
for some reason i got this giant LPS toy dog that moves its feet, it could be like that. MOVEMENT AND JUMPINGt: tattletail could be made and under its feet is a little thing that allows it to hop or waddle, or just move its feet forward, i dont know much about toys like that but i do have a example. and you win!! ^ Brushing: i picture tattletail having much soft fur like a furby, but it can get messy, such as being rolled around, tripping, food inside fur, ect it will ask you to brush it as it sings while doing so, EGG: from time to time tattletail will drop the egg out of its department, then hide it somewhere and say "hide and seek!" to you, that means the game has begun, you must find the egg and bring it back to him. it will slide down a hole that activates the Mmmmm!! voice line, falling into a area where its made a egg. … I could make a miniature farm for my museum … maybe even a stuffed centipede.SIZE: the same size as tattletail, THE EATING MACHANIC: for it to eat there is a hole in its mouth, it cant consume giant things such as apples so you'll have to cut that up, or just give it a tattle treat :3. I also like the stories about when Jesus was a little boy and about when He healed people when He was older.”īack in her swing again, Satu lets her creative imagination soar. He serves as first counselor in the Tampere Finland Stake presidency.Īsked what she liked best about her Primary classes, Satu said, “Church history and stories about Joseph Smith. Raimo Merenluoto, the children’s father, manages a plant that makes mobile telephones. A color coordination consultant, she is also busy in the Church as a counselor in the Young Women program and as an institute of religion teacher. The children’s mother, Kaarina Merenluoto, makes their home a happy place.
Tattletail toy 1990 tv#
To help build the good feeling in their home, Satu and her brother earned an extra reward that was offered them by their parents for not watching any violence on TV for several months before Christmas. Satu has two brothers, Jukka (14) and Markuu (12). Satu, who has some cousins living in the United States, likes to play the piano, dance, sing, help her mother in the kitchen and outside in the yard and garden, and write to her pen pal in Estonia, a Soviet republic across the Gulf of Finland. And, as do many young Church members in Finland, Satu and Anna often stay overnight at each other’s home after all the Sunday meetings are over. When she isn’t swinging, she’s probably playing in the playhouse with her lifelong friend, Anna Haikkola, who lives nearby. Satu loves to swing on the rope and seldom seems to tire of it. Their backyard is shaded by a huge tree that has hanging from one of its high branches a thick rope that’s just perfect for swinging. The Merenluoto family lives in a secluded home on a landlocked island a short distance from Turku.


In a tiny museum in the basement of her playhouse, she displays other things that she has created. And hanging from a tree branch in the Merenluotos’ dooryard is a dandy birdhouse that Satu made for some lucky bird family. Her bedroom is a showcase for a collection of stuffed toys and creatures that she has made from scraps of material. Ten-year-old Satu Merenluoto, whose first name means “fairy tale,” shows a creative flair with everything that she does.
