Challenge Staff

March 22, 2013 12:50 PM
The day of the second challenge dawned bright and sunny. Though it was only late January, the weather was unseasonably warm in the high sixties. Certainly warm enough to spend the afternoon outdoors in relative comfort as long as one dressed appropriately. This was most fortunate as most of the higher numbered teams probably would spend a fair portion of the day just outside the Gardens, waiting for their turn into the challenge.

Unlike the first one, this challenge would be completed all at one time, then the staff would have to go in and fix any damage that had been inflicted on the course, and only then could the next team begin. The slight advantage to going later, of course, was that those groups would have some idea how long most teams had taken to complete it previously, and would therefore be able to gauge how well they were doing in comparison.

As one o'clock approached, Coach Pierce arrived on the scene and stood on top of the bench that blocked the entrance into the Gardens. "Hello," she greeted the gathered students with the assistance of a sonorus charm so they could all hear her. "Your second challenge is an obstacle course through the Gardens. May I please have the overseers gather near Professor Meade, please." She indicated where the COMC professor was standing and waited for the students elected for that role to divide out of the main crowd.

"This challenge will be scored by how quickly your team gets all of its members, excluding the overseer, through the obstacle course. If you find you cannot get through an obstacle, there is an opt-out path. However, be advised, a significant time penalty, which varies depending upon on the difficulty of the obstacle being skipped, will be applied against your team's final time for every team member who opts out."

The Coach inclined her head toward the group of overseers. "You will not be going in completely blind. Your overseer will be able to communicate with you as you go through the course, telling you the safest path between obstacles." Rock throwing prairie elves, Devil's Snare traps, and other blockages and annoyances populated the paths that were not the 'safe' route through the maze. Between most obstacles, team overseers could choose to send their teams through to the next one by way of a longer but safer route, or through a shorter but booby-trapped route. The quickest shortcuts had the nastiest obstructions.

"Overseers, you have the choice of using a surveillance circle to track your team's progress and look ahead for your best route through the labyrinth, or you can scout ahead and offer advice from a broom. You cannot directly assist your team through a challenge or you will incur the obstacle's opt-out penalty, but you can offer advice if you see something they can't."

"All right, folks. Team One starts it off, once your overseer is ready. They will have a few minutes to get an idea of what lies ahead of you. We'll start the clock when the first team member enters the course, so I advise waiting until your overseer tells you to begin."

Coach Pierce got down off the bench then used her wand to push it aside, clearing the Garden entrance for the first team. Meanwhile, the first overseer was lead through another opening in the hedge, bringing them into a secluded clearing with a nice quality broom and a table with a model of the Obstacle Course upon it.

“Overseers, you have two options to do your job, one is flying above and assessing the best route for your team or, two, you can scry for them using the model placed in the table,” Adrian pointed to the model of the gardens with the obstacles that was near him. Professor Meade gave them the option to chose their preferred method of scouting. Broom riders would fly above the Course and talk directly to their teams. They could point out relevant points of interest, lead the way through the labyrinth, and even poke and prod at the actual obstacles to provide information about them, so long as they didn't actually do anything to physically or magically help their team.

Scryers would follow their team through the enchanted model. The Obstacles were clearly marked and labeled and glowed yellow for easy identification. Safe routes between them were colored a reassuring green. Hazardous routes were colored either in orange or red to mark the severity of the danger. Finally, blue indicators would help them easily find their team's location. A simple tap of their wand against any part of the model would allow the scryer to zoom in for a better look in real time. A second tap against the edge of the table would bring them back to the overview. Not being physically present would limit the overseer's ability to communicate with their teammates to only verbal instructions, but these would be relayed clearly to their location and the model, when zoomed in, would allow him or her to see and hear everything the team did.


OOC: Like in the last one, all teams can post simultaneously. Fuzzy time allows you to move on to the next obstacle before finishing the previous one, as long as you don't contradict anything that might still happen earlier. Please keep your characters' age, physical limitations and abilities in mind and have them progress realistically. Your four foot nine beginner student cannot reach the top of the Wall, or the short rope dangling down from it, even if they jump.
Subthreads:
0 Challenge Staff The Obstacle Course Challenge 0 Challenge Staff 1 5


Brianna Japos

March 25, 2013 4:11 PM
Brianna wasn’t sure what she was supposed to be doing for the Overseer position or what exactly it entailed. When she had been home for holiday break, she had talked with her mother about proper attire for the challenges considering she had only the skort to where during the first one. Her mother had gone shopping and come back with somewhat loose jogging pants for her to wear. Brianna didn’t mind wearing pants, she just didn’t have any. For the longest time she had been pretending to be a girl from a rich proper Pureblood family and so, she only had dresses and skirts in her wardrobe. Her current problem was working herself into the jeans. Now that her legs were stronger, it actually wasn’t terrible, plus the fabric stretched and weren’t skin tight to make it difficult for her. So, she felt more prepared this time around in a fitted t-shirt, zip up jacket, pants, and sneakers than she had during the last challenge. Not that it seemed to matter since she was going to be Overseer, but just in case she needed to do something, she was ready.

Right from the start, Brianna was separated from her teammates. She really didn’t know what to do with herself as she waited for their team to come up. She really wished she could sit down, but sitting on the ground was too difficult for her to pull herself back up again on normal surfaces let alone the uneven surface of the gardens. So, she just stood there with the other overseers trying to not star too long as people since there was nothing else for her to focus on.

As the Overseers disappeared into the gardens while their teams were called forward, Brianna ended up just looking at the ground most of the time, only to look up again when the team ahead of them went in. She caught sight of Derry wave at her and give her the thumbs up sign. Brianna smiled back at him and threw her own thumbs up back to him. She supposed it was his way of possibly calming down any nerves that she might have had being on her own and she appreciated it. She probably should be nervous all things considered, but she wasn’t nearly as much as she would have been had she had to do the physical part of the challenge. She was thinking of this as a practice practical for the CATS exams.

Finally, it was her turn to go in and she followed the staff in and found herself with two options. Had Brianna been healthy, she probably would have chosen the broom. She knew how to fly just fine. She didn’t necessarily enjoy it, but she knew how to do it and it meant she could actually be there for her team. However, she didn’t know how sitting in that position without support would feel on her back and so, she opted for the weird map scrying option.

Sitting at the table, Brianna took a few minutes to look over the first part of the challenge. It was simple enough, just a mud pit. It was after the mud pit that Brianna was concerned with, but she thought they were a bunch of boys who probably climbed trees an swung on ropes growing up anyway… she hoped. “You may begin.” Brianna said at the map, hoping that was how it worked. “Take the first left and then a right and you’ll be at the first challenge. A mud pit.” She informed them. Although she didn’t want to admit it aloud, she thought it was sort of fun watching them from a map by small little dots. She almost jumped when she heard Derry’s voice ask about the drought charm. “Sitis is the charm.” Brianna offered, although she didn’t know how helpful it would be if they didn’t know the wand movement.
6 Brianna Japos Hopefully, I'll be of help to you. 203 Brianna Japos 0 5


Linus Macaulay

March 26, 2013 9:22 AM
At the start of the academic year, Linus could remember feeling particularly low-spirited. He had been passed over as prefect, Quidditch had been cancelled, it was the first year of serious exams, and one of his friends had been seriously injured with nobody thinking him sufficiently important to inform. All in all, he would gladly have returned to the bliss of his summer vacation. Conversely, making his way back to school after the midterm break had quite the opposite effect; Linus had a firmer friendship with Brianna, a date to the ball, he had been named assitant captain for the Crotalus team, and these school challenges were actually turning out to be a very welcome distraction from the ever-accumulating pile of homework assignments. Currently, the propspect of an afternoon of fresh air in the labyrinth was one that brought joy. Hence Linus was in an unusually good mood even as they waited for the majority of the other teams to enter the maze.

Finally it was their turn, and Linus joined the other boys in the team in entering the maze while Brianna's disembodied voice guided them. He wasn't even rattled when the first obstacle transpired to be a mud pit. Admittedly, Linus took pride in his smart appearance, but he had spent countless hours in his earlier youth getting sufficiently muddy to make his mother exclaim with vigor. The fifth year was good and ready to go wading in, but, perhaps fortunately, Derwent had hesitated before the pit and suggested a drying charm. With unexpected disappointment, Linus acknowledged the sense in avoiding a mud-coating for the reminader of the activity, and so offered his services. "I can do the charm," he said, raising his wand from his pocket. While he performed most admirably in DADA, his wandwork was relatively consistant in other subjects, and Linus worked well under pressure. With Brianna watching his every move, younger students to inspire, and an imposed time limit for the competition, he felt a reasonable level of expectation, and, thankfully, performed a successful drying charm across the first portion of the pit.

"Let me just... test it," he suggested, reluctant as he was for another member of the team to be disappointed by placing unfounded trust in his skills. He stepped out with where he'd cast the charm near the centre of the pit, and felt a solid but unstable surface beneath his feet. "The top is dry but there's still mositness underneath," he evaluated. Considering he was standing safely and only Derwent looked as though he was greater in mass overall, Linus was relatively certain the rest of the team could cross this way. "The charm will need to be cast again further along," he added.

0 Linus Macaulay The tables have turned 205 Linus Macaulay 0 5


Anthony Carey VIII

March 26, 2013 11:06 PM
It would have been inappropriate to actually voice objections to going into the Gardens obstacle course, since that was a properly masculine activity to engage into and he was, well, obviously not a girl, but Anthony was pretty sure he wasn’t supposed to admit to anyone that he was really excited about the prospect, either. Excitement in general was frowned on, so being excited to go work with a bunch of people his grandfather had frowned severely when he heard Anthony was associated with at all and probably get filthy and lose all pretenses of dignity in the process would be even worse. It was not the kind of thing an Anthony should look forward to with pleasure, or indeed at all.

The only problem was, Anthony had started thinking of the challenges the way he did Quidditch: as an activity where he wasn’t an Anthony. He was just…Anthony, not more or less important than anyone else in the group, and it didn’t matter if he was very dignified or not, since no one else was, either. The challenge team, honestly, was even better for that than the Quidditch team, since while Linus did seem like a pretty dignified person in general and of course Alan could be an informant for his older sister, overall it wasn’t as tense a group as the Quidditch team, not as ambitious. Since in Aladren, even studying in the common room while other people were doing the same thing felt like being part of a team full of people who were ambitious, some of them together, even, Anthony found his dealings with this team to be kind of a relief.

Ambition didn’t suit him. He couldn’t fit in with a team which was ambitious. Ambitious people were what they were because there was some question of just where they would end up, an uncertainty Anthony had never felt. He couldn’t imagine a situation which wouldn’t end with him in exactly the role which had been planned out for him.

At the mud pit, Derry suggested drying it out, and Brianna mentioned the incantation from above. Anthony wondered whether he should suggest that the mud could be somehow enchanted to resist magic, but before he made up his mind, Linus had successfully charmed it, so that problem was gone. Anthony carefully stepped out behind him, making a bit of a face at the weird feeling beneath his shoes as he did.

He took a few steps, now debating with himself over whether or not he had seen the wand movement right and whether or not he should try it anyway. “Do you think we should try the spell as we go along, to make it drier?” he said. “Or that, er, the other we – me and Alan – “ he might as well include Alan, not least because it made him look less like an incompetent second year if he was part of a group of incompetent second years – “should try to cast it at all?”
0 Anthony Carey VIII We're going to do great! 234 Anthony Carey VIII 0 5

Derry Pierce

March 27, 2013 12:16 PM
If Derry remembered correctly - which he didn't always - the drying charm had been introduced pretty early in his intermediate Charms career, as the easier option to some more complex cleaning charms. Alan and Anthony both seemed like smart guys and were only half a year from being intermediates themselves. He saw no reason why they shouldn't be able to cast it.

"I don't see how it could hurt if we all cast the spell," Derry offered eyeing the ground that visibly sagged under Linus's weight. "At best, we reinforce each other and make a thickier, sturdier crust to walk across, and you guys learn a new spell. At worst, well," misformed magic at its worst could be pretty unpredictable so he wasn't quite sure what 'at worst' would entail precisely, but he was sure enough of his own and Linus's ability to dismiss the concern, "Linus and I should be able to handle it on our own."

He took out his wand and demonstrated the wand motion a couple of times until the second years were copying it correctly. "Sitis," he cast at the ground near Linus, drying another patch for them to proceed along.

Then he looked at the pit im front of him and cast it again at where he was about to step, just in case his weight was too much for the current crust to hold. He held his breath and stepped out onto their dry part. He might have imagined the perceived dip of the ground and the quiet squelching sound as mud oozed somewhere beneath him, but it held so far.

"Let's do this quickly, if we can," he suggested, more out of concern that their bridge might break under the continued stress of their combined weight if they stood on it for too long than because the challenge was being judged based on speed.
1 Derry Pierce Go Prairie-Hawk-Snakes! 189 Derry Pierce 0 5


Brianna

March 31, 2013 8:08 PM
Brianna listened to them as they worked out what they had wanted to do. She felt sort of useless being behind the scenes and only able to watch everything through a magical map and only offer advice if she felt that she had something worthy of saying. They had to do all the work. She knew that the reason she was really picked for this position was because of her condition. She would never blame them for it, but she was sure no one would ever say so directly to her face. Part of her wondered, if she had been physically fine, if they still would have put her in this spot because she was a girl. Would it even matter if she had been athletic when she was on a team full of guys? As much as she liked to think Derry was diplomatic and reasonable, she still felt that they would think her weak and not want to bother with her.

“It will probably be best if you stick to the right.” Brianna commented. “It’s shallow on that side at least half way through. After that, there is a drop off. Half way up, to avoid that drop, go left diagonally until about three fourths of the way through and then head right diagonally the rest of the way.” Brianna explained. “That will keep you in the shallowest part of the mud so that you won’t have to dry up too much and waste your energy. There are quite a few obstacles to go, so it’s best that you don’t get tired out so soon.” She had no idea if they were going to listen to her or not, but it was her job to help them through it as quickly as possible.

“Just to give you a heads up about what is next, you have three paths to choose from, the shortest one is the most dangerous, then you have a wall to climb over. There are another three paths, again the shortest being the most dangerous, and then the final obstacle which is a lake that you have to swing across to get to the other side.” Brianna told them, figuring they could listen and do their charm at the same time. “So, the less energy you use now, the better you’ll be when you get to the final one.” They probably already knew that, but she didn’t want them getting stuck on the whole mud pit when she felt there were worse obstacles to deal with ahead of them.
0 Brianna That is a long team name. 0 Brianna 0 5