Arsuron Population: 158
River Camp: 50
Arsur Coast:43
Lotus Colony: 63
Technological Development
- Copper Working: 2/8
- Fire though Quicklime and Water: 1/5
- Dolphin Domestication: 1/10
- Papyrus: 1/4
The Arsur CoastIt was only a few weeks when the new traders from the Lotus Colony had arrived, bringing wooden built ships and the material itself to the people of the Homeland. As the traders, dressed in new clothes made from the various plants of the rain forest and the naturally red fibers of the bark of trees growing in the rain forest. In addition to this useful new material, the traders brought something tantalizing to the people of the coast. The bark of the natural rain forest trees had been ground into a fine dust and mixed with oils found in the various fruits of the rain forest. The resulting mixture was the red dust suspended into a thick red paste, that when spread upon the cloth created from the reeds native to the Arsur Coast, stained them to the bright red. This blood red dye quickly caught on in popularity among the Arsuron, though it was decided among the alliance elders that the dye would be restricted to a specific garment, the cloak donned by the Arsuron Warriors, in hopes that the bloody red would intimidate their enemies. ArHeg Yifenon, as it came to be called (Blood of the Lotus) was a relatively expensive product, costing at least 10 hand axes for a single bark cup of dye. However, wood was becoming important very quickly, with the standard price of a ships worth of wood being a single Dolphin's skeleton. The result was naturally a heavy increase in the hunting of the Dolphin, and the slow decline of the animal, with heards drifting farther from their homes, and entire sections of the sea becoming devoid of them.
A fisherman named Angos saw a solution to this, using the same method that the Arusron had to control fish and grow their population. Angos was to lead a group of fishers out to sea and find a pod of dolphins and capture several children of both sexes to be bred. When the dolphins were captured, he brother, a very knowledgeable aquafarmer would raise them, and create a sustainable population of dolphins for food and trade. That was the plan at least, and today Angos' fishers would depart and hopefully find what they wanted. On the day of departure, the ships left via a more northern path, to avoid the traditional "curse" that had a tendency to befall those who sailed from the southern shores; the chance of one's ship to burst into flames on the ocean. It was for a long time considered simply to be an action of Yi'am, a rule that the Arsuron were never to violate. But one Aruson became interested in just what it was that made the ships burn like this, and at sea non the less. He had often heard of the sands of this beach, how they seemed to be forever warm, the waters were always heated to just the right temperature so that one would never shiver when entering. This Arsuron was Anfen, and he was determined to learn how to make fire.
Upon journying south of the main camp, he found that the sand truly was hot, very hot, so hot that the groud was at times painful to stick one's toes into, and when he dug into the tightly packed sand, it just seemed to get hotter. The sand, the sand must be what is hot. Walking onto the shoreline, Anfen found that his wet feet also made the sand feel warm. Anfen took a full bark box worth of the sand from the beach onto his ship, and sealed it as tight as he could, before departing home, holding onto the precious sand.
With wood starting to take the place of reeds, many were trying to find uses for them. Often they would be stripped of their bark, to be woven into baskets. It was well known that dried reed bark created a tight basket that could be stowed away on a boat, but many were at a loss as to what to do with the soft fleshy parts in the center of the plant. Traditionally they were thrown away, but one day, a weaver forgot to do so, leaving the soft pieces to dry on accident. When she returned, the pulpy core was dried into a papery material, something light weight and clothlike. The weaver thought of what this might be used for, it did not look strong enough to be a basket material, but it might be useable for clothing, or maybe even as sails. She would try and weave the thin rectangular pieces into a cloth that all could use.
Toolmaker's centerThe toolmaker had been laboring tirelessly at the copper ore, shaping, bending, hammering the metal, and shaping the pieces. He had found that the stone could be hammered with a stone into very thin pieces, and twisted and bent unlike any other stone he had ever seen. His colleagues suggested that this could be used in hunting, that the bendable stone could be used to disable prey, to injure them and keep the spear lodged into the animal and recovered after the hunt, and bent back into shape afterwards. The tool makers would continue working with this material, and try and create spear and arrowheads in this stone. Another suggested hammering the edges of a long piece of this metal to create a blade, a blade that could be easily sharpened and repaired. Indeed, many experiments would be done.
Lotus Colony Lotus Colony had not just survived, but was thriving. The acquisition and trade of wood and dye was turning this former exodus into a rich piece of territory for the Arsuron. It was time, they thought, to spread. The Lotus Arsuron decided to explore the rivers, send 3 canoes each with two people down both of the rivers, and set up trading posts and get agreements with whoever they found. With all hope, it would bring in a great deal of wealth.
One group took the western river (
@Raindeer ,
@Shoggothought); another took the Eastern River (
@Diehard243)