Ah, virtual villagers are like little friends in a digital garden. Just like in nature, trees need time to grow and produce fruit again. Be patient and take good care of your villagers and their surroundings, and you may see those trees bear fruit once more. Just like painting, it's all about patience and gentle nurturing.
you just drag the villager to the trees and after a few tries they might do it automatically.
In "Virtual Villagers: The Tree of Life," to cook coconuts, first gather coconuts from the palm trees. Then, drag your villagers to the cooking pot, where they can use the coconuts to prepare food. Ensure that your villagers have the necessary skills, such as cooking, to successfully prepare the meal. Once cooked, the food can be used to feed your villagers and help sustain the tribe.
You can buy the farming tech if the villagers don't want to fish any more. Then they will get food from the cocount trees.
No, you have to plant them again. You can either buy the saplings from Nook's or plant a fruit to regrow a tree.
If you mean Virtual Villagers: The Lost Children, the only way to be able to harvest coconuts is to buy Farming level 2. Your farmers should start harvesting coconuts automatically, but if they don't, just drag them to the coconut trees like you dragged them to the ocean at the beginning of the game. Hope that helps :)
possibly, if it wants to.
Trees in the deciduous forest include oaks, maples, beeches, and birches. These trees shed their leaves in the fall and regrow them in the spring. They provide habitat and food for various animals, and their leaves contribute to the forest floor's nutrient cycle when they decompose.
get tech points and then tech up science to remove the rubble then put 4 hot rocks on it then go to the palm trees and get the leaves!!
fruit trees grow fruit and forest trees don't grow anything.
Fruit trees bear fruit while forest trees can or cant they just have to be in a forest. So fruit trees is a much narrower thing then forest trees.
Yes, fruit trees have the ability to regrow leaves after being eaten by deer. However, the regrowth rate and success will depend on factors such as the time of year, extent of damage, tree health, and growing conditions. Providing proper care and protection for the tree can help facilitate regrowth.
Trees that shed their leaves in the fall and regrow them in the spring are deciduous trees.