Then ending of "Where the Red Fern Grows" is that Old Dan dies because of a Mountain Lion and was buried in the forest. Little Ann goes missing to find the grave of Old Dan and dies right next to Old Dan's grave because of grief. The family moves to the city where Billy purchases the two dogs with the money they acquired from the Coon Contest. Billy goes to the grave before they leave and noticed that a Red Fern grew between them. They go in the Ford Truck and leave for the city.
At the end of Where the Red Fern Grows, the protagonist's dogs die, prompting him to bury them together and create a memorial. This experience teaches him important lessons about love, loss, and the bond between humans and animals.
the climax of Where the Red Fern Grows is when Billy and his dogs win the coon hunting contest
When the mountain lion attacks Little Ann and Old Dan... the second time :)
Where the Red Fern Grows conclusion is aboutt billy and his dogs tryingg too winn thee huntt
Both of the full-grown puppies died and a red fern grew over their grave sites.
The climax of 'Where The Red Fern Grows' is when Billy wins the coon-hunting contest (:
I would answer you but it sounds like a school project you're working on so i'm not going to tell you HA!!
Way Back When and If I could only go back again
The dogs Old Dan and Little Ann die at the end of the book "Where the Red Fern Grows." Their deaths occur in the final chapters of the book when they encounter a mountain lion.
In "Where the Red Fern Grows," Billy's mother is descended from the Cherokee tribe. This heritage is mentioned as part of the background story of Billy's family in the book.
In "Where the Red Fern Grows," Billy refrains from killing the ghost coon because he feels compassion for the animal. He sees the coon as a noble adversary and feels a connection to it, ultimately choosing not to end its life out of respect for its wild spirit.
I know the audio has "damn" short for damnation several times. Two in in the scene where the little boy gives his money to his grandfather to order his dogs. I know there are others in the fight seen near the end of the book.
Billy was 10 years old when he went hunting for the first time in "Where the Red Fern Grows."
The main complication in "Where the Red Fern Grows" occurs when Billy's dogs, Old Dan and Little Ann, face dangerous challenges while hunting, leading to a series of trials that test Billy's determination and the bond between him and his beloved pets. These challenges include encounters with a mountain lion and a deadly blizzard.
Well, in the first chapter, he is an old man. He goes into his memories where he is ten. It takes two years to save up money, so then he is twelve. At the end, he is a teenager.
An example of imagery in Where The Red Fern Grows is at the very end ... When the Red Fern Grows! It represents the bonds of everlasting friendship in that it grows in the strangest places in the most beautiful of ways, just as how you can meet and make friends of similar quality. Hope this helped. :)
At the end of the book "Where the Red Fern Grows," Sandy McSouthers dies. He is Old Dan and Little Ann's previous owner who returns to visit them and ends up passing away peacefully after rekindling his bond with the dogs.
In the beginning of "Where the Red Fern Grows," Billy's main problems were feeling lonely and wanting to have his own hunting dogs, which his family couldn't afford. He also faced skepticism and criticism from others about being able to train hunting dogs on his own.
Kevin dies and Max grows up.