Bindi's bucket. It's a bucket that is bigger on the inside and gives a province as its ultimate gift. Just my way to show that dr who's tardis can be embellished upon. Dr who's tardis/ bindi's bucket. Bindi could get you to go to a past province build the portal and do a task, then go to a province higher than the level you are on and do another task. Hence time travel.
Thanks for the explanation, although I should probably have phrased it more clearly, since your original post does indeed imply that Bindi's Bucket has the ability to employ spatial distortion, so that much was already clear. Let me try again:
Who is Bindi, and
why/how do they have the Bucket? I'm not trolling here - I really do want to know. I've tried searching the Net, but all that comes back is 'Bindi's Bucket List', which appears to be the homepage of an ordinary, non-time-travelling person who rescues dogs and posts about them online, and I'm sure that's not the Bindi you're referring to?
Anything can be taken and rewritten, the concept of time travel is not solely owned by the dr who corporation, nor is something that is bigger on the inside.
Very true, and as per Solomon via Ecclesiastes (which itself is anything up to six thousand years old, or even older, depending upon which historical expert you choose to rely upon), "there is nothing new under the sun". Shakespeare put it rather differently, i.e. "There is only one story in the world: boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl" (paraphrased). And it's virtually impossible to write any kind of
original fantasy fiction at all ever since Tolkien covered virtually every aspect of that subject in LOTR and his other works, although many authors and video game makers still try, of course. Unintentional plagiarism of already written ideas is the frequent bane of many authors, who genuinely don't realise that their work isn't original - although on the subject of sci-fi time travel, the first well-known (and thus often seen as original) work based on this topic is H.G. Wells'
The Time Machine, which pre-dates Dr Who et al by around a century or so... even though Wells, too, was far from the first author/mythologist to include the concept in their work. And on this note, as already asked above: where does Bindi fit in? Ancient myth, modern fiction, or...? I'm genuinely interested.
Maybe we could call it the Torch Wood (in joke for Doctor Who geeks).
... and/or Plants vs Zombies geeks, although the PvZ version of Torch Wood is quite literally a burning tree stump, so... not really the same thing!