Archive | February, 2011

Please Explain The Differences In The Pippa Funnel Named Pc Games Versus The Horsez, Etc Series?

It is my understanding that the 4 Pippa Funnel based PC games, (titled in order as) The Stud Farm Inheritance, Take the Reins, Golden Stirrup Challenge, Secrets of the Ranch and Ranch Rescue, are also marketed (in order) as: Saddle Up With Pippa Funnel, Champion Dreams: First to Ride, Horsez, Horsez 2, Petz Horse Club. Perhaps they are not marketed as “the same”, for example, in different markets, but essentially they are the same games, some just feature the add in of a Pippa character. Can anyone confirm this for me? Also, does anyone have any thoughts on where to buy some of the latter Pippa games? Amazon does not have them and although I can select some PC games from Amazon UK for shipping to the US, the only Pippa games I can find link me to a “suitable shipping list” of sorts, stating that media such as video games are not allowed to be shipped to the US. The Ubisoft site only lists the first game and Lexis the first three. Thank you.

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Where The Pharaohs Chariots Of Fire Doused By The Red Sea?

Did the Pharaohs army even have half a chance?
“And the waters returned, and covered the chariots, and the horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; there remained not so much as one of them.” (Exodus 14:28)
A book by Cambridge University physicist Colin Humphreys titled “The Miracles of Exodus” supports not only the claim for an Aqaba crossing, but also the location of Mount Sinai in Arabia.
The hub that was found had the remains of eight spokes radiating outward and was examined by Nassif Mohammed Hassan, director of Antiquities in Cairo. Hassan declared it to be from the 18th Dynasty of ancient Egypt, explaining the eight-spoked wheel was used only during that dynasty around 1400 B.C.
The Bible account makes it clear that once the Israelites had marched through the parted sea on dry ground, that the waters rushed back to completely engulf the doomed army of ancient Egypt.
With that in mind, many of the items being seen in the Gulf of Aqaba have been photographed by divers for comparison to the Exodus story.
Speaking to WorldNetDaily from the isle of Gotland in the Baltic Sea, Moller, the author of “The Exodus Case,” says the key in finding the correct route of the Israelites is to understand that the Hebrew reference to “yum suph” does not mean “sea of reeds” as many scholars have claimed.
Moller says it refers specifically to the Gulf of Aqaba, and while he’s not formally affiliated with the Wyatts, he agrees with them that a host of other evidence can be found on the Arabian side of the water, including remains of the golden calf, pillars, altars and the even the rock the Bible says Moses split to bring forth water for the Israelites.
Regarding the items found beneath the waters, Moller believes there are remnants not only of chariots and wheels, but also human and animal skeletons.
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