Second Life Destinations
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Second Life Destinations
News of places to explore in Secondlife
Curated by Ann Owiti
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Tatakai Tochi - Oriental mornings in Second Life

Tatakai Tochi - Oriental mornings in Second Life | Second Life Destinations | Scoop.it

I was drawn to Tatakai Tochi for two reasons. The first is that it features the work of Shen Molinaro. The second is that it offers an oriental theme, something guaranteed to attract my attention much like a moth to a flame:) . A homestead region held by Regina Mills, (heatherfury) Takakai Tochi literally means “land of flight”. In keeping with this name, it presents visitors with rugged highlands pushing their way into a misty sky, an early morning sun just edging over the highest peaks. Sitting atop the shoulders of several of this craggy hills are flat-topped plateaus occupied by traditional Japanese houses and buildings which overlook the deep slices of the valleys and gorges dividing up the land.

Ann Owiti's insight:
See also other pictures of Tatakai Tochi by
 Ziki Questi http://sco.lt/8lBf6n
Caitlin Tobias http://sco.lt/7ycWFF

For the designer Shen Molinaro also see  Suomi
For reviews and pictures of Suomi see
Eddi Haskell http://sco.lt/5WZWCn ;
Kate Bergdorf http://sco.lt/65KPy5 ;
 Inara Pey http://sco.lt/8VZ3CL ;
Ziki Questi  http://sco.lt/6lL19d

 Post YOUR pictures of Tatakai Tochi and Suomi here at the  Flickr group for Second Life Landscapes https://www.flickr.com/groups/secondlifelandscapes/

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Tatakai Tochi - Second life

Tatakai Tochi - Second life | Second Life Destinations | Scoop.it
Shen Molinaro, designer of the recently blogged Suomi, has just completed a new sim, Tatakai Tochi (meaning Fight Land in Japanese), owned by Regina Mills (HeatherFury). The result is a stunning region that evokes the mountainous lands of rural Japan, with tremendous opportunities for photography.
Visitors arrive near the top of the rugged landscape, which hosts several small buildings and looks down through swirling flower petals and clouds to the land and seascape below. There is a way down: look for the windmill, and take the zigzag path nearby down to the ocean's edge, there following the wooden walkway that hugs the stones until reaching the valley floor. Here, a delightful display of floating lanterns awaits, and explorers can take a couple of different stone paths to continue their journeys. The lowland interior of the sim, often dotted with shrines or places of reflection, is filled with pastel trees in bloom, thick bamboo, and gently winding streams fed by high waterfalls.

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