Resource Chest #47624 (25/25)
These pages are scrawled with maddeningly illegible writing.
Common garden snails leave their shells behind when they can no longer go on living for one reason or another.
For a creature that is part jackrabbit and part antelope, these eggs look surprisingly normal.
It's unclear what creature this meat is from, but one thing's for certain - it's beginning to spoil.
Bore worms do extremely unpleasant things to flesh, and should be avoided.
The luck properties of a jackalope foot charm are largely unsubstantiated, and yet they remain a coveted item.
If given enough light and water, this fig will outgrow the pot.
This string is rather poorly woven but should be sufficient to keep a kite under control in anything but gale-wind conditions.
What ancient civilization crafted this stone idol is impossible to guess, but the lion visage holds a majesty and wonder.
These boards have been sitting somewhere damp for a long time and are infested with fungus and rot.
This very fine silk scarf is tinted blue.
This ring is designed to master the art of conjuring and controlling Golems.
This bit of leather has been crafted to lash things together.
The broxa is a supposedly mythical beast, but this beak makes you think maybe they're real after all.
Druids are known for their lore in the brewing process, and this grog lives up to the legend in potency and flavor.
This yarn is finely woven and stained with Indian Paintbrush pigment to be bright red.
Copper cups fell out of fashion when it was discovered certain kinds of potent grog could react with the metal to create poison. You wonder how many people were poisoned by this one.
This goop is grey, dense, and unpleasant, and it came off of a Frog. Hopefully from the outside of the frog.
The plumber who crafted this tubing is either brilliant or insane.
This is an enchanted Garlic Dowser, that helps locate garlic nearby for wary vampires.
This stone tells of the death of a certain elf, whose name you don't know because you can't read elven.
This mahogany figurehead graced the front of a small boat, but now is just an ornate piece of wood.
As with most birds, these pigeon bones are hollow.
This goop is grey, dense, and unpleasant, and it came off of a Frog. Hopefully from the outside of the frog.
This book is badly burned, and it's difficult to tell what the contents might have been.