In the Green zone, you need to eliminate all but one room. The remaining room is the place the thief stashed their treasure. Can you find it before the other Scout Patrols to win the Best Detective Trophy?
The Chinese characters carved on four posts of the bridge can be translated as:
Thicket water flower-garden; Chinese style ornamented bridge; Please enter, be amused, ramble; Heath, peace and wishes accomplished
But which position is this character in? Stand on the mainland (not the island) and look towards the bridge
The Morning Room is where a Victorian lady generally began her day. Usually, it was filled with light bright furnishings, the most important of which was a writing desk.
The Victorian era conservatory would have been used as both a place to sit in and somewhere to grow plants that couldn’t survive the harsher weather outside. It was the product of English love for gardening and new glass and heating technology.
A traditional Victorian kitchen would have been large, busy and constantly in use with three or even four large meals every day. The kitchen would be filled with servants doing all the cooking being done on a coal fired range.
A room dedicated solely to housing the private collection of books. With rows of dark wooden shelves and various soft comfy chairs; good for allowing whoever from the family to relax and read in. Victorians were avid readers, so it would have likely been a very well used room too.
Victorian dining and dinner parties were opportunities to elevate social class. They were formal affairs and considered the highlight of any social event. It became an elaborate art form that took planning and a great deal of attention to detail.
A Billiard room was a common feature of the upper-class homes at this time. Often decorated in dark colours, adorned with stag heads and even tiger skin rugs, these rooms conveyed elite masculinity, and were the retreat of the men of the house.