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winter squid?Follow

#1 Apr 22 2006 at 5:30 PM Rating: Decent
hey there,
I have been looking around trying to figure out where to fish for winter squid...some people say only during the winter so they dont spawn now...others say they get like 50 at steamwheedle...any help? I have 300 fishing and use bright baubles...i have tried bay of storms,steamwheedle and a few other places but no luch...thanks
#2 Apr 22 2006 at 5:35 PM Rating: Good
they only spawn in the autumn and winter months. Summer Bass now spawns instead of winter squid.

this is how it always used to be- it may have changed and they may have placed it in very specialised areas (why the hell cant you catch em in winterspring i asks ya?) but this is doubtful.

in short, they no longer exist until a few months time.
#3 Apr 23 2006 at 2:26 AM Rating: Decent
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1,724 posts
Yep, they're gone for the summer now. I have about 8 stacks stashed on a mule to sell when the price gets good and ripe.
#4 Apr 24 2006 at 10:51 AM Rating: Decent
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4,877 posts
Quote:
I have about 8 stacks stashed on a mule to sell when the price gets good and ripe


not to mention the squid, wow thats a long time to store a squid, but hell, i am doing the same with snowballs(make them as well as keep em, 3 snowmasters(on 3 alts) keep me full.
#5 May 02 2006 at 6:37 AM Rating: Decent
Isn't it interesting that Azeroth doesn't have hemispheres and has the exact same seasonal cycle as the US...
#6 May 02 2006 at 11:02 AM Rating: Decent
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Quote:
Isn't it interesting that Azeroth doesn't have hemispheres and has the exact same seasonal cycle as the US...


IT dose, just unlike earth, we orbit off kilter, north of the Stars(sun) equater, hence we have nortrend and winterspring(forzen year round) but the south of the planet has no such cold zones, STV, and Tanris are as south as the world gets, yet always warm, now thats odd to me, but like i said explainable, we just dont orbit the resedent stars equator.
#7 May 02 2006 at 6:51 PM Rating: Decent
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1,606 posts
How can you not orbit around an "equator" of a star? They're round... and put out the same radiation in all directions. No matter how you orbit them... you orbit their center... so exposure shouldn't change...
#8 May 03 2006 at 9:22 AM Rating: Decent
The planet (Azeroth)is tilted. The northern part is tilted slightly away from the sun while the southern part is tilted slighty toward the sun. Therefore the north is always a little cooler and the south always a little warmer. The planet has winter and summer not because of the tilt but because it travels around the sun in a slight elipse. It has summer when it is closer to the sun and winter when further away from the sun.

Either that or it's just magic.

Edited, Wed May 3 10:29:43 2006 by Excelis
#9 May 03 2006 at 12:27 PM Rating: Decent
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4,877 posts
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How can you not orbit around an "equator" of a star? They're round... and put out the same radiation in all directions. No matter how you orbit them... you orbit their center


OK, so you will make the statment that a star has no equator, will you deny poles? like a north and south, buecause stars have poles, and a equator is a line pependicluar(SP) to the median of said poles.(thas all me)
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The equator is an imaginary circle drawn around a planet (or other astronomical object) at a distance halfway between the poles. The equator divides the planet into a Northern Hemisphere and a Southern Hemisphere. (thats form a dictionary)


Ya only one equator per body, and all stars have them:)

How odd that folks jump up to cut stuff down without even looking in a book to see if their comments are based in reality.
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