As the North is experiencing a sort of small renaissance at the moment, and in light of recent comments, I thought it would be good to start a thread to discuss the issue around the White Knife. Canon indicates there is some point where sailing up the river towards Winterfell becomes impossible due to rapids. It is not entirely clear where this point is, but it seems likely to me that its somewhere north of the fork in the river. It is unclear whether both streams have rapids, or just the one coming from Winterfell.
I'd love to hear some comments from those who have worked in the area (Jakethesnake8_8 carci Emoticone11 Deiniol _Simbaa ) and understand the lay of the land. What solutions are we looking at?
To get the conversation started, I wondered if there was some way we could add a "rapids" water texture which, when laid flat, displays a churning, aerated white water, such as below. Most rapids, in my experience, are shallow and rocky and don't necessarily include falls. This might overcome the need to drastically re-terraform a large area to give it a greater fall downstream.
As a side note, this would also be useful for other rivers where we have this issue, such as the Tumblestone, and allow for more variety in our other rivers and streams (where they are not meant to be navigable).
I'd love to hear some comments from those who have worked in the area (Jakethesnake8_8 carci Emoticone11 Deiniol _Simbaa ) and understand the lay of the land. What solutions are we looking at?
To get the conversation started, I wondered if there was some way we could add a "rapids" water texture which, when laid flat, displays a churning, aerated white water, such as below. Most rapids, in my experience, are shallow and rocky and don't necessarily include falls. This might overcome the need to drastically re-terraform a large area to give it a greater fall downstream.
As a side note, this would also be useful for other rivers where we have this issue, such as the Tumblestone, and allow for more variety in our other rivers and streams (where they are not meant to be navigable).