Tuesday, July 2nd, 2020 – Landsdrop

Tuesday, July 2nd, 2020 —> +19°C / +68°F —> grey & clouded over @ 7:30 am –

— Didn’t get a lot done in Aerendel yesterday – I did build a shelf support in the North-West corner of the office here and plopped the beginnings of a shelf there – from the support to the heavy grey desk top that still needs a bit of work and its own support – we’re planning on getting that at least partially accomplished today.

— This morning, so far – I watched Volffe work all around the borders of Landsdrop { West of Highland Forest, East of Absentia – North of ‘North-West Aerendel_02’ } – which got its designation way back when the refugees who ‘Discovered’ Aerendel began to explore – look for game animals, look for edible native plants – & look for decent places to build settlements beyond the limits of Aerendel City and away from the corruption that was already becoming a ‘thing’ in Birkenport.

- Landsdrop as of 9:23 am July 2nd, 2020 -

– ” Landsdrop as of 9:23 am – July 2nd, 2020.” – borders all worked on – creeks in place as far as the next ‘drop’ –

— Landsdrop got its name from the cliffs that drop to a nearly flat – open stretch of ‘prairie’ land – ‘Scientific’ types, even way back 5,000 years ago – wondered if the ‘drops’ were caused by earthquakes – or if they marked the farthest reaches of a huge glacier during the last ice age. { And we have a lot to do to ‘sculpt’ the land beyond the most major drop and redirect the ‘creeks’ that made the prairies the obvious choice of farmers way back ‘when’. }

- Volffe standing Night Watch on Lovers' Lookout Hill in Keltic Vale -

– “Volffe standing Night Watch on Lovers’ Lookout Hill In Keltic Vale.” – looking North and East toward Del-Vahria. –

— I think I hinted at the beginning of this article / post – That we didn’t get a heck of a lot done Yesterday – I think all that Volffe actually did – besides checking around for obvious catastrophes – was plant a lot of leafy ‘weeds’ among the summer grass on Lovers’ Lookout Hill. { He didn’t call them weeds – he called them local vegetation – which has been used for salad greens over the last 5,000 years. }

— And I have some real world ‘Schnarr’ to do, so I’ll post this now and maybe do some more later —>

~~~~~ Jim