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

Julian Umland

March 27, 2013 1:50 PM
Julian Umland was, as a general rule, a careful, neat sort of girl. She took care of her belongings and tried not to appear in public looking sloppy or wrinkled or stained. This, her mother had always explained to her, was not a matter of impressing other people, though that helped; it was a matter of having self-respect.

Julian had self-respect, or at least thought she did, which she supposed counted as the same thing in the end. She also had four brothers. Without magic, she thought her ability to show off her self-respect would have been much more limited before Sonora, because with four brothers came most of the clothes budget going to their growth spurts and also a lot of things that ended in tears, dirt, and other such calamities. The prospect of a physical challenge didn’t really bother her that much, at least not from a dirt perspective. More worrying was that, without John and Joe to chase all the time for most of the year, now, Julian thought she was putting on too much weight.

That impression was helped along by how well, relatively speaking, the clothes she had on today fit her, since they had originally belonged to her second older brother Paul. Julian didn’t own a lot of pants, and for things like the challenges, it had seemed better to wear things which had nearly been washed to death already, such as some of Paul’s old clothes which John was still not big enough for. It had taken some experimenting to get the pants short enough to not trip her, and she looked very much, with her hair in a plait which reached a little past her shoulders, like a girl in a boy’s clothes, but she thought she had an outfit which would work for most things, especially since the tennis shoes really were hers and fit in all dimensions.

That, Mom always said, was important. Clothes which weren’t the most flattering fit in the world were one thing, but shoes were important. Shoes that didn’t fit right could cause all sorts of problems. The neck of Julian’s t-shirt kept slipping off-center and the jeans she had on felt weird to walk in, but her shoes were perfectly comfortable as team sixteen walked through the first two easy paths to the mud pit.

Josephine didn’t seem enthusiastic and asked for thoughts about it. Julian bit her lip, hating to call attention to some of her deficiencies but deciding it was a good idea. "Is there a good way to figure out how deep it is?" she asked, biting on the side of her thumbnail now. She wasn't that short, but, well, she wasn't that tall, either.
16 Julian Umland We'll dazzle the whole wide school. 254 Julian Umland 0 5


Lucille Carey

March 27, 2013 11:02 PM
The idea, Lucille decided, of doing something physical didn’t frighten her that much on her own. She even thought she might not be the very worst person possible; she had been riding horses for almost as long as she could remember, and that was one of the things she was willing to admit to being good at. The chances that the challenge would involve normal or flying horses was slim, but still, between that and the dancing lessons, she wasn’t really that weak. Instead, it was the thought of her mother’s reaction to it that made her nervous. Her mother would not be pleased, and saying she had sacrificed herself for Melanie wasn’t likely to work, either, especially since it was really just that she hadn’t spoken quickly enough.

Still, she did at least have vaguely appropriate clothing, as she realized when Alex asked to borrow some, so she decided to try to make the best of it now and to worry about her mother later. There was nothing much that could happen while she was at school, anyway, and what could Mother really do even once she got home? That kind of thinking felt forbidden, dangerous, but it was true; this was something the school had assigned her to do, she hadn’t had a choice in it, so there was even less reason than usual to punish her for it.

She held firm to that resolution and to her wand as her team went into the Labyrinth, and only broke step when she saw the mud pit in front of her. That was…icky, though she knew how to do a Scouring Charm well enough to get most of the evidence off after the fact.

Julian – who Lucille still wanted to call ‘Julie’ in her head because Julian was a boy’s name, but she tried not to too much, because she usually preferred her full name and just let her cousins and Aria call her Lucy because she didn’t like to correct them – brought up another point, one Lucille wouldn’t have thought of. She guessed she had just been imagining the mud as up to their ankles, maybe capable of splashing higher but really just there to inconvenience them, but in retrospect, she guessed that didn’t really make a lot of sense. An inconvenience wasn’t really a challenge, not nearly the way the things they had faced the first time had been. The mud wouldn’t, if that was anything to go by, be deep enough to drown them or anything, but it would be hard to get through.

“Not that I know,” she admitted, since seeing how deep things were wasn’t something she usually did. It just wasn’t necessary. Either she knew how deep something was before she ever came to it, or else she didn’t need to know. “Maybe we could Transfigure it?” she suggested. Transfiguration was, in her opinion, a good contender with Charms for the most useful branch of magic; it could make what you needed from what you had. If you were good enough, anyway.
0 Lucille Carey I'll be content with a respectable showing 224 Lucille Carey 0 5

Melanie Lennox

April 09, 2013 8:32 PM
As she joined the other overseers, Melanie felt a little guilty. She hadn't really needed to do it like Valerie did. She would have been fine on the course. It was just that, well, she'd never done anything athletic other than ballroom dancing. Her mother wasn't the sort that would ever encourage such a thing. Dancing was a necessary skill but for optional lessons, the Teppenpaw had had piano lessons instead.

Still, she felt bad about not letting Lucille do it. She really didn't want her roommate to be mad at her. All Melanie really wanted was for them to be friends. She seemed like a very nice girl and hoped that she wouldn't dislike Melanie because of this. It might not be a big deal, and if the roles were reversed, she wouldn't have been the least bit mad at Lucille-in fact, she would have been more angry with Topher Calhoun if her sister hadn't been made overseer then she would have been at Lucille had she taken the position-but one never knew. Fortunately, the other Teppenpaw did not seem the grudge holding sort.

When Melanie saw the first obstacle, she winced, feeling even more guilty. She was here, clean and dry while Lucille and the others would be traipsing through the mud. Josephine didn't even seem all that thrilled about it and she hadn't grown up the way the two Teppenpaws had. Of course, being a proper lady wasn't necessarily a prequisite for not wanting to get dirty but their sort seemed to be completely adverse to it. Unless maybe it was a mud bath. She'd gone to the spa with her mother and Valerie last summer. Mother was always trying to get Melanie to do that kind of stuff but she only wanted to go if her sister could, even though it was something she'd rather enjoy. She remembered how excited the older girl had been to go, though they'd ended up having milk baths rather than mud ones. Mother didn't want Valerie going in mud of any kind and Melanie really didn't either.

" Yes. It's very deep in some places, like possibly up to the chins of shorter people and barely there in others." She replied to Julian's question. "I can guide you through them." That was what the overseer was supposed to do and she would hate for anyone to drown in the mud, getting it in their mouths. That would be unpleasant. Plus, they could get stuck and that would slow the team down. Melanie assumed that nobody wanted that. However, if walking through the mud was the route they chose, though she couldn't see why they would if they could come up with another alternative, she'd do her best to keep them out of the deepest parts.

"However, transfiguration is a wonderful idea." She complimented her roommate. It was honestly what she herself would have thought of. When it came to walking through unpleasant substances, that was the most practical way of dealing with them, if they couldn't be avoided. Of course, though Melanie was good at the subject, she didn't know if she had quite the skill level to transfigure mud. She didn't have to though, and she just hope Josephine and Attoria were decent at the subject.
11 Melanie Lennox We'll do the best we can. 226 Melanie Lennox 0 5