They attempted shoving boulders into the undergrowth but it was to thick so it didn't work
Then they set the forest on fire to smoke him out
The boys light the forest on fire to force Ralph out of his hiding spot, and they also use spears and try to flush him out by spreading out and attacking him from different sides.
Once Jack is certain that Ralph is hiding in the thicket he puts two different plans into effect. Firstly a boulder is levered from the top of castle rock and sent crashing into the thicket. When this fails to kill Ralph or drive him out of hiding Jack puts his second plan into effect. He lights a fire, hoping to smoke Ralph out of hiding, and unintentionally sets the entire island on fire.
One of the twins. Whether it was Sam or Eric, the book never really says.
a hiding spot is somewhere that you go to when you are playing hide and go seek
First, the question should read:How did Jews move to their hiding spot?Assuming the question is meant seriously, it is unanswerable.• Jews move the same way anyone else does.• Which Jews, where, when, and what sort of hiding spot?• Permanently move to a permanent hiding spot, or temporarily move to a temporary hiding spot?
Covering your face as in shyly hiding? In that case obviously because shyness hits their spot ;)
Ralph spotted a faint plume of smoke, from the funnel of a ship out at sea, on the horizon.
his hiding spot is in the lighthouse
Spot can be a noun and a verb. Noun: There is a spot on the floor. Verb: He spotted the child hiding behind the door.
Under the bed
Probably not. Attics tend to fall into one of two categories: "readily accessible", and therefore not really a better hiding spot than any other room in your house, and "unsafe", and therefore not a good hiding spot. Some manage to be both. Don't hide in the attic.
if u call a writing desk drawer a hiding spot then yes,she did have a spot p.s. u should see the movie "The Diary of Anne Frank" its sooo good and romantic but sad
the great american challenge