Snowy Treasure Hunter 3: Can You Help Snowy Escape the Foes and Find the Treasures?
After winning a contest to manage the best restaurant in his hometown, Snowy the Bear grew restless. Upon seeing a newscast reporting on a mysterious castle from which no treasure hunters have emerged, Snowy packs his pick axe and satchel and sets off on an all-new adventure! As he makes his way through three beautiful environments, Snowy must collect all of the jewels and other trinkets on which he can get his paws while avoiding court jesters, dungeon masters, vampires and more!
Snow. Treasure hunter is a journey of a bear cub named Snowy in three game worlds. The brave hunter of vintage treasures to outwit the treacherous guards and collect the treasures of the Egyptian pharaohs. More than sixty levels filled with dangerous adventures await our hero. Ahead - placers jewels hidden in the labyrinth of the ancients, and hot fight with reanimated mummies.
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Every explorer and traveller must carry somekind of a boat or canoe with him. If he is withoutone, the natives will often make most extortionatedemands for the hire of their own to him; butif he has one, no matter how small, he can bargainon much more equal terms. But even if no boatscan be procured, the mere crossing of a river canalways be effected by means of rafts. These canbe made of almost anything; casks, boxes, planks,reeds, bamboos, all can be pressed into the service;but we are told, it must be borne in mind 'thatthe cargo a raft can carry above water is alwayssmall, and not at all like the mountain of treasureinvariably represented on that of Robinson Crusoe.'These rafts are often constructed of very strangematerials. On the Nile they are made of jars,which are thus brought down the river to be soldat Cairo. On many of the African rivers they aremade of bundles of sedge-grass; and lying downon these, the hippopotamus hunters approach thehuge beast; the raft looking so like a naturalaccumulation that he does not attempt to get outof the way till it is too late. On such a raft, madeon a larger scale, the Swedish naturalist Lindholmand his assistant successfully descended one of therivers that feed Lake Ngami. The voyage was astrange one. The raft was built in a quiet nookby throwing hundreds of bundles of sedge acrosseach other, without any other fastening than theirnatural cohesion and entanglement. On this hugefloating mass a hut was built, and the two adventurersthen poled it out into the stream, and it wentdown the current at the rate of about forty or fiftymiles a day. Occasionally it took the ground atthe bottom, but when a little of the grass tore off,it floated clear again. As the lower layers becamesodden and pressed together, fresh grass had to becut every day and laid on top, till at last therewas six feet of the raft under water. Occasionallyoverhanging branches tore off some of the grass,and once a large projecting trunk lay so close tothe water that it 'swept the decks fore and aft.' Thehut was destroyed, and with much of its contentswas carried away into the river; but the travellerssaved themselves by climbing over the bough,and then repaired the damage and resumed theirvoyage. Sir Samuel Baker constructed a muchmore singular raft to cross the Atbara River inEquatorial Africa. A bedstead supported by eightinflated hides formed the basis of the structure;and on this was secured a large sponging baththree feet eight inches in diameter, which formeda dry receptacle for the ammunition and otherbaggage. f9413d35dd