Glein
Vaigarin Elder
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2021
- Messages
- 45
- Reaction score
- 15
Medusa Expanse - 011030:6 (Sirris II, Sanctuary System)
The Obsidian Wilds (Local Name: None Provided)
The trip to Orgar City had thus far, proven to be taking far longer than expected. This was primarily due to the flora which the convoy was having to fight it's way through to reach the city, as they were taking the directmost route there as opposed to following the already existing trails and roads. On most worlds, the terrain wouldn't be nearly as much of a problem since the vehicles that comprised the convoy were designed for extremely rough terrain in the worst conditions that Duskarian (and Hassani technically since some of it was that old of a design) minds could come up with for nearly any planet they found. What they hadn't bet on, was a forest that had seemed normal until they entered it four days after leaving the walls.
From afar, it looked like any other kind of forest that one could find in textbooks and on the many Duskarian colonies on other planets in the stellar region. But as the convoy approached, they realized that the trees just kept getting larger. And larger. And yet larger still. Soon they entered a forest that had trees large enough that their width was nearly the same as that of the vehicles the convoy was using. And were tall enough that they rivaled Obsidian City and Skylador's skyscrapers.
But it wasn't until the expedition managed to get into the forest proper that they encountered the real majesty of it all. The tree canopy here was so thickly woven together that it was like they'd all been plunged into night, with only the glow of luminescent mushrooms and other assorted flora like ferns and some grasses that kept it from being impossible to see with the naked eye. The headlights of course, helped matters, as did the spotlight someone hastily mounted onto one of the trucks so they could swing it around and look either side of the convoy and see what lay beyond.
Of course, the challenge that faced the convoy now, was that the root systems of all these behemoths of trees made traveling a very uncomfortable and extremely bumpy ride, when they were able to move the vehicles at all forward. As it was, the Pathfinder was busy talking with two of the security personnel while holding up a holographic display of the convoy's formation and pointing at it.
Elizabeth herself was sitting on the top of the lead IFV, her eyes steadily sweeping the forest around them. Sure, she had another cigarillo in her mouth, but this one was unlit and her hands were firmly holding the black powder rifle she had laid across her lap. They'd been in this forest for, by the Duskarian clock, 3 days now, and if the projections were correct, they'd made a whole of 20 kilometers of distance fighting their way through the trees and foliage around them. On one hand, this was exactly the sort of thing the expedition was supposed to learn and figure out. On the other hand though, it was almost disheartening to know that their progress could very well be this tedious in many more places, since this was considered 'truly natural' terrain, untouched by any kind of civilization in all of known history.
The Obsidian Wilds (Local Name: None Provided)
The trip to Orgar City had thus far, proven to be taking far longer than expected. This was primarily due to the flora which the convoy was having to fight it's way through to reach the city, as they were taking the directmost route there as opposed to following the already existing trails and roads. On most worlds, the terrain wouldn't be nearly as much of a problem since the vehicles that comprised the convoy were designed for extremely rough terrain in the worst conditions that Duskarian (and Hassani technically since some of it was that old of a design) minds could come up with for nearly any planet they found. What they hadn't bet on, was a forest that had seemed normal until they entered it four days after leaving the walls.
From afar, it looked like any other kind of forest that one could find in textbooks and on the many Duskarian colonies on other planets in the stellar region. But as the convoy approached, they realized that the trees just kept getting larger. And larger. And yet larger still. Soon they entered a forest that had trees large enough that their width was nearly the same as that of the vehicles the convoy was using. And were tall enough that they rivaled Obsidian City and Skylador's skyscrapers.
But it wasn't until the expedition managed to get into the forest proper that they encountered the real majesty of it all. The tree canopy here was so thickly woven together that it was like they'd all been plunged into night, with only the glow of luminescent mushrooms and other assorted flora like ferns and some grasses that kept it from being impossible to see with the naked eye. The headlights of course, helped matters, as did the spotlight someone hastily mounted onto one of the trucks so they could swing it around and look either side of the convoy and see what lay beyond.
Of course, the challenge that faced the convoy now, was that the root systems of all these behemoths of trees made traveling a very uncomfortable and extremely bumpy ride, when they were able to move the vehicles at all forward. As it was, the Pathfinder was busy talking with two of the security personnel while holding up a holographic display of the convoy's formation and pointing at it.
Elizabeth herself was sitting on the top of the lead IFV, her eyes steadily sweeping the forest around them. Sure, she had another cigarillo in her mouth, but this one was unlit and her hands were firmly holding the black powder rifle she had laid across her lap. They'd been in this forest for, by the Duskarian clock, 3 days now, and if the projections were correct, they'd made a whole of 20 kilometers of distance fighting their way through the trees and foliage around them. On one hand, this was exactly the sort of thing the expedition was supposed to learn and figure out. On the other hand though, it was almost disheartening to know that their progress could very well be this tedious in many more places, since this was considered 'truly natural' terrain, untouched by any kind of civilization in all of known history.