He chose the BROOM MOUNT!!!! It came to me in a dream. My mum, grandma and grandpa who passed 20 years ago, told me not to fret that Ttobey will be giving me the BROOM MOUNT this year, since it is 20 years since my mum and grandma died and 19 years since my grandpa died. Thank ye so much Ttobey. I knew ye would do it. *hugs the Ttobey and gives his a large box of Ttobey treats and summons the Ttobey treat guards into the room so nobody can steal the Ttobey treats*
*Bounces into the thread bringing a wagon train of carts carrying tubs of foam and bubbles, a tent with a zippered front, tables, and loads of treats and drinks. Sets up the tent, places the tables inside, places the treats and drinks on the tables, steps out and zips the tent closed. Proceeds to fill the thread with FOAM AND BUBBLES* We are having a FOAM AND BUBBLES PARTY for hitting page 100!!!!!!
Come and join the FOAM AND BUBBLES PARTY!!!!!! *turns the GNOMISH FOAM-O-MATIC 9000 up to maximum and the GNOMISH BUBBLE BLOWER 10X4600B to tremendously huge* *SQUEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE*
Ttobey, I want a drogmor! It was my first ever mount I bought in EQ1, at like Age 9 and I was so happy
The first version of the run I did on that Drogmor made people so motion sick I had to change it! It ran like a bucking bronco!
From wikipedias jackalope article (origins section): "Stories or descriptions of animal hybrids have appeared in many cultures worldwide. A 13th-century Perian work depicts a rabbit with a single horn, like a unicorn. In Europe, the horned rabbit appeared in Medieval and Renaissance folklore in Bavaria (the wolperinger) and elsewhere." Yet the first sentence of the same article is: "The jackalope is a mythical animal of North American folklore (a fearsome critter) described as a jackrabbit with antelope horns." Well I'm german, so for me that is a Wolpertinger and has been named as such since medieval times I find it hilarious that americans think by just naming something in a more english sounding way that this warrants the founation of their own folklore.