UNO Pixie UNO Pixie’s Comments (group member since Feb 13, 2016)



Showing 301-320 of 1,839

Dec 26, 2023 02:59AM

88432
Team Cruella's Espresso Martini


description




Team Members:
Zoë Hays - Captain
Gwen - Co-Captain
Filipa
Eli
Marie
Alyssa
Katie
Lillskrutta
Tiffany


Team Spreadsheet
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
Dec 25, 2023 11:23PM

88432
Team Crowley's Angelface


description




Team Members:
Eldarwen - Captain
Snowtulip
Sophie
Vicci
LaurLa
San
Stephanie


Team Spreadsheet
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
Dec 25, 2023 11:23PM

88432
Team Count Adhemar's Bourbon Lancer


description




Team Members:
Annalisa - Captain
Suzanne - Co-Captain
Ashley M.
Louise
Heather Moore
Kylie
Alla


Team Spreadsheet
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...

Ashley
Dec 25, 2023 11:22PM

88432
Team Catwoman's Black Velvet


description




Team Members:
Karolyn - Captain
Dale Cruz - Co-Captain
Ivelisse - Co-Captain
Ilsen
Joyce Gravino
Heather
Roe


Team Spreadsheet
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
Dec 25, 2023 01:42PM

88432
Team Brixton Lore's Gunfire


description





Team Members:
Deanna - Captain
Denise - Co-Captain
Barbara Pereira
Anna
Ann
Kira
Carrie


Team Spreadsheet
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
Dec 25, 2023 01:41PM

88432
Team Bonnie's Gunpowder Punch


description




Team Members:
Sara Hollingsworth- Captain
Christina - Co-Captain
Susan A
Trinia
Daniel
Kayt
Jade


Team Spreadsheet
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
Dec 25, 2023 01:41PM

88432
Team Aunt Entity's Sidecar


description




Team Members:
Kirsten Pullen - Captain
Lisa - Co-captain
Melis
Taylor
Kat Duncan
Rebecca
Leanne Smith


Team Spreadsheet
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
May 03, 2023 01:59AM

88432
description


****CONGRATULATIONS!****

To all our wonderful members who played UNO this year.


And the WINNERS ARE ...


Team Luna Moth






Team Members:
Danielle - Captain
Ashleigh - Co-Captain
Christina - Co-Captain
Jhmingos
CB
Jean
Tory
Daniela

Please join us in congratulating them and we hope to see you in 2024!
Apr 26, 2023 11:50PM

88432 3d-fonts

2023 UNO cut-off date and time

Cut-off Countdown

UNO finishes on Monday May 1, 2023 at 9am UTC time.

https://www.timeanddate.com/countdown...

Main cities, FYI:

Monday May 1, 2023
San Francisco 2am
London 10am
Brussels 11am
New York 5am
Mumbai 2.30pm
Tokyo 6pm
Sydney 8pm

Check out other cities HERE

https://www.timeanddate.com/worldcloc...





**********Captains,

Spreadsheets need to be updated within 24 hours from the end of the challenge; and then we can announce the winners!***********

Apr 10, 2023 11:45AM

88432 reserved
Apr 10, 2023 11:45AM

88432 reserved
Apr 10, 2023 11:45AM

88432 Tasks - continued


Sarcastic Fringehead

Why it’s sarcastic nobody knows, but the sarcastic fringehead is an aggressive small fish with a giant mouth that it uses to battle for territory with other fringeheads. This fish is a tube blenny, so called because they live in burrows or tube-like structures created by other animals. In the case of this species, the shelters are those created by burrowing clams or by empty snail shells. Some individuals have even been observed living inside soda bottles or other manmade materials.
Tasks:
25. Read a book featuring a sarcastic character.
26. Read a book with an orange cover.

Blobfish

Out of water the blobfish is aptly named, as it’s one big gelatinous blob, but blobfish look almost unrecognizable underwater. These tadpole-shaped fish have bulbous heads, large jaws, tapered tails, and feathery pectoral fins. Rather than scales, they have loose, flabby skin. They don’t have strong bones or thick muscle—instead, they rely on the water pressure to hold their shape together. That’s why blobfish collapse into a squishy mush when they are pulled up to the surface.
Tasks:
27. Read a book with a character who simply has no luck, or good fortune.
28. Read a book where a character's world collapses, or where everything a character thought to be true turns out to be wrong. (There can be lots of interpretations for this. Use your own imagination and judgement.)

Colon Rectum

One of the most unflattering names in the animal kingdom? The colon rectum is a rounded fungus beetle found worldwide, and seems to have done nothing whatsoever to deserve its name, poor thing.
Tasks:
29. Read a book with a two-word title.
30. Read a book with a brown cover.

Moustached Puffbird

The moustached puffbird has small tufts of white feathers around its beak (hence the ‘moustached’) and is plump, round, and fluffy (hence the puffbird). The moustached puffbird is found in the Andes, in northern and northwestern Venezuela through Colombia and slightly into northern Ecuador. It is primarily a bird of the undergrowth of humid and wet forests, though it also occurs along the edges of forest and in open woodland. It usually stays within 6 m (20 ft) of the ground.
Tasks:
31. Read a book where a character has a moustache or beard.
32. Read a book with a white cover.

Pleasing Fungus Beetle

There are over 2,000 different species of pleasing fungus beetle (erotylidae), named after their habit of feeding on fungus, along with plant matter. Some are important pollinators, while a few have gained notoriety as pests of some significance. Most are inoffensive animals of little significance to humans.
Tasks:
33. Read a book with an inoffensive character, i.e. someone who is considered to be pleasing.
34. Read a book featuring a pest, or a disease/illness.

Slippery Dick

Is the ‘slippery dick’ an insult, a cocktail, or a fish? It’s a type of wrasse native to shallow, tropical waters of the western Atlantic Ocean. It has a thin, elongate body with a terminal mouth, and its body coloration has three phases during its life: juvenile, initial, terminal. During all these phases, the slippery dick's coloration changes and becomes more pronounced.
Tasks:
35. Read a book where someone drinks or makes a cocktail.
36. Read a book with 3 things that are the same on the cover. (This can be 3 items/plants/people/etc.)

Strange-tailed Tyrant

The reason for the ‘strange-tailed’ portion of this bird’s name is obvious enough, but why is it a tyrant? Simple, this is a species of bird in the family Tyrannidae. It is found in northeastern Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, and three small separated localities in southern Brazil. Its natural habitat is subtropical, tropical, dry lowland, or grassland. It is threatened by habitat loss, and is mostly extinct.
Tasks:
37. Read a book featuring a tyrant.
38. Read a book set in South America.

Tasseled Wobbegong

The tasselled wobbegong is a flat, well-camouflaged shark that sits motionless on the seafloor, waiting for unsuspecting prey to swim a bit too close. It is a member of the carpet shark family, named for their seafloor-dwelling behavior. With its blotchy coloration and the highly branched skin flaps that disguise its mouth and head, the tasselled wobbegong perfectly blends in to its surroundings on coral reefs along the northern shore of Australia and throughout the islands of New Guinea and Indonesia.
Tasks:
39. Read a book set in Australia.
40. Read a book where someone goes for a swim.

Tufted Titmouse

A little gray bird with an echoing voice, the Tufted Titmouse is common in eastern deciduous forests and a frequent visitor to feeders. The large black eyes, small, round bill, and brushy crest gives these birds a quiet but eager expression that matches the way they flit through canopies, hang from twig-ends, and drop in to bird feeders.
Tasks:
41. Read a book with a beard on cover. (The beard can be on a person or an animal. It just needs to be clearly recognisable as a beard.)
42. Read a book with a gray cover.

Puddingwife

The Puddingwife is a resident of all Mexican waters of the Atlantic Ocean including the Gulf of Mexico and the east coast of the Yucatán Peninsula in the Caribbean. Over the course of its life, it transitions from female to male, changing colour as it transitions from phase to phase. They reach a maximum of 51 cm (20 inches) in length. They have 2 pairs of enlarged canine teeth on their lower jaw.
Tasks:
43. Read a book with two people on the cover. (Not more, not less. Age/gender doesn't matter. Just two people.)
44. Read a book that is MPG LGBT/LGBTI or any variation thereof. (MPG Queer accepted as well.)

Slowpoke

Athetis tarda, or also known as the slowpoke moth, is a moth of the family Noctuidae. It is found in North America and its habitat consists of oak woodlands. The wingspan is 23–35 mm and they blend in quite well with their surroundings.
Tasks:
45. Read a book that could be considered slow. (This can mean various things for various people. Use your own judgment.)
46. Read a book set in North America.

Hellbender

Snot otters. Lasagna lizards. Allegheny alligators. With nicknames like these, you'd think the actual animal, a salamander more commonly known as a hellbender, would be a natural poster child for endangered wildlife. Instead, hellbenders live quiet lives tucked away under large rocks in the mountain streams of eastern North America, from Arkansas to New York. Ranging in color from mottled olive-gray to chocolate brown with rust-colored splotches, the nocturnal amphibians can easily be mistaken for rocks, if they're seen at all.
Tasks:
47. Read a book with a rock on the cover.
48. Read a book with a character who (usually) leads a quiet life.
Apr 10, 2023 11:44AM

88432 Part One

Tasks

Bony-Eared Assfish

The bony-eared assfish is actually a type of cusk-eel, an eel-like fish that resembles a glorified tadpole, with a bulbous head and a tapering tail. Like many other deep-sea creatures, assfish bodies are soft and flabby, and their skeleton is light and reduced. A lack of food and high pressure at depth may make generating muscle and bone difficult.
Tasks:
1. Read a book where someone doesn't ever seem to use the bathroom. (You know those books, where references to going to the bathroom or behind a tree are non-existent, even if they travel for weeks.)
2. Read a book with at least one ear on the cover. (It doesn't need to be a cover with just an ear. The ear can be attached to a person or even an animal. You just clearly need to able to see the ear.)

Penis Snake

The penis snake (Atretochoana) is the largest tetrapod to lack lungs, double the size of the next largest. Caecilians such as Atretochoana are limbless amphibians with snake-like bodies, marked with rings like those of earthworms. The skull is very different from those of other caecilians, giving the animal a broad, flat head. Its nostrils are sealed, and it has an enlarged mouth with a mobile cheek.
Tasks:
3. Read a book where someone owns or sees a snake, or where reference is made to a snake. (Let your imagination fly.)
4. Read a book a skull on the cover.

Common Cockchafer

The cockchafer is a type of flying beetle, growing up to 3 centimeters long and sometimes called a ‘doodle-bug’ or Maybug or Maybeetle. The name "cockchafer" can be understood to mean "large plant-gnawing beetle" and is applicable to its history as a pest animal.
Tasks:
5. Read a book that is not suitable for children.
6. Read a book set in May - or spring in general.

Pink Fairy Armadillo

The Pink Fairy Armadillo is the smallest armadillo species in the world. About the size of a dollar bill, it is a nocturnal creature from central Argentina. It isn’t actually a fairy, but it may be just as hard to study: It spends most of its life underground, and sightings in the wild are extremely rare. As a result, scientists know little about its population size or trends.
Tasks:
7. Read a book featuring a scientist.
8. Read a book with a pink cover.

Naked Mole Rat

There are many different kinds of mole rats. The best known is probably the naked mole rat, whose hairless, tubular, wrinkled body makes it appear a bit like a tiny walrus—or perhaps a bratwurst with teeth. Naked mole rats are rodents, but they live in communities like those of many insects.
Tasks:
9. Read a book where someone ends up (practically) naked (there can be a lot of reasons for this, be creative).
10. Read a book where someone lives in a community.

Sparklemuffin

Two stunning new species of peacock spiders were found in Australia in 2015. Pictured is the one named ‘sparklemuffin’ after the bright bluish and reddish stripes on its abdomen. It may look very cool, and have some of natures’ warning red on its abdomen, but the sparklemuffin isn’t one of the most venomous spiders around. Less than a quarter-inch long (five millimeters), male peacock spiders are known for their bright colors and a rolling-shaking mating dance that would make Miley Cyrus jealous. Check out the Skeletorus' colouring as well!
Tasks:
11. Read a book with a character who likes to bake.
12. Read a book with a blue cover.

Vampire Squid

Though it resembles both, the vampire squid is neither a squid nor an octopus. It is a unique animal that has been separated by scientists into its own group. Like many of its relatives, the vampire squid has eight arms and two tentacles. It does not suck or drink blood, and instead gets its common name from its dark color and the skin that connects the arms, resembling a cape. This species lives in the nearly completely dark waters of the mesopelagic zone.
Tasks:
13. Read a book featuring vampires.
14. Read a book with a black cover.

Mountain Chicken

The mountain chicken (Leptodactylus fallax) is not a chicken. It is a frog. Officially named the Giant Ditch Frog and locally known as a mountain chicken (for its large size and the fact that it is eaten for food), the mountain chicken is a frog that lives in Dominica and Montserrat.
Tasks:
15. Read a book where a characters lives in or takes a trip to the mountains.
16. Read a book with a green cover.

Ice Cream Cone Worm

Pectinariidae, or the trumpet worms or ice cream cone worms, are a family of marine polychaete worms that secrete a kind of glue from their glands that is used to stick sand and shell pieces together to eventually create a tube to live in resembling ice cream cones or trumpets. These structures can be up to 5 centimetres (2 in) long.
Tasks:
17. Read a book where someone eats or sells ice cream.
18. Read a book with a character who lives at or takes a trip to the beach.

Satanic leaf-tailed Gecko

The satanic leaf-tailed gecko is a nocturnal species only found in Madagascar, where it’s also known as the eyelash leaf-tailed gecko or the fantastic leaf-tailed gecko. The tail can be shed to trick predators. The gecko occurs in a variety of colors, including hues of purple, orange, tan and yellow, but is often mottled brown, with small black dots on the underside that help to distinguish it from similar species.
Tasks:
19. Read a book where a great deal of the story/action takes place at night.
20. Read a book with a red cover.

Fried Egg Jellyfish

Fried Egg Jellyfish, sometimes also called Egg-Yolk Jellies, are jellyfish that sport a smooth translucent bell that has an elevated yolk-yellow bell at the center. This distinctive bell is what gives this jellyfish their name, as it looks like a cracked egg or an egg sunnyside up floating through the water.
Tasks:
21. Read a book where someone eats or makes breakfast.
22. Read a book with a yellow cover.

Spiny Lumpsucker

All members of the Cyclopteridae family are called ‘lumpsuckers’. The ‘lump’ portion of their name relates to their looks of being a round lump of flesh. The ‘sucker’ part refers to the fish’s modified pelvic fins that act as adhesive discs so they can stick onto rocks and remain attached. Some species also have spines on them, leading to the full name of spiny lumpsucker.
Tasks:
23. Read a book where a character is considered to be attached to someone, or with a clingy character.
24. Read a book with a purple cover.
Apr 10, 2023 11:44AM

88432 April Mini Challenge

This is an optional mini challenge for our UNO players.

Part One

Some animals have (seriously) unfortunate names. We therefore did not want to inflict them upon you as team names. They do deserve attention as well however and that's where the April mini challenge comes into play.

You will be reading books for tasks relating to some less than lucky beasties - you will also get some photos and details on them for your pleasure.

◈ Every book read, i.e. every task completed, is worth 10 points.
◈ Each book can be used for one task only.
◈ Books for tasks can be finished in any order.
◈ If your team completes all the tasks, you get 30 bonus points.

Part Two

All those extraordinary animals used for team names. If you haven't done any exploring of the lovely pictures posted for each team, now is your chance! You will be reading books for tasks relating to the beasties borrowed for fellow teams - have a browse through the teams, if you haven't already done so, to get a visual on these spectacular animals.

For each team name, you can read two books, choosing two of the following options:

◈ Read a book with the entire name of the animal in title or text.
◈ Read a book with a part of the animal's name in the title. (This obviously doesn't work for all team names.)
◈ Read a book with a cover representing (any of) the animal's colour(s).
◈ Get creative! Find a way to connect your book to the team name / animal in some way.

For example:
For Team Honduran White Bat, you could have the following options:
1. You find "Honduran White Bat" in either a book's title or somewhere in the text. The entire name, not just a part of it.
2. You read a book with "white" or with "bat" in the title. Not in the text.
3. You read a book with a white cover.
4. You read a book that is set in Honduras, for example, as it is a Honduran white bat, and not a Slovenian or Chinese white bat.

Another example:
For Team Boatbill, you could have the following options:
1. You find "Boatbill" in either a book's title or somewhere in the text.
2. You read a book with either "boat" or "bill" in the title, as both parts of the animal's name are an actual word.
3. You read a book with a blue cover or with a white cover, for example.
4. You find a fabulous other connection - i.e. you're being creative.

◈ Every book read, i.e. every task completed, is worth 10 points.
◈ Each book can be used for one task only.
◈ Books for tasks can be finished in any order.
◈ If your team completes all the tasks, you get 30 bonus points.


The rest of the usual fineprint

◈ Books can be started at any point since the start of the UNO challenge (Feb 1).
◈ Books need to be finished after the start of this mini challenge on April 12, 9am UTC https://www.timeanddate.com/countdown... and before May 1 at 9am UTC (when UNO sadly comes to an end).

◈ Books used for this mini challenge do not need to be separate books from what you are claiming for your UNO hands.
◈ The usual book length rules apply.
◈ Team spreadsheets will be updated with a mini challenge tab so that you can track your books and claim your points.
Mar 26, 2023 10:33PM

88432 3d-fonts

Only books STARTED after the challenge begins can count.

April Countdown

April starts on Saturday April 1, 2023 at 9am UTC time. To see when this starts, use this Countdown
https://www.timeanddate.com/countdown...


****IMPORTANT!! DUE TO COUNTRIES MOVING TO/FROM DAYLIGHT SAVINGS, YOUR TIME MAY BE DIFFERENT FOR APRIL*****


Main cities, FYI:

Saturday April 1, 2023
San Francisco 2am
London 10am
Brussels 11am
New York 5am
Mumbai 2.30pm
Tokyo 6pm
Sydney 8pm

Check out other cities HERE
https://www.timeanddate.com/worldcloc...


Mar 11, 2023 08:29PM

88432 Questions?

Ask your captains who will check in the captains group
Mar 11, 2023 08:28PM

88432 Mini tab for spreadsheet: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
Mar 11, 2023 08:28PM

88432 Animals

Alaskan hare
In the summer, Alaskan hares have a brown fur coat with white under parts. In the winter, they have a white fur coat with black-tipped ears. They also shed their grey-brown summer topcoat, becoming all white during the winter. Also known as the tundra hare, the Alaskan is one of the largest species of hares and are basically solitary except during late winter. Their ears are short compare to most hares and their hind feet are large and fur covered to aid in movement over snowy terrain.

Arctic hare
In the Canadian regions of Newfoundland and southern Labrador, the Arctic hare changes its coat color, moulting and growing new fur, from brown or grey in the summer to white in the winter, like some other Arctic animals including ermine and ptarmigan, enabling it to remain camouflaged as the environment changes. The Arctic hare has large claws on all four feet, but the ones on its hind legs are unusually long, allowing it to dig into packed ice and snow and build a hole for protection as it flees danger and predators. It can also hop on its back legs like a kangaroo. In the winter, Arctic hares mostly live in groups, and in the worst cold temperatures, living in groups allows Arctic hares to huddle for warmth. This union also allows them to see predators coming up on them and elude them.

Chameleons
Mostly live in the rain forests and deserts of Africa and come in many colours such as pink, blue, orange and turquoise. Colour change signals a chameleon's physiological condition and intentions to other chameleons. Because chameleons are ectothermic, they change colour also to regulate their body temperatures, either to a darker colour to absorb light and heat to raise their temperature, or to a lighter colour to reflect light and heat, thereby either stabilizing or lowering their body temperature. Chameleons can move their eyes separatelywhich means they can see predators coming from behind them, giving them a chance to scarper if they’re about to get caught. Excluding their tail, some chameleons’ tongues can be twice the length of their body. Their tongues consist of both muscles and bones, and can bend round to grab their pray. The majority of chameleons survive by eating insects, and some complement this diet by feeding on foliage and fruits. Some larger species eat up to 50 large crickets every day. Others may be a little more carnivorous, and feast on small birds and even other, smaller chameleons.

Anoles
Native to the Americas, the majority of anoles (Dactyloidae) can change their colour depending on things like emotions (for example, aggression or stress), activity level, levels of light and as a social signal (for example, displaying dominance) from bright green to various shades of brown. They are tree dwelling lizards and most have enlarged finger and toe pads that are covered with microscopic hooks. These clinging pads, together with sharp claws, enable them to climb, even over a smooth surface, with great speed and agility. Anoles have venom glands that manufacture a very weak, harmless venom.

Peron's Tree Frog
Also known as the emerald-spotted tree frog, emerald-speckled tree frog, laughing tree frog, and maniacal cackle frog, is species of tree frog in the subfamily Pelodryadinae. Peron's tree frog is one of the most variably coloured frogs in Australia, with the ability to change colour in less than one hour. They don't like to be handled for long periods of time. They also vary in shades of grey and brown, where their lightest is almost white. The frog has mottled yellow and black thighs, armpits, and groin. Occasionally, emerald spots are found on the back, which increase in number with age.

Cephalopods
Can change their colours and patterns in milliseconds, whether for signalling (both within the species and for warning) or active camouflage, as their chromatophores are expanded or contracted. Although colour changes appear to rely primarily on vision input, there is evidence that skin cells, specifically chromatophores, can detect light and adjust to light conditions independently of the eyes. They camouflage themselves by creating colour patterns that closely match the underlying seafloor (hint: this means your book needs to have some kind of pattern as the cover colour). Cephalopods live everywhere in the oceans: near the shore in shallow water; far from land in the open ocean; in the ocean's dark middle depths (the planet's largest habitat); and in the deep sea. (hint: your location needs to be on water, unless you can find an author born at, or living at, sea) Cephalopods get their name from the Greek word “kephalópoda” meaning “head-feet”, because their arms encircle their heads. Both squid and cuttlefish are known as ten-armed cephalopods because they have eight short arms and two long tentacles.

Flower spiders
Also called crab spiders change their colour, usually to hide from their prey. Consequently, the spiders change colour to resemble the flower surface on which they sit through the reflection of light. Some spiders release a yellow pigment that enhances their color changing process. An example of a species of spider with such color changing features is Misumenoides formosipes and Misumena vatia. The color change from white to yellow takes 10-25 days. Hence, the flower spiders patiently wait for the completion of the process before they can attack their prey. They are small to medium size with colours of green, yellow, white, brown and grey. Most of them are not hairy except a few species. Their legs held in crab-like position and can move forward, backward or sideways. They are common in Australia and also found throughout New Zealand.

Golden Tortoise Beetle
Is a species of beetle in the leaf beetle family, native to the Americas. Adults can turn from shiny gold through reddish-brown. The color changes through its development, during mating, and during times of disturbance, such as when it is touched by a human researcher. This beetle consumes foliage of plants in the family Convolvulaceae, including bindweeds, morning glory and sweet potato. Both adults and larvae feed on foliage. These beetles play dead when disturbed.

Chrysso spiders
A genus of comb-footed spiders. has been introduced to Europe, and occurs both in North America and in Asia from Hungary to Mongolia. Many species are strikingly colored, but the coloration is variable. C. compressahas a striking black sternum and abdomen, but the venter of Brazilian species is black, while those of Peru are yellow. C. venusta has been observed to rapidly change its color when disturbed. Females are about 9 millimetres (0.35 in) long, and have blade-like hairs on the tip of the abdomen.
Mar 11, 2023 08:28PM

88432                         

Animal Colour Transformations! A March Mini Challenge

This is an optional mini challenge for our UNO players.

We have given you a list of 9 animals that can change colour. You can read up to 5 books per animal using the descriptions as inspiration.

◈ One book per animal must relate to one of its colours by reading a book with that coloured cover
◈ One book per animal must relate to its location by reading a book based in that location's country or with an author that lives, or was born in, that country.
◈ The remaining three books must relate to a characteristic of the animal in some way as per the description given - get creative!

Example
Animal - Arctic Hare
Description - In the Canadian regions of Newfoundland and southern Labrador, the Arctic hare changes its coat color, moulting and growing new fur, from brown or grey in the summer to white in the winter, like some other Arctic animals including ermine and ptarmigan, enabling it to remain camouflaged as the environment changes
Books to read:
1. Colour cover - could be a brown, grey or white cover
2. Location - could be based in Canada or by a Canadian author
3-5. Characteristic - get creative! Find a book with ermine in the text, where someone changes their appearance, buys a coat in a new colour, where an environment changes (e.g. flood/fire/war), where the book moves through the seasons of summer to winter etc.
   Note: You can use the colour cover or location a second time as a characteristic, but only one of these not both.


                        

◈ Each book read can only be used for one task.
◈ For each book read you receive 10 points.
◈ If you complete all 45 tasks, your team will receive 30 bonus points.
◈ Books can be started at any point since the start of the UNO challenge (Feb 1)
◈ Books need to be finished after the start of this mini challenge on March 15, 9am UTC. Countdown is here: https://www.timeanddate.com/countdown...
and before April 1 at 9am UTC (When the April month of UNO begins)

◈ Books used for this mini challenge do not need to be separate books for what you are claiming for your UNO hands
◈ The usual book length rules apply
◈ Team spreadsheets will be updated with a mini challenge tab so that you can track your books and claim your points
◈ The books you are reading for each animal MUST relate to the description given and not any other sources. (So, for example, reading a green cover for chameleon is not valid as green isn't given as a colour in the description).
Team Panda Ant (367 new)
Mar 04, 2023 12:39AM

88432 Hello again Team 🐼 🐜,

From now on Keri will be supporting you, Paula & Patti as another co-captain.

Happy Reading! 📚