Skinwalkers 2006 Full Movie Online Free

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Tea Rochlitz

unread,
Aug 5, 2024, 2:33:47 AM8/5/24
to longmiresa
Hieveryone, im new to the forum but wanted to ask if anyone else had come across what i think is a rare skin for a black tennessee walker. Found it north of yhe bayou district pulling a cart with couple o hill billies who had a screaming damsel in the back. Did the right thing & shot em both in the face. Did a double take on the horse as it seemed a bit scabby. It was a black tennesee walker with dreadlocks, scars on its chest, red ish eyes & what appears to be large wounds on its legs. Generally abused looking. Ive saved it to my stable as i cant find anything online that suggests its rare or unique etc? Has anyone come across this horse? Is it rare or am i just trippin? ...sorry for lack of photo - I'll add a pick when i get home tonight! Cheers Guys

Cheers dude, found her on the far east side of the map in the woodland area north of the bayou (was actually trying to find a panther to hunt) wondering if there are other 'abused' style skins for different horse breeds? Ive named her Scabby Sue


Haven't seen anything about this horse, but yeah, it definitely looks unique! Awesome find. How are it's stats? Maybe there is something there. Definitely would keep him/her for their character alone.


Nice, so maybe its unique to that one cart - although the mini side quest will probably respawn like the other ones do. Stat wise its just same as regular tennessee walker but she looks cool. Fashion always dictates my play style so for now Scabby Sue's gettin a riding!


Looks like all hillbilly horses have the abused skin. Just came across a pair stealing a lady south east of van horn. One horse got away but the other i caught & it was a scabby brown apoloosa. Also looks like your more likely to come across them at night. I know what im gonna be doing for the next too many hours! Haha


So far ive managed to find a scabby appoloosa, Tennessee walker & just now a blue roan Nokota. Scabby Sue's now at lvl4 bond but really wanna find something bit bigger like a halfbred or thorough bred. Anyone come across one? Nokota a little bit faster bit health n stam dont touch ma tennessee walker scabby sue, itll be hard to let her go.. ..thats if i do! Love how this game makes you genuinely care for your horse. Even if their stats aint great.


Ok so i just found this Mustang that i didnt know existed in a spot near by st denis. Went to stable it & it kicks me out with a message saying cant stable gang horse? How have i got this? It says its a a Dark Bay Roan.


Haha! Too true! But am a sucker for the mustangs n when it says i cant have it then that made me even more determined lol. i ended up trying to put ma saddle on it which it let me but it wouldnt bond at all..? Then tried recalling it at the stable to see if i could glitch it in. Turned into the brown tennessee walker you get if your horse dies.. Went outside n it was still there, kicked me in the face n ran into the stable! Couldnt get back to it without it actioning - entering the stable animation. Lol!


Seems to be a unique spot for spawning decent horses! Been farming it & so far ive had loads of rare ones. Missouri trotters, andalusian, appaloosa, arabian etc etc all free! Its bitchin! Checked out on you tube n folk are talking bout it. Just went again & Nell II is there (one o the gangs horses but not sure whos) must spawn randomly any horse in the game? gonna keep at it and see if i can luck out with the RNG n bag a tiger stripe mustang!


Skin walkers are purely evil in intent. I'm no expert on it, but the general view is that skinwalkers do all sorts of terrible things --- they make people sick, they commit murders.


In the Navajo world---where witchcraft is important, where daily behavior is patterned to avoid it, prevent it, and cure it---there are as many words for its various forms as there are words for different types of snow among the Eskimos.


Skinwalkers are not boogiemen and they aren't the figures made up to scare children. Unlike Anglo stories of werewolves and witches, they don't lose control and kill everything in their path or maliciously curse people for no reason.


Like humans, they do kill, and like humans, they have motivations for those acts of aggression. Power and revenge fuel their murderous intent, but such things cannot occupy the brain of a rational creature all the time, and skinwalkers do not make murder part of their daily routine.


Other than their origin story, legends of skinwalkers rarely include death or any kind of mauling. Instead, common stories include skinwalkers in their animal form running alongside a vehicle and matching their speed, even as the driver accelerates. Eventually, they get bored with this routine and simply disappear into the surrounding wilderness. In some respects, it seems rather playful, like a dog chasing a car that passes on the street.


Skinwalkers have been reported by both Native and non-Native people, including a popular story here in New Mexico of skinwalkers being seen by State police on a stretch of roadway on Navajo territory.


A skinwalker is tied up with the Navajo concept of good and evil. The Navajo's believe that life is a kind of wind blowing through you. Some people have a dark wind, and they tend to be evil. How do you tell? People who have more money than they need and aren't helping their kinfolk -- that's one symptom of it.




A lot of Navajo's will tell me emphatically, especially when they don't know me very well, that they don't believe in all that stuff. And then when you get to be a friend, they'll start telling you about the first time they ever saw one.


Regardless, the tale or legend of skinwalkers is prevalent and meaningful to Native peoples in New Mexico. It is rooted in their history and tradition, and like many other things we don't always understand about different cultures, it does command our respect.


The material for this article was compiled by reviewing various sources, many online. For more information, visit the sites: www.rense.com; www.mysticpolitics.com; www.sites.lib.byu.edu

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages