The Life Fruit is a Hardmode plant that grows on Jungle grass below the surface after at least one of the mechanical bosses has been defeated. Once harvested and used, a Life Fruit permanently increases the player's health capacity by 5, turning one of the hearts in the player's health meter golden. A Life Fruit can only be consumed after the player has reached the 400 health cap from Life Crystals. Be sure to look out for them, as they will blend in with the ground. It can be Shimmered into an Aegis Fruit, that can be consumed once for extra defense.

Hey! whats up guys! just wanted to show off a scene I did of this jungle river.

This image uses a lot of particles (obviously). All the weeds and grass are particles. So are the hanging vines and the moss on the rocks.

I also used a plane with a wave modifier and some dynamic pant to make the ripples in the water more believable.

Heart_of_the_Jungle1280720 380 KB

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@Ace_Dragon Thanks! I thought about going for the planet Dagobah version of the jungle but in the end, went with a cleaner look. I was thinking that the jungle is both chaotic and yet still perfectly clean

Suriname is best known for two things: the Dutch colonial history centered around the capital Paramaribo and the untouched Amazon jungle in the countrys interior. I knew I could see the capital independently but needed the help of a tour company to get to the jungle. I found Jennys Tours which organizes dozens of types of tours around Suriname. Most tours require a minimum number of people to run the tours. I asked if there were any tours that already had the minimum number of participants and worked with my dates and was told there was a 3-day jungle tour going to Fredberg. While I originally wanted to only spend 2 days in the jungle, they said that this tour was special. Additionally, a fellow traveler I met on a flight to the Gambia years ago just so happened to publish a blog post on his trip to Suriname/Fredberg and said it was epic. So, I decided to trust them and book. Everything was handled via WhatsApp, and I wire transferred the $300 about a week before the trip.

We then continued to hike for two more hours through the jungle. The 38-degree heat was brutal, but luckily, we were in shade for nearly the entire hike. It was interesting to see the shifts in the landscape: some areas had much taller trees than others.

Eventually, we reached the base of Fred Mountain. The hike up was strenuous and involved holding onto some railings, but we made it. We dropped our bags off in the summit camp and headed to a viewpoint to watch the sunset and gawk at the endless virgin jungle.

For dinner, the chef made pasta with an alFREDo sauce. Afterwards, I chatted with the cook who explained to be a bit about Maroon culture. Maroons are the descendants of African slaves who then escaped into the jungle. The slaves lived off the land and created a unique culture based on an amalgamation of African cultures as they came from different tribes and different parts of the continent. Their time in slavery caused them to forget some details of the culture and the new environment forced them to adapt. Marrons speak a creole language with many African words and most people practice a religion called Winti, a form of animism based off various African religious beliefs. There are currently six district tribes and each one speaks a different language and practices a slightly different version of the religion. Fred and all the staff are from the Saramaka tribe.

The highlight should have been the view from the top, especially at sunrise, but it ended up being the Maroon dancing. The scenery everywhere was so beautiful and it felt special knowing you are so far in the jungle. The journey (yes including the long bus) also made the trip special and feel like a real adventure. In addition, it was fun for me to meet all the other travelers and staff members and to learn about the Dutch, Maroon, and French Guiana cultures. My guess is I will have met more Dutch people in these three days than I will on my inevitable trip to the Netherlands.

Everything had weight, had solidity. The elephants first appear marching regally through the jungle with moonlight gilding their heads, sweeping their trunks and tusks back and forth, and you can feel the weight of their movement as they pass. Trees shake when Mowgli or other animals land on them, buffaloes tumble heavily down thick, slippery mud in a monsoon, and bodies crash together with sickening thuds when animals fight.

The Life Fruit is a Hardmode plant that grows exclusively on Jungle grass in any area within the Underground layer or below. Once harvested and used, a Life Fruit permanently increases the player's health capacity by 5 and restores the player's health by 5, turning one of the hearts in the player's health meter golden. Life Fruit can only be used once a player has reached the 400 health cap from consuming Life Crystals.

A total of 20 Life Fruit are required to reach the maximum 500 health capacity, at which point all of the player's hearts will be golden. Once this is reached, the player's health cannot be manually increased beyond 500, with the exception of the effects of the Lifeforce buff.

On one of our days of ministry we hiked three hours into the jungle to visit a community called Mango Playa. Some of you may know this name from my previous posts. It is a difficult journey, practically ascending the entire trip, sometimes in mud and water like a swamp. Despite the difficulty, I constantly heard the missionaries encouraging one another with scripture verses and prayers, and by reflecting on the passion of Christ. (See Eph. 5:19-20)

The tone throughout the piece is very primitive and archaic, suitable to the wild jungle environment it is intended to reflect. Despite such an environment, the piece does not expand much in regards to dynamic contrast or tempos. The instrumentation for both versions consists of: strings, flutes, brass, drums, crash cymbals, synthesizer, and mallet percussion.

Connor Hopkins' The Jungle is a deeply serious work using high craft to dramatize the worst days of American industry. 


Upton Sinclair's 1906 piece, first published in serialization and then as a novel, caused a tremendous stir. He tells the story of an penniless immigrant family, crushed by corrupt exploitation, indifference, and unsanitary conditions of the Chicago meat packing industry. Sinclair's ambition had been to shake the American public into awareness of the inhumanity to the workers practiced by management and by capitalists -- an aim mirrored in Trouble Puppet's tag from the work, "They were slaughtering men there, as surely as we were slaughtering animals."


The Jungle was assigned reading in my high school American history class, long ago. I recall skimming impatiently through the early pages and then feeling gathering horror at the explicit depictions of animal slaughter and of brutalism I could never have imagined. The reading public shared those sentiments a hundred years ago, rousing political pressures that eventually led to Federal investigations, legislation, inspection and the founding of the agency that was eventually to become the U.S. Food and Drug administration.


Sinclair sought to strike for social justice and against wage slavery. He was deeply disappointed in the outcome and is quoted as saying bitterly, "I aimed at the public's heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach."


Hopkins' version of The Jungle is aimed equally at the heart, and the abstraction of puppetry escapes the filth and blood that obsessed the initial public. Yes, the old floor sweeper dying of tuberculosis hacks interminably into the open case of packed beef. When the processing line stops because of an accident, one worker desperately afraid of losing his job strikes down another and hides the unconscious body inside a packing case with the beef. 



When the dangerous army led by Emperor Nebulus arrived, five young teenagers were summoned by an anthropomorphic leader of one of the jungle tribes named King Leon who give them five respective animal powers, as well as elemental powers. With these powers, five new heroes come together to save the world as Power Rangers Jungle Steel.

Jurgis suffered a series of heart-wrenching misfortunes that began when he was injured on the assembly line. No workers' compensation existed, and the employer was not responsible for people injured on the job. Jurgis' life fell apart, and he lost his wife, son, house, and job.

Sinclair was dismayed, however, when the public reacted with outrage about the filthy and falsely labeled meat but ignored the plight of the workers. Meat sales dropped sharply. "I aimed at the public's heart," he said, "and by accident I hit it in the stomach."

While the 1954 original is solid, this one soars. It starts out slowly with a plaintive Como nearly singing a cappella as the background singers later come along with an orchestral sound that gets the heart pumping to a rousing woodwind-driven crescendo.

Jungle Heart is a horizontally scrolling shooter, in which the player controls Joy, a flying elephant on a quest to find a mysteriously vanished star. Joy must make his way through the jungle, battling against hostile cockatoos, vultures, crocodiles and more.

Joy can fly around and blast enemies with water, but he can only keep himself in the air for so long. The player can instead land and roll across the ground, jumping over obstacles and enemies. Pickups include butterflies that replenish the flight duration meter, water that replenishes the ammunition meter, heart that replenishes health, and coconuts. Collecting ten coconuts allows Joy to transform into the "Battle Mammoth" who can shoot powerful, long-ranged ice bolts.

The Elephants and The JungleIt suits the elephant

To live in the jungle.

To live in a room, a house,

A zoo doesn't seem right to him.In this jungle, the elephant has space to roam,

A place to play,

A place to move around,

An open space too where he can be by himself.The jungle isn't meant to be the house of man and woman,

The jungle is the elephant's home.

It's not right for man and woman to grow a jungle inside;

They have to build a home in their heart.The elephant has to grow a jungle in his heart:

There should be in his heart

Hills and mountains,

Streams, rivulets and rivers.It suits the elephant

To live in the jungle by itself.12:55 PM 31 March 2000

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