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Post by Tempestarii on Sept 13, 2006 10:02:01 GMT -5
Daniel is smaller than I imagined..
I prefer this spin-off, it reminds me of that odd video in The Ring.
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Post by wixy15 on Sept 13, 2006 10:18:12 GMT -5
Bit cryptic for you temps.....
*scratches his head*
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lg15fan
Cool Cove Resident
Posts: 79
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Post by lg15fan on Sept 13, 2006 11:01:39 GMT -5
This is so much fun. I hope the video is related.
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hagert
Anchor Cove New Resident
Posts: 10
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Post by hagert on Sept 13, 2006 12:02:50 GMT -5
Very spooky stories of Turnbull Canyon from that region...looks much like the San Gabriel Mountain range....I keep gettin signs on Icehouse Canyon too
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Post by thingy666 on Sept 13, 2006 12:06:45 GMT -5
what if some-one goes to that pool...water thingy...whoot he find the bag or just an empty water thiny? Sorry but I cant go my self, becose I live in the Netherlands so.....
Englisch isnt great becose of the fact I live there...
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Post by brandoblues on Sept 13, 2006 13:24:00 GMT -5
cassie left another clue in the comments
edit to save space:
from the looks of it the first tiny.cc url got suspended so cassie had to indeed provide the clue with a new url, so nothing really new, just the location still
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Post by beingbored on Sept 13, 2006 13:41:17 GMT -5
Oh man if they want fan involvement to the point where people go on missions to retrieve clues from the movies...well then that is just awesome. ARG!
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Post by Alissa Brooke on Sept 13, 2006 13:43:40 GMT -5
They better do a clue in Rhode Island Ha. Ha. Ha.
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cbowen4
Anchor Cove Resident
Posts: 29
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Post by cbowen4 on Sept 13, 2006 13:46:26 GMT -5
cassie left another clue in the comments More than a clue, it looks like it's the GPS coordinates of the swimming video location.
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ka
Cove Jr. Detective
Posts: 46
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Post by ka on Sept 13, 2006 13:51:19 GMT -5
That leads to a terraserver image with the attached address: E East Fork Rd, Azusa, CA 91702 Mean anything to anyone? Google maps points to this: Seems to be a group of houses or shacks, surrounded by clumps of trees. Perhaps the rock pool.
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Post by Alissa Brooke on Sept 13, 2006 13:54:25 GMT -5
Perhaps thats the closest to the lake they could get? I mean lakes don't actually have numbers attatched to them, do they?
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Post by fight4urit on Sept 13, 2006 13:57:59 GMT -5
THat clump of houses is most likely: Follows Camp 626-910-1100 Fax: 626-910-2555 23400 E East Fork Rd, Azusa, CA 91702 Or www.campwilliams.com/
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Post by morninglory on Sept 13, 2006 14:36:42 GMT -5
could that be the camp that bree goes to?
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Post by fight4urit on Sept 13, 2006 14:41:43 GMT -5
I think the camps are mainly like RVish/Camping Camps, but there appears to be people who live at Follows Camp
A little information about the follows camp: Follows Camp in Present Day History
While so many of the great resorts and camps were ruined by the great floods of 1938, it was the depression that killed the reign of Follows Camp as a renowned tourists camp. In 1975 and 1976 the old Ferlguson property where the Ralph Follow's original dream began with a short order restaurant, was combined with Follows Camp. The Ferguson property had been a religious retreat known as Beaulah Land after World War II and became Shady Oaks in the 1950's, with a store and picnic area. Together, the combined properties are the Follows Camp of today, land it is known as a place where one can relax and "start the day by looking for the mother lode and ending the day at The Fort with delicious dinners and a game of pool...great trout fishing during the season the river is stocked every two weeks and …great places to swim."
The forces of nature still wreak havoc on Follows Camp. January 2005 record rainfalls wiped out three bridges, stranding 135 residents. The storm also washed away the grassy riverbank as the San Gabriel River rose 20 feet above normal. The resident's home wine cellar was washed away, spilling dozens of bottles of wine into the raging waters. For two and a half weeks people were cut off from the outside world, relying on Sheriff Department airlifts, and neighbors who loaded a crude steel supply filled compartment with supplies then dragged it by pulley over the river. Eight residents, hardy as any original camp pioneer, finally took matters into their own hands to build a dirt ramp over the main bridge using bulldozers and dump trucks. For now the artists, retirees and others who live in the private camp community for the solitude it provides, have an umbilical cord to supplies and surrounding communities.
The days of mining camps and flamboyant resorts are gone, but many people still choose to enjoy these areas today in one venue or the other. Time will only tell when another deluge will cause the great flood waters to rise and fall once again.
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Post by firenze11 on Sept 13, 2006 14:43:34 GMT -5
It seems that from the maps if you took E East Fork Road to NF-8W16 (this may be a trail itself, I found a website that refers to it as Heaton Trail) you would pretty much dead end into the river in a canyon. The coordinates given were 34.23970, -117.76556. I've been trying to find out what this area is called. At TopoZone it shows the area being between Heaton Flat and Coyote Flat. There is also the East Fork Station which may be where they parked. I dunno. Here's the address for topozone though: www.topozone.com/map.asp?lat=34.2397&lon=-117.76556&size=l&symshow=n&u=5&datum=nad83&layer=DRGIf I lived anywhere near there, I'd drop all my readings/essays and be there. But alas. . .le sigh.
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