Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Tribe of Rushing Water is a group of cats who live in a mountain range. They are split into two groups: prey-hunters, who hunt prey, and cave-guards, who protect the prey-hunters and the cave the Tribe lives in. They are led by a cat who takes on the name Stoneteller.
Children's literature portal; The Sun Trail is a children's fantasy novel and the first book in Erin Hunter's Warriors: Dawn of the Clans series. Published on 5 March 2013, it was the first novel in a six-novel prequel arc published following the previous arc, Warriors: Omen of the Stars, though was immediately preceded in publication by the novella Cloudstar's Journey.
While in the mountains, the Clans meet the Tribe of Rushing Water and Stormfur chooses to stay with the Tribe with Brook Where Small Fish Swim, whom he has fallen in love with, and his sister, Feathertail's, spirit. At the end of the book, the Clans discover a forest around a lake that reflects all of the stars.
According to the local outlet, there were nine relatives in total that had been caught in 15 feet of rushing water. "I honestly thought I was going to lose my family that day," Ursrey told the outlet.
FOURTH OF FOUR PARTS: Tribes are fighting legal battles every day to safeguard water resources in the Great Lakes. But it's stretching them thin. Great Lakes tribes teach 'water is life.’
Image credits: historycoolkids The History Cool Kids Instagram account has amassed an impressive 1.5 million followers since its creation in 2016. But the page’s success will come as no surprise ...
Thunder Rising is set a few months following the events of The Sun Trail, during which the cats who were previously part of the Tribe of Rushing Water (also referred to as the Tribe) left their mountain home during a famine when the Tribe's leader had a vision directing them to leave in search of food. The cats have settled into groups in their ...
The Southern Nevada Water Authority supports a monument designation that allows for the continuation of existing ranching and agricultural activities, said Bronson Mack, water authority spokesman.