Natural Selection: Difference between revisions
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imported>Captain Eek m →Notes: explain background to why both uses are "acceptable" |
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==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
*'Yodeling' is a more commonly used spelling | *'Yodeling' is a more commonly used spelling in United States English, but 'yodelling', common in British English, is also acceptable. | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
*The trumpet and yodeling are a reference to commercials for [[wikipedia:Ricola|Ricola]], which sounds like 'E. Coli'. | *The trumpet and yodeling are a reference to commercials for [[wikipedia:Ricola|Ricola]], which sounds like 'E. Coli'. | ||
*[[wikipedia:2006_North_American_E._coli_outbreak|Outbreaks of E. coli]] were traced to contaminated spinach in 2006, hence the bacterial warning. | *[[wikipedia:2006_North_American_E._coli_outbreak|Outbreaks of E. coli]] were traced to contaminated spinach in 2006, hence the bacterial warning. |
Revision as of 12:29, 22 June 2008
You discover an unusually square snowdrift -- after you brush the snow off, it is revealed as a wooden crate filled with cans of spinach. This explains what the goats do for food on his godforsaken mountain. Most of the cans are partially-eaten (and the spinach inside them, too), but you find one that's intact.
After looking around to make sure no one's blowing into a great big trumpet and yodelling to warn you about bacterial outbreaks, you pocket the can.
![]() | You acquire an item: can of spinach |
Occurs at The Goatlet, semi-rarely.
Notes
- 'Yodeling' is a more commonly used spelling in United States English, but 'yodelling', common in British English, is also acceptable.
References
- The trumpet and yodeling are a reference to commercials for Ricola, which sounds like 'E. Coli'.
- Outbreaks of E. coli were traced to contaminated spinach in 2006, hence the bacterial warning.