02-03-2021, 23:12:00 PM
Step one: William has no need for tools, aside from a shovel and a screwdriver! However, he does need some long iron rods, some chicken wire, and a huge slab of metal, with some hinges strong enough to support it.
Step two: William summons enormous silver bars with spikes at the bottom, and also some long iron rods and chicken wire.
Step three: William then drives the silver spiked bars into the ground, using his gold cross as a hammer, to create a ring around the dodo area. He then takes the iron rods and bends them so that they can be neatly wrapped around the dodo enclosure's silver bars, creating something that looks like a wire birdcage, but scaled up to accommodate dodos. He also puts chicken wire inside the enclosure to prevent the dodos from escaping through the gaps in the bars. He then installs the door, after bending a long rectangular bar of silver into a frame.
Step four: He then uses his great strength and stamina to dig a moat around the enclosure, in which he puts solid gold spikes, because bimetallism is important, even in construction. Across that, he puts a bridge made of the moved dirt from the moat, leading to the door. He then uses six of his electoral votes to make a system where only someone accompanied willingly by employees from two regions of the park can open the door, by voting, to prevent poachers from entering the enclosure.
Step two: William summons enormous silver bars with spikes at the bottom, and also some long iron rods and chicken wire.
Step three: William then drives the silver spiked bars into the ground, using his gold cross as a hammer, to create a ring around the dodo area. He then takes the iron rods and bends them so that they can be neatly wrapped around the dodo enclosure's silver bars, creating something that looks like a wire birdcage, but scaled up to accommodate dodos. He also puts chicken wire inside the enclosure to prevent the dodos from escaping through the gaps in the bars. He then installs the door, after bending a long rectangular bar of silver into a frame.
Step four: He then uses his great strength and stamina to dig a moat around the enclosure, in which he puts solid gold spikes, because bimetallism is important, even in construction. Across that, he puts a bridge made of the moved dirt from the moat, leading to the door. He then uses six of his electoral votes to make a system where only someone accompanied willingly by employees from two regions of the park can open the door, by voting, to prevent poachers from entering the enclosure.
I am the They who says it!