First of all, welcome to Dream Views! You seem to have read around a bit and learned a bit before you posted; thank you. I won't bore you with links to various 'newbie' areas of interest for now, since you seem pretty well-educated so far.
Congrats on remembering nine dreams, that's awesome dream recall already! Dream recall is surprisingly easy if you just set the intent to remember your dreams. That and laying in bed a few minutes before you get up, thinking about your dreams and back-tracing elements of them to earlier dreams of the night really is all there is to it. I find that by taking those few minutes to think on my dreams, it helps set them more firmly in my mind so that I don't promptly forget them upon waking up fully.
Now, for your questions:
As for your first, regarding connected dreams; this is pretty common I think. I have them often, but like Vex Kitten said, it can be hard to tell if they're actually separate dreams or just one long dream sometimes. Usually, though, I find that if I have a distinct feeling that they were separate, they typically were.
An impossible setting as a dream sign is only going to be reliable if you, constantly, in day-to-day waking life question your surroundings, and carefully inspect them for any discrepancies. I've learned to do this, and it's my standard method of becoming lucid. If I see a color that seems too vivid, or a brick out of place, or a cat with floppy ears, anything, I do a reality check. Usually the nose-hold, which I'll explain later.
An analog clock should work fine to do a reality check with, just remember to pay attention to the numbers; if you're dreaming they may not even be numbers, but weird symbols or letters. Of course also pay attention to the position--and number--of hands.
Yup, your usual reality check will work fine, just remember to do it as often as you can remember to. As I mentioned earlier, I prefer the nose-hold, which is exactly what it sounds like. You simply pinch your nose like you're going underwater, then try to breathe through it. If you can, in fact, breathe then you've got to be dreaming. It soon becomes reflex to hold your nose and try to breathe every time you see something a tad strange. I reality check if I see something out of place, something feels off (for instance, you're having a bit of an 'off' day, where it feels a bit dreamy (for lack of a better description)) or I just happen to remember that I haven't done one in awhile.
Hope this helps, and happy lucids!
-MoS
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