[PnP] Re: Navigation Woes

Choinski, Burton Burton.Choinski at matrixone.com
Sun Oct 1 20:36:39 CEST 2006


One could go with survival, but then where is the need for Navigation.

I'll grant that I don't have much experience with cross country travel, though I do have a good sence of direction.  I honestly have no idea how close to on target I would be over 100 miles, even with landmarks (and I'll grant the clearer air up there could give you 2-3 hexes of vision on a large landmark, but not so much down south in the murk).

I take it your primary concern is that top-of-the-line navigators should not be 20% of the time off the line (or even 10%, if you consider the level of survival they will probably have).

How about if I rejigger the numbers to be based on 2d10.  The bell curve will bite inexperienced more, and experienced less.  Basically, convert my 01-100 values to an appropriate (2d10-2)*5% scale.  This gives a target number range of 0-90, with everages in the 45's.  The odds of the high skill guys getting off track will be greatly reduced (possibly impossible, when a high enough survival is added, or bonuses for landmarks).

How does that sound?



-----Original Message-----
From: pnp-bounces at abroere.xs4all.nl on behalf of Alex Koponen
Sent: Sun 10/1/2006 12:49 AM
To: pnp at abroere.xs4all.nl
Subject: [PnP] Re: Navigation Woes
 
It is hard to place myself in the position of someone NOT having the 
skills I have. Born and raised in Alaska I have also done enough hiking 
and camping to have tired of it. I have never studied navigation as such 
(I certainly don't know spherical trig.) but have picked up enough 
tricks of the trade to be able to go cross-country fairly well. I might 
not be able to cross 100 miles of wilderness without getting lost but I 
suspect I could if there were decent reference points visible.

South of my house is the Alaska Range. Large mountains (5,000+ meters) 
that tell you which way is south if you can see them. They are 70+ miles 
away and I can see them quite well. If your vision is blocked by hills 
you need only get to a ridgeline to see the shape of nearby hills and 
ridges...this should tell you where you are if you are even mildly 
familiar with the area. If lost, one can follow water downstream and you 
will eventually get to a settlement in all but the least settled areas 
on this planet.

It is hard for me to imagine being some city dweller that has no clue 
how to tell direction in the wilderness. But yeah, I suspect that I have 
a better survival skill in hills and forests thatn many city dwellers.

Perhaps using 10 x survival skill would work as well? 


_______________________________________________
pnp mailing list
pnp at abroere.xs4all.nl
http://abroere.xs4all.nl/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pnp

-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: winmail.dat
Type: application/ms-tnef
Size: 4038 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://www.powersandperils.org/pipermail/pnp/attachments/20061001/40e55b32/attachment.bin>


More information about the pnp mailing list