(no subject)
Mar. 29th, 2006 04:38 pm*pinches bridge of nose* Dear Brane, regardless of how appealing a thought you find it...
...you are not allowed to cross Reign of Fire with Due South and have the community of Inuvik, NWT be one of the survivor communities of Canada when the Burning Times finally end.
Mind you, I'm willing to allow coastal communities in the Arctic, I could see that happening- hard for the dragons to destroy sea life, you know? And it's not like you don't get people practising subsistence living in places like Bethel, AK, so there's probably coastal Inuit villages that'd qualify. I don't think the dragons much care for cold, so coastal Arctic communities are likely to be pretty good refugias, rather like the way the shoreline coves were during the last glacial period. Oh sure, the dragons show up regularly, but not nearly as regularly as if it were a few hundred or thousand miles further south.
But the image I have is of a Benton Fraser in his sixties, seventies, whatever, still smiling and wearing his old uniform, proud as can be, as the survivors make their way out. Having successfully kept the place civilised the whole time.
THIS IS WHAT I GET FOR HAVING O CANADA ON MY MP3 PLAYER.
...you are not allowed to cross Reign of Fire with Due South and have the community of Inuvik, NWT be one of the survivor communities of Canada when the Burning Times finally end.
Mind you, I'm willing to allow coastal communities in the Arctic, I could see that happening- hard for the dragons to destroy sea life, you know? And it's not like you don't get people practising subsistence living in places like Bethel, AK, so there's probably coastal Inuit villages that'd qualify. I don't think the dragons much care for cold, so coastal Arctic communities are likely to be pretty good refugias, rather like the way the shoreline coves were during the last glacial period. Oh sure, the dragons show up regularly, but not nearly as regularly as if it were a few hundred or thousand miles further south.
But the image I have is of a Benton Fraser in his sixties, seventies, whatever, still smiling and wearing his old uniform, proud as can be, as the survivors make their way out. Having successfully kept the place civilised the whole time.
THIS IS WHAT I GET FOR HAVING O CANADA ON MY MP3 PLAYER.