Foxwoods - a completion

Brainstorming for Summer Camp 2026 Prep

The ecosystem of Foxwoods is extremely diverse, with the foothills, southern border mountain foothills, and coastal areas of major rivers home to a diverse range of wildlife.

Flora

The eponymous acacia is the most common tree on the hills, and the region's name comes from its red leaves in autumn. Maple, poplar, and ash are also a recurring sight, and among the magical trees, the Twilight tree and Pinera also appear in the groves. On riverbanks, willow is the most common giant. Wild apple, pear, prune, and low cherry trees form natural orchards.

Shrubs are usually blackthorn, hawthorn, privet, rosehip, elderberry, raspberry, and hazelnut.

The hills and meadows are carpeted with a million colorful wildflowers: poppies, sage, yarrow, chamomile, clover, nettles, grasses, and violets.

Mushrooms grow on fallen trunks and deep in wet ravines.

Fauna

Abundant wild produce provides food for all living things. Roe herds, red fox families, hares, badgers, squirrels, hedgehogs, rats, mice, and voles live in the region.

Sometimes wolf packs from the mountains or the Pine Woods appear, and the sight of giant ravens gliding and stalking big game is not uncommon. Unlike griffins, these huge birds do not attack Elves, although they may mistakenly attack Bugits.

As for birds, a wide variety of them, from the smallest to the largest, appear in the region. Pheasants, grouses, woodpeckers, tits, sparrows, and kestrels are common around the hills, while storks, kingfishers, herons, swallows, and other waterfowl make noise on the shores.

Reptiles and amphibians also live here in large numbers, including vipers, snakes, lizards, turtles, frogs, toads, as well as Green River alligators and Cascade crocodiles - on the riverbanks.

The insect world is even more colorful: ants, butterflies, moths, stag beetles, bees, bumblebees, wasps, dragonflies, ladybugs, grasshoppers, and crickets, just to name a few.

Hely itt:
Humanoids

The residents of Foxwoods are a living, breathing part of the cycle here, along with the countryside. The lives of the Narmiron elves, i.e. the Walon tribe, and the Badger- and Fox-bugits are similarly determined by the changing seasons, the vagaries of the weather, and all events that affect the entire living world.



Cover image: by Lia Felis (with Adobe Express)
Character Portrait image: by A.I. (OpenArt SDXL)

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