To get to Tanglewood way, you have to go through a crack in the wall. There is the end of a HUGE root or vine running from the crack and curling around outside. But once you go through the crack, the root/vine vanishes. You see the crack, you see the tree it obviously came from. You don't see any sign of the root/vine.
And it's obvious from the way the root is laying on the side with the rabbit guards that it's not under the ground at all. That means it had to have snaked across the ground on the other side of the wall (roots don't grow on top of the ground so that means it pretty much has to be a vine), found a crack in the wall, grown through it, gotten bigger and bigger until it broke the wall.
Roots and vines don't do that. If it was going to crack the wall at all, you should see it on both sides of the wall.
To get to Tanglewood way, you have to go through a crack in the wall. There is the end of a HUGE root or vine running from the crack and curling around outside. But once you go through the crack, the root/vine vanishes. You see the crack, you see the tree it obviously came from. You don't see any sign of the root/vine.
And it's obvious from the way the root is laying on the side with the rabbit guards that it's not under the ground at all. That means it had to have snaked across the ground on the other side of the wall (roots don't grow on top of the ground so that means it pretty much has to be a vine), found a crack in the wall, grown through it, gotten bigger and bigger until it broke the wall.
Roots and vines don't do that. If it was going to crack the wall at all, you should see it on both sides of the wall.
In the REAL world pre-teen kids don't go around using magic to cast Helephants and Humangofrogs. Thankfully Wizard101 is not the real world, therefore vines and plants can grow what ever way they want with the use of magic.
To get to Tanglewood way, you have to go through a crack in the wall. There is the end of a HUGE root or vine running from the crack and curling around outside. But once you go through the crack, the root/vine vanishes. You see the crack, you see the tree it obviously came from. You don't see any sign of the root/vine.
And it's obvious from the way the root is laying on the side with the rabbit guards that it's not under the ground at all. That means it had to have snaked across the ground on the other side of the wall (roots don't grow on top of the ground so that means it pretty much has to be a vine), found a crack in the wall, grown through it, gotten bigger and bigger until it broke the wall.
Roots and vines don't do that. If it was going to crack the wall at all, you should see it on both sides of the wall.
If it helps. The fact is the plants are more real than you may think. The truth is there are vines like ivy that can consume an entire wall and in time can little is left of the wall itself. In fact i grow sweet potatoes and they are wild vines as well creeping through and around the stone boarders of its raised planters. I would provide a real picture if i could but you may be able to find a picture of something like it on the net.