With his fight against a giant octopus nearly having cost him his life, Solmar had been able to take solace in the fact that he had come out of it alive. More than that, he had come out of it while having earned the trust of the Kappa of the western coast. Because of his struggle to kill the creature and how it had caused it to no longer pose a threat to the Kappa, he had at the same time brought them a new, albeit temporary source of food that just might last them an entire week. Shortly after, he had taken a team of four along with him to forage and bring in alternative sources of food, which was highly needed due to how they were no longer able to survive on their regular source of food. Thanks to Cedar's overfishing of the water so their fishing communities could thrive, the Kappa had been driven into a state of near-famine. But with the death of the octopus that was preying on them and an influx of apples from the forest above their caverns, they were starting to get back on their feet.
Before Solmar had gone down in one of the tribal tents belonging to the Kappa villagers, he had taken the liberty of speaking to the leader. Claiming that he thought it wise if the Kappa started building something of an outpost near the surface entrance to their underground dwellings, he believed that from there, they would be able to send out foraging teams more effectively. Seemingly agreeing with Solmar, the Kappa leader told him to get some more rest and regain some of the strength he had lost. While it had not at all been his intention, he had slept for the next twenty four hours after that. Apparently, the fight with the octopus, the hike through the caverns and teaching the Kappa foragers which types of food were edible or not had taken far more out of him than he had been willing to admit. So when he woke up, got dressed and left his tent, he was somewhat startled by what he saw, rubbing his eyes a bit in disbelief.
Seeing several groups of Kappa being assigned different roles, it seemed that a large portion of the village tents had been broken down for resources and were being carried up towards the exit leading into Sakuramori. Trying to find the leader of the village, Solmar started hiking through the caverns, noticing far more activity within those regions than there had been in the days leading up to today. Probably being because they could eat their fill in the last day and upcoming days, the workers seemed to be far more energetic, which was truly a good thing. By the time Solmar found the leader, he saw how he was instructing the others to start building up tents in the area directly surrounding the cave exit. When several Kappa brought in wood from outside, he saw how resourceful they were when they started working the trees they brought down and turned them into beams with which they were building a crude type of gate and watch post. Watching all of it unfold, there was one thing he knew for sure.
He had overestimated how much these people needed him. While it was true that he still needed to teach them more about the local flora, as in which types would be edible and which had to be avoided at all costs, what he did not need to help them with was building. From the looks of their tribal huts, it seemed like they had never worked with wood before, and that was most likely true. However, their resourcefulness had allowed them to quickly adapt to working with this newer and more sturdy natural material, one of which the forest had plenty. What made the young mage feel better about the cutting of the trees was how much these people seemed to care about nature, making use of every single piece of wood they had brought down. Using the bark for makeshift pieces of armor, drying the leaves to use as tinder, using the thicker sticks in order to make crude spears and more, Solmar remembered one of the things he wanted to do with these people at some point.
Though now was not yet the time for it, he went through the gate that was still in progress in order to get some clean forest air into his lungs, something he really ached for after spending two days down in a damp cavern. As he did, he heard something approaching, gliding through the air towards him. Turning his head, a small white feline bumped into his chest, hugging him tightly after not having seen him for almost a week. Knowing the white fur ball to be Fellis, Solmar hugged him back as tightly as he could, finding it hard to believe that things had happened this way. Having already started to believe that he might never see the cat again, Fellis brought about a rather interesting story for him. Telling Solmar that he had gone to where they had agreed to meet, Fellis had gotten lost and arrived a day late. Starting to follow his scent from there on, the feline had been all over the place as Solmar had not exactly been standing still while he waited for Fellis to get back to him.
Doing one job after the other, Fellis arrived everywhere just a little too late to actually find the mage, a feat which became that much harder when Solmar went down into the Kappa caverns for a day or two. When he could not find Solmar in any of the spots he frequented, he just started flying through Sakuramori every couple of hours, hoping to catch his scent or spot him from above. While he did, he had come across other people who had been going through the forest in hopes of, believe it or not, finding Solmar. Being a group of people that had invested money in the group that had Solmar putting Sakuramori's dangerous zones onto the map, they were from a preservational society. Claiming they needed Solmar's expertise with a task that they were willing to pay quite a lot for, Fellis had taken the written agreement from them for Solmar to read, if he ever found him again. And now that he did, after an extended hug, he gave him the pieces of paper that had been bestowed upon the flying cat.
Reading that the preservation society had come to find that there was an overabundance of deer and pike within the forest, they needed someone capable to trim down their numbers. Getting into the letter further, he encountered a pair of documents, one for each species. Stating numbers in great detail, it was added that too many deer meant that a lot of young saplings would not get the chance to grow, shrubs and plants would get decimated and grass would get shortened. This took away the hiding spaces for smaller animals such as rats, rabbits and mice, who became targets for falcons and other predatory birds, mammals and reptiles, thus causing their numbers to dwindle if left unchecked. More than that, it also meant that the forest would not get to renew the amount of trees that got logged in the regions closer to the human towns and settlements. As for the pike, they were hunting and killing too many of the species of frog, salamander, fish and aquatic mammals. Apparently being responsible for eviscerating species that lived in the ocean but laid their eggs inland in fresh water, they were also put on the list.
While Solmar was more than willing to help out, the sheer number of deer and pike he would need to kill seemed daunting, not to mention senseless as he had no use for them. But that was when one of his older ideas got sparked. If he did things the right way, he could use this as a means of teaching the Kappa more about spending their lives on dry land, as well as how they should be living off of said land. Running back into the cavern, he discussed with the leader of the Kappa how he had been given a task that required him to kill quite a bit of animals, which meant a lot of pelts and meat if they were to aid him. Claiming that he would be able to teach a small group of them how to hunt properly, the Kappa leader gave Solmar a couple of fit aquatic folk that he could spare from the construction activities. Arming them with some of the crude spears they had made from the leftover branches, Solmar took the three of them with him and headed into the forest along with Fellis. Using Fellis to scout the area ahead of them, he sat down with his followers.
(1500)
Before Solmar had gone down in one of the tribal tents belonging to the Kappa villagers, he had taken the liberty of speaking to the leader. Claiming that he thought it wise if the Kappa started building something of an outpost near the surface entrance to their underground dwellings, he believed that from there, they would be able to send out foraging teams more effectively. Seemingly agreeing with Solmar, the Kappa leader told him to get some more rest and regain some of the strength he had lost. While it had not at all been his intention, he had slept for the next twenty four hours after that. Apparently, the fight with the octopus, the hike through the caverns and teaching the Kappa foragers which types of food were edible or not had taken far more out of him than he had been willing to admit. So when he woke up, got dressed and left his tent, he was somewhat startled by what he saw, rubbing his eyes a bit in disbelief.
Seeing several groups of Kappa being assigned different roles, it seemed that a large portion of the village tents had been broken down for resources and were being carried up towards the exit leading into Sakuramori. Trying to find the leader of the village, Solmar started hiking through the caverns, noticing far more activity within those regions than there had been in the days leading up to today. Probably being because they could eat their fill in the last day and upcoming days, the workers seemed to be far more energetic, which was truly a good thing. By the time Solmar found the leader, he saw how he was instructing the others to start building up tents in the area directly surrounding the cave exit. When several Kappa brought in wood from outside, he saw how resourceful they were when they started working the trees they brought down and turned them into beams with which they were building a crude type of gate and watch post. Watching all of it unfold, there was one thing he knew for sure.
He had overestimated how much these people needed him. While it was true that he still needed to teach them more about the local flora, as in which types would be edible and which had to be avoided at all costs, what he did not need to help them with was building. From the looks of their tribal huts, it seemed like they had never worked with wood before, and that was most likely true. However, their resourcefulness had allowed them to quickly adapt to working with this newer and more sturdy natural material, one of which the forest had plenty. What made the young mage feel better about the cutting of the trees was how much these people seemed to care about nature, making use of every single piece of wood they had brought down. Using the bark for makeshift pieces of armor, drying the leaves to use as tinder, using the thicker sticks in order to make crude spears and more, Solmar remembered one of the things he wanted to do with these people at some point.
Though now was not yet the time for it, he went through the gate that was still in progress in order to get some clean forest air into his lungs, something he really ached for after spending two days down in a damp cavern. As he did, he heard something approaching, gliding through the air towards him. Turning his head, a small white feline bumped into his chest, hugging him tightly after not having seen him for almost a week. Knowing the white fur ball to be Fellis, Solmar hugged him back as tightly as he could, finding it hard to believe that things had happened this way. Having already started to believe that he might never see the cat again, Fellis brought about a rather interesting story for him. Telling Solmar that he had gone to where they had agreed to meet, Fellis had gotten lost and arrived a day late. Starting to follow his scent from there on, the feline had been all over the place as Solmar had not exactly been standing still while he waited for Fellis to get back to him.
Doing one job after the other, Fellis arrived everywhere just a little too late to actually find the mage, a feat which became that much harder when Solmar went down into the Kappa caverns for a day or two. When he could not find Solmar in any of the spots he frequented, he just started flying through Sakuramori every couple of hours, hoping to catch his scent or spot him from above. While he did, he had come across other people who had been going through the forest in hopes of, believe it or not, finding Solmar. Being a group of people that had invested money in the group that had Solmar putting Sakuramori's dangerous zones onto the map, they were from a preservational society. Claiming they needed Solmar's expertise with a task that they were willing to pay quite a lot for, Fellis had taken the written agreement from them for Solmar to read, if he ever found him again. And now that he did, after an extended hug, he gave him the pieces of paper that had been bestowed upon the flying cat.
Reading that the preservation society had come to find that there was an overabundance of deer and pike within the forest, they needed someone capable to trim down their numbers. Getting into the letter further, he encountered a pair of documents, one for each species. Stating numbers in great detail, it was added that too many deer meant that a lot of young saplings would not get the chance to grow, shrubs and plants would get decimated and grass would get shortened. This took away the hiding spaces for smaller animals such as rats, rabbits and mice, who became targets for falcons and other predatory birds, mammals and reptiles, thus causing their numbers to dwindle if left unchecked. More than that, it also meant that the forest would not get to renew the amount of trees that got logged in the regions closer to the human towns and settlements. As for the pike, they were hunting and killing too many of the species of frog, salamander, fish and aquatic mammals. Apparently being responsible for eviscerating species that lived in the ocean but laid their eggs inland in fresh water, they were also put on the list.
While Solmar was more than willing to help out, the sheer number of deer and pike he would need to kill seemed daunting, not to mention senseless as he had no use for them. But that was when one of his older ideas got sparked. If he did things the right way, he could use this as a means of teaching the Kappa more about spending their lives on dry land, as well as how they should be living off of said land. Running back into the cavern, he discussed with the leader of the Kappa how he had been given a task that required him to kill quite a bit of animals, which meant a lot of pelts and meat if they were to aid him. Claiming that he would be able to teach a small group of them how to hunt properly, the Kappa leader gave Solmar a couple of fit aquatic folk that he could spare from the construction activities. Arming them with some of the crude spears they had made from the leftover branches, Solmar took the three of them with him and headed into the forest along with Fellis. Using Fellis to scout the area ahead of them, he sat down with his followers.
(1500)