Summer 4, 516 AV
daytime
After the full-day ordeal that had been her mapping of Zintia Peak, it took Dust several days before she came back around to the project. Days full of anything but mapmaking. She remained excited about the project, though, so it didn't fade far from her mind, and at last she essayed out with kit and book in hand. Dust was determined to do something easier this go-round, so she trekked west across the city, through Zintia and Shinyama to the agricultural expanses of Sharai.
What could possibly be easier to plot than a mountain full of fields and hothouses?
After some dithering, Dust settled on a rise near the Okomo Villa for her base of the day. She then proceeded to watch the odd, glass-horned goat-creatures for several chimes. It was kind of tempting to shift and go play with this year's kids, bouncing rambunctiously around the fields. But! She was not going to get distracted today, no. That was the best way to get absolutely nothing done.
At last, Dust opened her book to her map of Zintia Peak, looking over the image in the clarity of morning light. It... had its flaws, she knew. But she still loved it. It was great. And now she would do another one... on the next page. The very blank next page. This page would have to contain both Sharai and Shinyama -- or at least that was her plan. Each of those peaks was a bit smaller than Zintia, and they were also less busy, so it should all work out okay.
Ink stick sharpened, her clothes set aside, Dust shifted to raven and took to the air, surveying the peak below. She wasn't too worried about the coastline, so ignored all that; the river would be good to mark, though. Of course, everything started with the boundaries which defined the peak's settled area. Those she laid out as she had Zintia's, contours checked, committed to paper with a light hand, and rechecked before moving on to the next one. The bridge she drew only halfway, the other end to be finished when she continued with Shinyama. Last came the river, whose exact path the Kelvic was less concerned about; enough to show it passed between the two peaks, and maybe a little closer to Sharai than its neighbor.
This map wasn't about rivers, after all.
Once the outline was set, Dust found herself free -- free to consider the whole rest of the terrain beneath her. She'd actually never tried to depict much in the way of terrain before, never mind the different kinds of fields which patchworked Sharai's slopes. There were pastures full of cattle, plus the okomo's particular spaces, fields and orchards open to the sky, and of course everything under skyglass. There were roads linking fields to barns, and fields to houses, and ultimately everything to the bridge in the east. The Okomo Estates would need to be noted as a landmark, at least collectively, and the Villa directly below her, because what was more important on Sharai than its special goats? Nothing, of course!
The roads and the landmarks would be enough to focus on for now. She tucked away the problem of landscape to mull over in the meantime.
daytime
After the full-day ordeal that had been her mapping of Zintia Peak, it took Dust several days before she came back around to the project. Days full of anything but mapmaking. She remained excited about the project, though, so it didn't fade far from her mind, and at last she essayed out with kit and book in hand. Dust was determined to do something easier this go-round, so she trekked west across the city, through Zintia and Shinyama to the agricultural expanses of Sharai.
What could possibly be easier to plot than a mountain full of fields and hothouses?
After some dithering, Dust settled on a rise near the Okomo Villa for her base of the day. She then proceeded to watch the odd, glass-horned goat-creatures for several chimes. It was kind of tempting to shift and go play with this year's kids, bouncing rambunctiously around the fields. But! She was not going to get distracted today, no. That was the best way to get absolutely nothing done.
At last, Dust opened her book to her map of Zintia Peak, looking over the image in the clarity of morning light. It... had its flaws, she knew. But she still loved it. It was great. And now she would do another one... on the next page. The very blank next page. This page would have to contain both Sharai and Shinyama -- or at least that was her plan. Each of those peaks was a bit smaller than Zintia, and they were also less busy, so it should all work out okay.
Ink stick sharpened, her clothes set aside, Dust shifted to raven and took to the air, surveying the peak below. She wasn't too worried about the coastline, so ignored all that; the river would be good to mark, though. Of course, everything started with the boundaries which defined the peak's settled area. Those she laid out as she had Zintia's, contours checked, committed to paper with a light hand, and rechecked before moving on to the next one. The bridge she drew only halfway, the other end to be finished when she continued with Shinyama. Last came the river, whose exact path the Kelvic was less concerned about; enough to show it passed between the two peaks, and maybe a little closer to Sharai than its neighbor.
This map wasn't about rivers, after all.
Once the outline was set, Dust found herself free -- free to consider the whole rest of the terrain beneath her. She'd actually never tried to depict much in the way of terrain before, never mind the different kinds of fields which patchworked Sharai's slopes. There were pastures full of cattle, plus the okomo's particular spaces, fields and orchards open to the sky, and of course everything under skyglass. There were roads linking fields to barns, and fields to houses, and ultimately everything to the bridge in the east. The Okomo Estates would need to be noted as a landmark, at least collectively, and the Villa directly below her, because what was more important on Sharai than its special goats? Nothing, of course!
The roads and the landmarks would be enough to focus on for now. She tucked away the problem of landscape to mull over in the meantime.
Common | Pavi | someone else