Okay. So this has derailed to focus on just one aspect of the canon I think, that there are 'moors'.
In my map I produced to try and classify areas (which I can no longer edit because adobe illustrator wants me to subscribe to it a second time?) I tried to classify the marches as becoming driest near the princes pass. This makes sense as where is the rain coming from? It is boxed in by mountains on all but the northern side and no stream or river is mentioned as running through it (there probably would be one though, especially in Spring).
This is a note to CashBanks. Stop focusing on the Moors part so much. It should only be 1/3 of the area, most likely just the NE area that borders the Reach and Stormlands where rainfall from the west could come in and fall on the western side of the Red Mountains. This area would most likely be more like Dartmoor and not the N. England/Scottish moors and then fade into being treeless hilltops, like at Rhysling, as there are more and more trees in the gullies below.
We need the largest proportion to be grasslands. Dominated by grasses rather than heather. It isn't the Rills, so I don't suggest having plenty of eroded soil but instead that the reason why this area is underdeveloped is because of the constant warring over the area and a reasonably low population.
I can't find the brilliant image I had for this anymore but it was from the south of France and had undulating meadowlike grassland with a few stands of trees and I cannot find it now. Grrrrr :c
What I believe we are suffering from is a lack of heather variants or alternative options. We have no other low lying shrubs other plant that could represent sagebush, rosemary, coastal scrub etc other than having bushes of leaf block suddenly sprouting from grass around it.
Imgur is currently fucking with me so I can't put all the images I have collated over the past two hours into an album for some reason, nor log in.
Now, just in terms of vision. I always saw this region as being like the areas of southern Mediterranean France bordering the Pyrenees with dryer, rockier entrance to Dorne at the Wide Way/Prince's Pass.
The rockier dryer parts would be more similar to garrigue areas of Southern France (Narbonne Plage etc), or the uplands of Aude and Pyrenees-Orientales.
The grassier parts more like grassland in Provence, Aude, Narbonne etc.
Then as it approaches the area closer to Musgood it becomes more and more like Dartmoor
I know its coastal, but the second image is what I honestly see most of the Marches as looking like. Windswept, quite rocky, gnarled trees and bushes.
In my map I produced to try and classify areas (which I can no longer edit because adobe illustrator wants me to subscribe to it a second time?) I tried to classify the marches as becoming driest near the princes pass. This makes sense as where is the rain coming from? It is boxed in by mountains on all but the northern side and no stream or river is mentioned as running through it (there probably would be one though, especially in Spring).
This is a note to CashBanks. Stop focusing on the Moors part so much. It should only be 1/3 of the area, most likely just the NE area that borders the Reach and Stormlands where rainfall from the west could come in and fall on the western side of the Red Mountains. This area would most likely be more like Dartmoor and not the N. England/Scottish moors and then fade into being treeless hilltops, like at Rhysling, as there are more and more trees in the gullies below.
We need the largest proportion to be grasslands. Dominated by grasses rather than heather. It isn't the Rills, so I don't suggest having plenty of eroded soil but instead that the reason why this area is underdeveloped is because of the constant warring over the area and a reasonably low population.
I can't find the brilliant image I had for this anymore but it was from the south of France and had undulating meadowlike grassland with a few stands of trees and I cannot find it now. Grrrrr :c
What I believe we are suffering from is a lack of heather variants or alternative options. We have no other low lying shrubs other plant that could represent sagebush, rosemary, coastal scrub etc other than having bushes of leaf block suddenly sprouting from grass around it.
Imgur is currently fucking with me so I can't put all the images I have collated over the past two hours into an album for some reason, nor log in.
Now, just in terms of vision. I always saw this region as being like the areas of southern Mediterranean France bordering the Pyrenees with dryer, rockier entrance to Dorne at the Wide Way/Prince's Pass.
The rockier dryer parts would be more similar to garrigue areas of Southern France (Narbonne Plage etc), or the uplands of Aude and Pyrenees-Orientales.
The grassier parts more like grassland in Provence, Aude, Narbonne etc.
Then as it approaches the area closer to Musgood it becomes more and more like Dartmoor
I know its coastal, but the second image is what I honestly see most of the Marches as looking like. Windswept, quite rocky, gnarled trees and bushes.
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