Categories
FATE Games

Niffty Diaspora Handout and AP

Here’s a link to Chris Norwood’s very attractive cluster PDF.

The first week’s actual play. Sounds like an interesting group of people and worlds.

Categories
Shop stuff

More Location Scouting

Today I hit two stores this morning– the first on my way to walk Dad’s dogs, the other near our house across from Fresno High.

Categories
Trips

Sunday: Looking at suburbs and the Catalan Dragons

We kept Sunday low key and drove around the suburbs of Perpignan to see what they looked like. Honestly, it reminded me strongly of our suburbs, with lots of housing and a bit less in the way of restaurants and patisseries open on Sunday. We eventually found somewhere to grab a bite to eat, then spotted the Decathalon store (also closed on Sunday), got a little lost, and returned to the room for some bread, cheese, and a movie, Amélie. Amélie was a neat movie, very much an exploration of the main character’s life and quirks as she gets lured into stepping out of her shell more and more.

Then we drove to the big game: the Catalan Dragons against some foolish interloper. (The Wigan Warriors, according to Jennifer). Their mascot is on the “super cute” end of the cute/fierce scale.

Down on the field there was some Rugby. The first half, most of the action was on our end– bad news for the Dragons, who were defending the goal on our end. Well, trying– their opponents ran up a substantial lead early, despite the dragons being heavily favored.

Of course, I say “our end”, but this was another of those confusing… things work sometimes, but not others. We must have been the first people to ever purchase our tickets on the internet, because three out of 4 “bouncers” directed us from one side to the other– the only thing they knew was that the tickets wouldn’t let us sit in their section. Even though the other bouncer had sent us there.

Finally, the fourth guy let us wander right by and claim our seats a few minutes before the match started. No clue what he saw that the others didn’t… but it was amusing, and made me think of their phone and net struggles. Anyway, below are random pictures from the game. There’s really no story to them- just random shots throughout the game.

I liked rugby, though I’d have liked to watch a couple more games so I could start to learn through repetition. It doesn’t supplant American football (or soccer) yet– but I’ve only been exposed once. I did like the pace and points– it scores like football, but the pace is constant like soccer. Really, it’s a great hybrid.

Categories
Trips

Saturday: Queribus Castle and the Aude Gorge

We had a lazy start, slept in, and hit the morning market for picnic lunch components. Then we saddled up and hit the road for Queribus, one of the Cathar Castles stretching along the old boundary between France and Aragon. Approaching the castle was impressive; from the town of Maury where we turned off of the highway, it sits up in the sky. After wandering through the narrow city streets, we followed the roundabout signs and were soon headed toward the town of Cucugnan. The road was two pretty good lanes as we started twisting up the mountain. Soon we turned off of the main road and climbed the narrow track to Queribus. The car did a good job, though the lack of guardrails continued to amaze Jennifer as we threaded the winding road.

From the valley floor, Queribus looks the a finger on the mountain. (I wish we’d take a good picture from the valley floor.) From the top of the track, where you park, it’s still impressive. And unsquishable, as Jennifer found out. We wandered from the small parking lot to the wooden buildings at the foot of the trail, where we bought tickets and an audioguide. (The castle docents and shop owners were from the village of Cucugnan.)

After we climbed just a few feet and passed the first bend, I took this picture. They were big fans of capitalizing on what nature provided: a lot of the bare stone is the mountain itself, often barely shaped.

At the first landing, where the stable used to be, we were confronted with a sturdy wall and daunting arrow and musket slits. From the landing where I was standing, it’s the last clear spot before climbing the narrow stairs. It’s also right at the end of a straight away, so you’re forced to slow here– right in the kill zone. You already have a good field of view downhill from here– you can easily see the winding track we drove up to reach mighty Queribus.

Once you climbed past this point and forced your way through the short door, you then have a nice stone stair to advance along. Not that they make it easy.

Eventually you make it past the outlook points (they had a map labeling all of the things you could see from there: you could easily see significant cities and towns on both sides of the border), and finally turn into the castle proper. The first room (where the picture was taken from) was a three story wood barracks (tied into the rock and stone walls)– now we can look straight from the bottom floor up at the keep looming over everything. When you take an immediate left on entering, you come into a common area with a huge lookout window overlooking the sheer southeastern face.

A few steps up the stairs and we got out on a half level– it turns out that the room we entered had originally been two stories (you could see the sockets for the wood beams), with a great column sprouting from the middle of the room. At the top of the column four arches sprang, a beautiful effect. (Practical too, reminded our audioguide: 4 arches are stronger than one, so this was a powerful way to span the large space.)

Then back to the stairwell, where we climbed toward the roof. Let’s just say that no one’s swinging an axe in this compressed space.

At the top we emerge into a modern tile walkway over the stones. You can see incredibly far in every direction.

On our way out, we took a photo up from the courtyard. The castle’s pretty imposing. Amazingly, this fortress was normally held by just 25 men. They certainly had a number of advantages in defense.

From here, we made our way back down to the car, grabbed our lunch fixings, and settled on a nearby bench where we had bread, fruit, and tasty cheeses. We were pretty wiped out after clambering around all those stairs and slopes, but wanted to check out Peyrepertuse, another Cathar castle visible from Queribus. We drove to the foot of the castle and looked up at the imposing sight.

We decided that too many castles in a day would be overkill, returned to the car, and drove down through an Aude gorge. It was impressive, cutting deep into the rock below among mountains, so you could look up and down both at once from the road threading its way along a path in the middle. The view was breathtaking.

As we wandered around the lookout spot on the south end of the gorge, the weather decided to stop threatening and start raining. We hopped in our little Ka and drove back, thankful that we hadn’t explored and gotten stuck on top of Peyrepertuse in the rain. The rain was heavy– fat drops that the windshield wipers struggled to clear.

We wandered back to the room and I tried my hand at cooking up Catalan sausage. It’s a tasty mild sausage that cooks up quite similarly to Keelbasa… and is good with potato too.

Categories
Books

The Girl with a Dragon Tattoo

The book was written by Stieg Larsson, but it thrives because of its tranlation by Reg Keeland. Honestly, the writing was completely transparent: I’d have thought of it as written well informed English if I didn’t know better.

I picked this up in Toronto on my way back, and was very pleasantly surprised by the writing, plot, and characters. They all have real and significant foibles– even the good guys have serious problems and can be their own worst enemy.

Given the title, I was surprised by the amount of screen time that was devoted to Mikael Blomkvist, but it was a good choice. Lisbeth Salander is interesting– in many ways she’s like a WoD character with a lot of points in flaws used to buy some exceptional traits. She’s not a superhero, but she’s very good at what she does.

Sweden turns out to have a few skeletons, at least in this telling. In many ways it’s a police procedural (well, anchored by an investigative journalist instead of a policeman, and the case is quite old…) but it has a lot of differences. The unusual to my experience setting is wonderfully revealed: the differences are small and typical assumptions are mostly right, but they build as the book continues.

In the end, I enjoyed the book thoroughly and will be requesting the next ones from the library.

Categories
Shop stuff

Shop Lease Space Scouting

I began the hunt at the Figarden Loop space, adjacent to the Save Mart I shopped at when I lived at Dad’s place. This is pretty distant from freeway access– just down the street from where Monte and Jill live. [For locating on google, use 6033 Figarden Drive.] In Realtorspeak, it’s Figarden New Town.

Categories
Trips

Friday: Journey to Carcassone

The journey was nice; Jennifer drove (our little Ford Ka was not exciting, but got us there fine) and I snapped a few shots out the window.

Categories
Trips

Thursday’s exploration of Perpignan

As Jennifer’s work week spun up, I did some exploration on my own. (I’m skipping a few days of slower time; I hope to fill them in later. Thumbnail summary: Monday cooked lunch for Jennifer, Rachelle and her family, then created characters with the kids; Tuesday low key exploration and did laundry; Wednesday played D&D with the kids.)

Thursday morning I headed inside the cathedral of Saint-Jean-Baptiste.