Finding Tolla’s Nemo in Second Life

Nemo, April 2025 – click any image for full size

Saturday, April 26th saw the opening of the latest addition to Tolla Crisp’s Frogmore / Witherwood Thicket estate (Tolia also holds Goblin’s Knob under the Frogmore banner, but that sits apart from Frogmore / Witherwood Thicket on the grid).  All three locations tend to be collaborative works by Tolla and landscaper Dandy Warhlol (terry Fotherington), and I’ve covered them on numerous occasions in this blog.

However, the new area is entirely Tolla’s own work, and has been causing no small amount of excitement in the Frogmore group in the run-up to it opening.

Nemo, April 2025

It is called simply Nemo, and it’s name should give away the fact that it is an underwater environment. In this it both stands apart from the Gothic mystery of Witherwood Thicket itself whilst perhaps also adding another chapter to that location’s enigmatic presence.

Whilst comparatively small in size when compared to the above water element of the region in which it sits, Nemo is by no means a quick, easy visit. There is rather more to be discovered than might at first be apparent from an initial cam-around on arrival (part of the setting are nigh-on a half-region walk from the Landing Point. It is also a setting rich in detail – and I really do mean rich; a casual hop-in / hop-out a waste of time – Nemo is a place to be experienced.

Nemo, April 2025

That said, it is also a place leaning heavily into the use of PBR materials. I’m not sure of Blinn-Phong fallbacks are provided (I no longer run any non-PBR viewers), so if you’re not running a PBR-capable viewer, consider this a warning that Nemo might not appear at its best for you.

In terms of design, the setting really does bring together a lot. Tolla has made superb and considered use of lighting, colour density, reflection probe ambience and animated mesh elements to give a real sense of being undersea. The sea floor is beautifully carpeted in a mix of swamp grasses and ferns, corals, seaweeds, sea anemone, trees and vines as to create the sense of a living, breathing ecosystem warmed by groups of fumaroles.

Nemo, April 2025

Within this environment, all manner of (largely tropical) fish swim, including clown fish. Turtles might also be found together with the odd shark – although his grin suggests he’s not into causing mischief – while jellyfish rise and fall. The Landing Point sit within a ruined structure, its arches suggesting it might have once been a place of worship – although given the Witch King styled statue standing to one side, one has to ask who or what might have once been worshipped…

It is actually one of several submerged structures to be found within the setting. some of these appear to be as equally old; others perhaps more recent, their wooden forms having yet to give in to the predations of water and salt. There is an intriguing mix of detritus and jetsam to be found. An old canon which might be indicative of a ship having come to grief here (and indeed, there is a partial wreck a short distance away) vies with the car from a Ferris wheel for the attention of local growths, the car also sitting close to part of a carousel, suggesting both might have been tossed into the sea intentionally.

Nemo, April 2025

Paths wind through all of this, leading to ruins and structures, caverns and corners as if in a natural maze. Paths are lit  by sunlight filtering through from above, the glow of phosphoresce from plants and from what might have once been aboveground lamps which sometimes share space with marble and stone statues. Rock walls also mark routs and divide these underwater gardens into more discrete settings.

With a name like Nemo, the “Finding” part (as I’ve used here) easily comes to mind – but is the setting really about fishy adventures? Sure, there are clown fish – there’s even one on his own waiting to be found. However, to consider the name a direct reference to the Disney / Pixar film (and its sequel) might be a mistake. There is another Nemo worthy of consideration here; one again the subject of the Disney treatment – albeit in live action format in his case, as embodied by James Mason (although he is far from the only actor to have taken on the role in question).

Nemo, April 2025

I’m of course referring to Jules Verne’s anti-hero, Captain Nemo, commander and designer of the marvellous Nautilus. The reason I feel the “Nemo” reference is more to him than a clown fish is simple: within the set it is possible to find Nemo’s Study, a very human retreat, albeit it now flooded. There is also a submerged library – and Captain Nemo was most certainly a learned man; while clown fish may have many gifts, I’m not convinced reading is one of them!

Of course, we’re all free to let our imaginations construct theories and stories to go with the setting – and leave us not forget, it does lie under waves that wash against Witherwood Thicket, as if the setting might once have been a part of that landscape. So perhaps there is a story there as well. But whatever paths our imaginations take, one thing is abundantly clear, Nemo offers a richly engaging visit.

Nemo, April 2025

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  • Nemo (Witherwood Thicket, rated General)

La Vie en Rose in Second Life

La vie Vn Rose, April 2025 – click any image for full size

There seems to be something of an unintentional French theme  within my more recent region visits, what with my reports on Les Secrets d’Albane, Sous les Oliviers and Jardin des Lys. It’s not that I’m actively seeking locations with French-inspired names and / or themes; it just seems to be the way that serendipity is pointing me.

Well, to a degree. Because while I’m here again I’m covering a location with a decidedly French name – La Vie en Rose (“life in pink”) and itself a most famous name, being the title of the signature song Édith Piaf (who wrote the lyrics) – it’s not entirely a matter of happenstance. It is the fact is it designed by Beautiful Requiem (BeautifulDisaster Requiem) on behalf (and with the assistance) of Rose Ulrik (Rose Siabonne), the names behind the beautiful (if now closed) Clef des Champs, which I’ve covered on numerous occasions in this blog.

La Vie en Rose, April 2025
Covering slightly less that a quarter of the area of the Full region upon (and over) which it sits, La Vie en Rose offers a choice of environments to visit – with some caution required in part.

The main Landing Point is within a sky platform. Open-sided to the sky, this carries with it memories of the pastoral, countryside feel of Chef des Champs whilst painting a picture all its own. It’s a place filled with details and little points of interest – some of which might be easily missed if one is not careful. It is located to the west of the setting and alongside a natural arch passing through a curtain wall of rock. Within this arch is a teleport disc providing access to the ground-level part of the setting with three destinations – Beach, Location 1 and Location 3.

La Vie en Rose, April 2025

The latter takes the form of a tropical setting with view out over open waters to the south and east.  Four rental properties line the eastern beach (Location 3 on the teleport disc’s menu) – hence the note of caution when exploring. However, the southern sands appear open to the public (Location 1 on the teleport disc’s menu), as does the inland lagoon, served by falls dropped from the parcel-edge cliffs and complete with its own beach. It’s an attractive setting, lending itself to a range of EEP settings, but I’m going to be focused on the sky platform in this article.

To the west of the latter, and under the rocky arch mentioned above, the path passes by way of a pool of water fed by waterfalls to run alongside a stream bubbling and splashing its way southwards, in a hurry to join with a larger body of water watched over by cypress trees and carpeted in lilies. The woods along this path offer various places to sit – with some reached via a log bridge slung across the stream. Wooden boards have been laid over rocks placed in the water of the pool so that it doesn’t end explorations, allowing people to reach the grasslands beyond, where the trail resumes.

La Vie en Rose, April 2025

However, before being too quick to follow the path past and over the water, when stepping under the rock arch from the Landing Point, take the time to look to your right. You’ll notice another archway, this one in carved stone hung with vines a short distance away. A Buddha sits in its shadows here, waiting to greet travellers and offer them the chance to discover the cavern lying within the arch and the secrets it holds.

For those who prefer the open grasslands in front of the Landing Point, these are also cut through with a track that loops around a rocky uprising to become one with the path leading outward from the large pool and its cypresses as it passes by a greenhouse like pavilion on its left, and a Tuscan-style pavilion to its right.

La Vie en Rose, April 2025

When travelling outward from the path from the Landing Point, it is possible to take a shortcut to the greenhouse pavilion by means of stone steps and passing through a broken gateway guarded by a wisteria tree. This leads to a path skirting another little body of water tucked neatly behind the greenhouse. Shaded by blossoming Sakura and fed by a waterfall of its own, this pool has an otherworldly feel to it, thanks to the carved stone of the broken gateway and the elven statue at the water’s edge.

Most of the westward end of the setting forms an open meadow bordered to one end by shallow waters. Here horses graze, birds fly and sing, and the grass and wild flowers grow pleasingly tall. The waters can be reached via a grassy path, or those who prefer can wander through the long grass, imagining their hands playing over the tops of the grass and flowers, perhaps pretending they are a field of wheat as Hans Zimmer’s Progeny from Gladiator plays through their head (at least it did with me!).

La Vie en Rose, April 2025

Part of the land here rising to form the hump of a little hill. Straddling it is a cosy little cottage open to the public. It is one of two houses in the setting, the second (also open to the public) sitting atop a plateau of rock. Neatly screened by trees, it is reached via a climbing up the side of the plateau, the path upwards commencing at the point of anther entrance into / out of the cavern I referenced earlier might be found. This second house sits within an extensive gardens also packed with detail.

Throughout all of the entire setting is a wealth of detail – can you spot the poker-play frogs, the houseboat riding the waters of a pond or the osprey with its latest meal? Outside of the little hilltop house, a loose deck offers comfortable armchairs, one of which has a book placed down beside it as if temporarily deserted while the reader pops inside the house – only for the breeze to come along and riffle through the book’s pages, flicking them with its invisible touch. Multiple places to sit and pass the time are waiting to be found, and wildlife large and small awaits snapshots from those so inclined.

La Vie en Rose, April 2025

Smaller than Clef des Champs, La Vie en Rose is no less as visually impressive, photogenic, and relaxing within its sky platform setting. It is more than worth a visit – and should you do so, don’t forget the ground-level beaches!

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A garden of lilies in Second Life

Jardin des Lys, April 2025 – click any image for full size

I received an invitation from Frank Atisso to visit the second of his public regions designs, which opened at the end of Easter 2025, following on the heels of Tide Haven, of which I wrote back in February 2025. The April 2025 design offers a similarly highly photogenic setting, but of a very different nature to Tide Haven.

Carrying the name Jardin des Lys – Lily Garden – the new setting is just that: a garden setting mixing formal and informal spaces built around a large main body of water festooned with blooming lilies lying serenely on its surface. Tall willow trees stand with heads bowed over the lake, boughs almost dipping leaves into the water as ducks swim by and an egret watches for careless fish.

Jardin des Lys, April 2025

The lake is supplied with water by falls on its northern side. It allows them to drift along its length, passing sweeping bays, a pavilion-topped headland and a lone flat rock of an island, before they finally exit the setting to the west.

Embrace the quiet elegance of Jardin des Lys — a lush, romantic escape where nature blooms in a harmonious melody of soft colours. 

– Jardin des Lys description

Jardin des Lys, April 2025

The Landing Point for the setting sits close to where the waters of the lake exit the region. It sits at the crossroads of paths visitors might use to explore the gardens. Immediately west of the Landing Point, a path leads to a tidy orchard, loosely-laid flagstones sitting between the trees. It appears some of the apples grown here are destined to be pressed and pulped for their juice – be it on its own for for cider: close to where the path strikes out towards the orchard is a table and cask where either juice or cider might be enjoyed.

A second short path leads south and through a picket fence surrounding a greenhouse and cloches. The former is now a cosy working space and the latter forcing tulips into growth and flower. A boat is tied-up at a little dock to one side of the greenhouse. Alas, it is not available for rowing out around the orchard headland and into the lake, bit does provide a place to sit and pass the time.

Jardin des Lys, April 2025

To the north, the path climbs a small plateau overlooking the lake. After meandering over the plateau and past the gazebo built there, it climbs back down via a stone stairway to head east and then turn north, offering a route to explore all the wildling garden the setting offers. This route includes passage to the the pavilion mentioned earlier, before passing over a little bridge alongside the northern waterfalls to reach the setting’ more formal gardens.

The latter – proudly displaying the date of their founding, 1873, in wrought iron over their main entrance, can be most quickly reach by heading due north along the final arm of the path at the Landing Point. The French theme of the region is continued here courtesy of  central statue of Napoleon I in horseback, possibly following his return to France following his first exile.

Jardin des Lys, April 2025

Around the central terrace on which Napoleon stands, the gardens are formally laid out into a series of spaces divided by a grid of paved paths. Reproductions of famous statues border the gardens, including Canova’s Venus Italica, commissioned by Napoleon, and version of the Borghese Gladiator and The Antinous Farnese, all of what present a mix of Greco-Roman inspiration. These gardens offer more places to sit – there are number of such spots spread across the region as a whole – , and provide access to two further buildings.

On the north side of the gardens, on the far side of the gateway leading into from the Landing Point, sits a conservatory which might have been built in Napoleon’s time, and is now the home of a tea house.

Jardin des Lys, April 2025

On the east side of the gardens, meanwhile, a narrow causeway rich in blooming roses and along which parallel lines of old power poles march, reaches out over the water to touch the octagon of large pavilion with glazed windows. It is of a style in which one could easily imagine a young Napoleon having an assignation with his mistress (later wife), Marie-Rose de Beauharnais (aka his beloved Joséphine) – the telephone and powerlines notwithstanding!

Throughout all of this Frank has, with the assistance of Vitoria Galli, filled the region with captivating detail, all the time taking care to ensure everything comes together in a perfect union. Nothing looks out of place here, and the various parts of the setting flow one to the next in an eye-pleasing and heart-warming grace and naturalness; Jardin des Lys is a place in which one can instantly feel at peace.

Jardin des Lys, April 2025

When visiting, I would strongly recommend using the Shared Environment, as this casts  the setting in the pink promise of a new day dawning, a hazy mist floating across the gardens and waters adding a glazing of mystery to the setting. Enjoy!

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Sous les Oliviers in Second Life

Sous les Oliviers, April 2025 – click any image for full size

Ely (Elyjia Baxton) keeps herself busy! It was just back in January when I wrote about her (then) recently-opened Full region design entitled After the Rain. It was a delightful place to visit and wander, and I was happy to add it to my growing list of articles on her region designs. However, After the Rain has now gone, and in its place has sprung Sous les Oliviers (“Under the Olive Trees”).

As the theme of Tuscany, Sous les Oliviers is a place to relax, explore, or simply admire the view. Sous les Oliviers is the ideal retreat. Every nook and cranny is designed to offer you an immersive and soothing experience, away from the hustle and bustle.

Sous les Oliviers About Land / Destination Guide description

Sous les Oliviers, April 2025

Whilst stating – and primarily displaying – a Tuscan theme in terms of architecture, the setting carries broader European themes within it. There is, for example, its very French name, coupled here and there with signage on walls. The local open-sided chapel bears the Spanish name Parroquia des St. Maria de los Caballeros – Parish of St. Mary of the Knights, as it sits on its own little island, and the windmill almost overlooking the chapel (but for the intervening olive tree!) is perhaps atypically Tuscan in styling, and would look equally at home in, say France or England. There is even a little touch of Americana waiting to be found!

This is not in any way to complain; rather it is to note that Ely cats a wide net in the creation of Sous les Oliviers, and the catch she brings forth offers a delightfully rich study and setting for people to enjoy.

Sous les Oliviers, April 2025

The landscape is, for the most part, flat and cut through with waterways which break it up into island-like masses of differing sizes. This in itself is suggestive of low-lying wetland as might be found elsewhere in Europe rather than being specific to Tuscan. Say, for example, the Netherlands or England’s fenlands to name but two. This further enhances the setting as being a place of the imagination, rather than having firm roots in the physical in terms of location.

The waterways are in part fed from waterfalls dropping from the western border of the land.  These separate Sous les Oliviers from the neighbouring Loulou. However, a path leading to their mid-point and the gates to be found there suggest the two regions will be linked; but at the time of my visit, Loulou was under reconstruction and so closed to public access.

Sous les Oliviers, April 2025

Most of the landmasses making up the setting have structures on them, the majority of which are distinctly Tuscan in styling as noted. One the houses on the lowlands artificially elevated above the land on which it sits, suggesting there is a risk of flooding that had to be countered. The large, raised terrace of this house sits as a place where live music might be enjoyed.

No such protection is required for the houses to the south of the setting; they sit elevated as the land naturally rises. They also overlook a cliff-sided, rocky cove. One of the villas here sits before tidy rows of vines, together with large casks, suggesting it is a home to local wine or sherry production, if on a modest scale. The presence of bee hives might also hint at a little mead might be on offer as well!

Sous les Oliviers, April 2025

A little eastward from this villa, the land rises further, passing by way of an old stone-built cabin with steps down to the cove, to reach a large, flat-topped table of grass. This is home to both a large villa and a pool of deeply blue water suggestive of great depth. The pool feeds two streams which further add to the setting’s waterways, the first sitting at the foot of sheer waterfalls dropping away from one side of the pool, and the second being more of a bubbling brook dancing and bouncing away from the opposite side of the pool, as it tumbles down the slope to the waters below.

As one might expect, multiple bridges help connect the various parts of the landscape together, allowing visitors to wander from place-to-place without getting their feet wet. The Landing Point sits mid-way between the lowlands and the upper highlands in terms of elevation, and alongside one of the aforementioned streams as it tumbles down waterfalls from the large villa. A paved footpath gets arrivals started on exploring, running as it down south towards the local beach or north down to the lowlands proper, where a choice of routes to follow awaits.

Sous les Oliviers, April 2025

Wherever you wander, however, there is plenty to enjoy. The landscape is  – as one would expect – entirely natural and flowing in its look, rich in grasses, flowers, trees, and lots of little details. Runs of sand offer miniature beaches, deckchairs and benches offer places to sit outdoors, gazebos and pavilions offer both the opportunity to sit and also to break bread or enjoy a meal. Lavender fields alongside the windmill dash the land with deeper purple, and so much more.

About the only places where feet might get wet is in taking a wade through the waters to reach the chapel on its little isle or to reach that of the local lighthouse. However, as the latter sits on the shoulders of rocks which appear intend on rebuffing visitors from climbing them and leaving only the sands at their feet as an easy visit, then the lighthouse is perhaps better appreciated from the other sides of the waters!

Sous les Oliviers, April 2025

In all, a delightful – as ever – setting from Ely, and one highly recommended as a place to visit.

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Albane’s Secrets in Second Life

Les Secrets d’Albane, April 2025 – click any image for full size

I’ve often said that to create a special place in Second Life other people might enjoy doesn’t actually require holding an entire region – Full or Homestead. It’s not even necessary to have a half or even a quarter of a region; beautiful little spaces can be created almost anywhere.

Not only have I said this but over the years I’ve delighted in visiting such corners, whether as a result of discovering them through the Destination Guide or by referral or simple serendipity or personal invitation.

Les Secrets d’Albane, April 2025

My latest discovery came via the Destination Guide in the form of Les Secrets d’Albane (“Albane’s Secrets”), a beautiful little garden tucked among the lakes of the Moon region of Sanara.

It’s a place created by Albane Claray, a landscape artist and the vision behind the of Village de Roqueblanche, and which I visited and wrote about in 2022. As a public space, Les Secrets d’Albane is truly tiny – just 3280 sq metres of land caught in the arms of two of Sansara’s roadways. But as the saying goes, small it may be, but it is perfectly formed.

Les Secrets d’Albane, April 2025
[The] Whisper of the wind in the trees, the scent of flowers. The friends corner, gossip with no tomorrow. At the crossroads of our lives.

Les Secrets d’Albane About Land description

Visits commence at the entrance to the garden, and a detailed description really is not required; the setting clearly speaks for itself; simply follow the path through the garden to the caravan and decide where you want to go from there.

Les Secrets d’Albane, April 2025

You might, for example, opt to sit outside the caravan and enjoy tea and cake, or slip inside and enjoy a game of chess from the sofa or sit at the windows and look out over the gardens. Or there’s the board game set-up outside and the reading nook and fountain further along the path.

For those who prefer, there’s a waterside area and also a boat on the water where time might be spent. My one minor niggle here is that, with a little linking to help free-up some LI, a hedge or ivy-covered wall could be placed between the road it it sits alongside the road, might help increase the sense of peace and beauty within the garden.

Les Secrets d’Albane, April 2025

However, such a niggle shouldn’t be taken to mean the garden is in any way spoiled. With its richness of colour, blossoms, flowers and attention to little details, Les Secrets d’Albane is entirely pleasing. Despite its small size, the places to sit and pass the time are spread far enough apart to give a sense of privacy when more than one couple (or individual) is visiting the garden and wish for a little peace and quiet.

An altogether delightful visit, and ideal for those seeking relaxation and  / or the opportunity for personal photography. Don’t forget that should you also fancy a visit to Village de Roqueblanche, you can do so via the teleport board outside the caravan trailer.

Les Secrets d’Albane, April 2025

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Pususaari: romance and kisses in Second Life

Pususaari, April 2025 – click any image for full size

Recently added to the Second Life Destination Guide is a Homestead region setting by SL couple Lu and Leelou Von Perkle (Lu Carrillo and LeeLou Graves respectively). Called simply Pususaari, its engaging description was enough to have me hopping over to take a look:

Pususaari is a little island made for kisses and quiet smiles. Wander through meadows, chase the sunset, whisper secrets by the sea, get lost in a moment, discover, cuddle, or dance under open skies. For lovers, dreamers, and quiet explorers.

– Pususaari Destination Guide entry.

Pususaari, April 2025

I have no idea as to the inspiration behind the setting – whether it simply draws its name from Pususaari (roughly “Pusus island”) on lake Puruvesi, Findland, or has been so-named in memory of a visit to that tiny island, or the similarities in the naming of both islands is just coincidental.

On the one hand, Lu’s physical-world time zone suggests he might hail from Finland and thus aware of the physical world location, and there is something of a similarly between the two islands in as much as they both have their greatest length running along a south-east / north-west line. However, whether there is any strand of a link between the two is rendered largely immaterial by the rugged beauty and sense of peace to be found within Pususaari in Second Life.

Pususaari, April 2025

It is towards the south-eastern end of the island that the Landing Point is to be found. It sits on a deck built out over the coastal waters and alongside the island’s southern headland. The latter rises behind the café occupying a good portion of the deck, perhaps offering it shelter from any harsher weather that may pass over the island. A broad arc of beach stretches north and west, its southern extent not quite reaching out to the deck and the café,  so a wander along a raised boardwalk is required to reach the sands with dry feet.

From this beach, the island might be split into six distinct area suitable for exploration. Directly east of the boardwalk steps, the sands lap at the foot of a grassy slope deeply scored by water run-off channels rises to the top of the southern headland’s large plateau. It thus offers a way up over the plateau to the eastern shoreline or, for those fancying a further climb, up the summit-topping lighthouse sitting at the tallest part of the island.

Pususaari, April 2025

Separated from this plateau by a deep cut of an inlet lies another east coat highland area. Rivalling the lighthouse summit in terms of its highest point, it is reached by leaving the beach and striking out across the meadow that forms the central lowlands of the island.

The path upwards here is via another grassy slope with signs of heavy rain water run-off over the years, and which reaches up between two bony shoulders of rock to reach a rough path. This winds through a wooded area atop the hills before it splits, one arm dropping down to the north-east coast occupied by a cosy little holiday shack, the other pointing to a further grassy climb running up to the spine of these uplands, forming the route up to the high tree.

Pususaari, April 2025

Across the meadow to the west, the land is equally divided, stony, rocky lowlands to the south sitting under two further shoulders of rock. Water drops from one of these shoulders to a pool of water below, while atop the other, and reached via a further sleep slope between them, sits a large windmill. Finally, to the north across the meadow to the north is a further ribbon of beach running from the north-eastern highlands to the lee of those to the west, where a Tuscan-style villa sitting within their lee.

Throughout all of these areas are places to sit an spend time, be it within little shacks hugging the east coast, wooden chairs sitting on the rough-and-tumble lowlands beneath the waterfalls, little spots on the beaches or up up among the hills or in and around the villa and / or the café. All of them present a variety of views and encourage visitors to stay and let the time pass without worry, with some requiring a bit of a climb – as with the bench under the gnarled tree mentioned above, or the ruined clock tower sitting high above the villa; all of them offer their own destination within the various parts of the landscape.

Pususaari, April 2025

Rich in detail large and small, indoors and out – including local animal life (wild and domesticated), Pususaari  lives up to its description fully: a place caught under an ideal shared environment, offering plenty of opportunities for photography, romance and simply wandering pleasure; even the default region name – Bisous – is perfect.

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