it is in mulch island were you get the ice-cream
go to this website for the answers!http://binweevilgang.wordpress.com/sws-missions/mission-2/
Yes they eat alot though
In the Organizations to show their levels, which was the practice of Native Americans
An eagle is usually the animal that is on top of a Pacific Northwest totem pole. Totem poles have different figures such as legendary ancestors, animals and mythological beast carved into them that are called crests.
Not at all. Ancient Aztec and Ancient Mayan totem poles were carved from stone. Mostly limestone. They were used to represent Gods and tell stories of great battles. Ancient Koreans are also known to have carved small totem poles from stone, representing shaman-like Gods which they worshipped.
There is one given to you after meeting the hermit, the others are randomly placed throughout the island.
There's the Blocking Totem, Knowing Totem, Rainbow Totem, Hungry Totem, and the Pain Totem.
After you have placed the jewels back in the Nabooti totem, climb back on the blimp and select an island. (see related question)
Totem poles can have a wide range of meaning and therefore do not have a set order. Meanings vary as much as the artists who build them. Totem poles are not pieces of worship, in fact, they tell a story, clan legend, cultural belief or event. The order of animals was erroneously believed to be so significant that the phrase "low man on a totem pole" became popular, but only with non natives. Many poles actually have the most important figure on the bottom, while others are placed in the middle.
Shaman gain access to their totem spells at level 4 with Stoneskin Totem.
The plural form of "totem pole" is "totem poles." To form the plural, simply add an "s" to "pole," making it "poles," while keeping "totem" unchanged. Therefore, when referring to multiple totem poles, you would write it as "totem poles."
use totem attack