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Gryffindor Common Room

Louis Walles

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Everything posted by Louis Walles

  1. I agree with everything that has been said above really! I think that the key to understand the method of choosing a wizard (because it is the wand that decides, after all) may be found in the core used. I think that they core is able to determine how does one acts and what he or she may use the wand for, whether evil or good. Then, the wand can assess on its own if this is what they want from it.
  2. The water exploded from the wand and made even a bigger mess. It also made the feather wet! I cast The Drought Charm in hope to clean the water from the room.
  3. Well, you are clearly wonderful with this spell as the book looks like new! I cast the Cleaning Charm in hope that it will clean up the room now.
  4. You have successfully repaired your broom and you sat down on it to go up to grab the feather. Unfortunately, the wind made the feather fly away again and you also made the books on the shelf fall down! I cast Tergeo to clean up
  5. The lock at the doors did open but not the doors! I cast Aberto to finally open them!
  6. Unfortunately the feather flew up and got stuck on the chandelier. I cast Accio to get my broom to me.
  7. A big feather is laying near the hammer Harry mentioned. The said feather is rather big, similar to the eagle feather. Additionally, the feather is rather colourful. I can see some blue, green, red, purple and yellow, but there are also so many different colours that change if you look at them from a different angle. According to Mr. Ollivander himself, this feather is used to make sure the wand is not aggressive or whether it works and will recognize its owner. All you need to do is to tickle the ready wand to test it.
  8. Apparently the most mystical number in the world is 137. According to the website 'how stuff works' there are plenty of reasons why. 'To physicists, 137 is the approximate denominator of the fine-structure constant (1/137.03599913), the measure of the strength of the electromagnetic force that controls how charged elementary particles such as the electron and moon interact with photons of light, according to the National Institute of Standards and Technology. The fine-structure constant is one of the key physical constants of the universe. "This immutable number determines how stars burn, how chemistry happens and even whether atoms exist at all," as Michael Brooks explained in a recent New Scientist article.' https://science.howstuffworks.com/dictionary/physics-terms/why-is-137-most-magical-number.htm
  9. He then started walking in the direction where the unicorns ran off. I followed him.
  10. 'I am here to collect some unicorn hair, but they just ran away'. He smiled and replied.
  11. 'Oh yeah, but I am not a trip now!' I replied. 'So what are you doing here then?' he said.
  12. get out from my hiding. 'Hi there! It's me!' I said. The centaur...
  13. and saw a huge centaur casually walking around. He was probably...
  14. In my opinion, the person who got the feathers to create the wands used a rather different approach and did not go with violence. In my opinion, when the phoenix lost a feather from its tail or any other part of his body, the person in question picked up the feathers and conserved them with the intention to later create a wand with them. I think they had a wonderful relationship, similar to the one Dumbledore had with his bird.
  15. This tree has a pink trunk with light green dots all over it. The crown of the tree is made out of stringed branches covered in coral like leaves. The leaves are very smooth and can be used to make clothes.
  16. In Celtic cultures, oak tree has a huge significance. According to the internet, the ancient geographer Strabo (1st century AD) reported that the important sacred grove and meeting-place of the Galatian Celts of Asia Minor, Drunemeton, was filled with oaks. In an often-cited passage from Historia Naturalis (1st century AD), Pliny the Elder describes a festival on the sixth day of the moon where the druids climbed an oak tree, cut a bough of mistletoe, and sacrificed two white bulls as part of a fertility rite. Britons under Roman occupation worshipped a goddess of the oak tree, Daron, whose name is commemorated in a rivulet in Gwynedd.
  17. I decided to use old candy to mark my path
  18. The mysterious creature turned out to be a small...jarvey. I have heard how awful they can be and that it is safer to avoid them but I do love ferrets and they are just overgrown wild ferrets, so what possibly can happen? Although at first, the jarvey was not so happy to see me, then it quickly changed its mind and decided to come in for a cuddle. I was truly surprised but then I started giving cuddles. After a while, the jarvey clearly got bored and decided to abandon me and head in the opposite direction. That was so nice.
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