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

Maximilian Joshua McLachlan

March 26, 2013 6:07 AM
The moment Josh had seen the team roster, he hadn't been very pleased. He had enough confidence in his skills to take care of all the younger students, which might have been behind the professors' reasoning in putting all of the children with him and James, but it was still not the ideal group. Josh had no qualms with losing, but if it meant having to babysit instead of really work with the team, he wasn't looking forward to it.

James was the official leader of the group and for that Josh was glad. He didn't want the responsibility of looking after a group like this. Or any group. He was surprised, however, when James decided to put himself as the Overseer. Josh hadn't played a sport in years. It was only genetics that kept him thin, but the leader had decided. Josh could do a lot more of the physical work and he was very competent when it came to spellwork. He didn't doubt he and James could complete this obstacle course easily.

The team was directed to the mud pit and Josh stood in front of it, his mind already calculating. It was just like working with water, except it had different properties. All they needed was for it to become a solid and that would be easy to walk across. James told them the right side was shallower, but if Josh could have it his way, he wouldn't want any of his teammates to have to walk through that. James's advice was good and Josh thought for a moment, wondering how well his younger teammates could cast spells.

Josh turned to the rest of them, having made up his mind in a matter of seconds. "I, sorry, we need to turn this mud into a solid form which can be done easily. If anyone else knows the spell, feel free to cast it, but only if you are sure you won't mess it up. Otherwise, I'll let you know when it's solid enough to cross. Just follow after me." After a moment, he thought he ought to thank James for his advice. "Sound good, James?"

With that, Josh turned to the mud and began on a section of the mud. The magic wouldn't spread through the mud, which would have been convenient, so Josh would only be able to make a wide-enough path for them. If he had wanted to solidify the entire mud pit, he could have, but it would take time and drain him which wasn't ideal. "Duro," he said, casting the charm, and the mud visibly hardened in front of them. He cast the spell a couple more times around it, watching as the mud hardened more. He took a couple steps and found it hard enough to hold his weight. "Follow me carefully and don't veer off. It's only a path," he told his teammates behind him.
19 Maximilian Joshua McLachlan Hear, hear. 184 Maximilian Joshua McLachlan 0 5


Gemma Bennett

March 26, 2013 10:32 PM
Five teams went in, and Gemma played with the curly end of her braided hair. Eliza had surprised her after breakfast by pulling her into an empty room to help her with it, and as she looked at it, fiddling with the short end beneath the tie, she thought about her sister, and to a lesser extent her brother and the rest of her family, and knew that if she did very badly today she would have let them all down somehow and that, therefore, she had to do at least an okay job, no matter what was in there that she was so very not equipped to deal with.

She had been nervous about the challenge ever since she heard it was a physical one, though she didn’t think she would have felt any better if she had been made the overseer instead of left as one of the main group. Either way, something she did could completely mess up the team’s time, but it somehow seemed less bad to do it as just an ordinary team member than as the overseer, the one with the intimidating phrase ‘brain of the team’ attached to her. Less like everyone would really blame her for everything going wrong if it did and they were somehow the twentieth team to come in or something. She didn’t think they would be – they did have three boys on their side, after all – but still, she didn’t want to be blamed for it if they were.

She moved her hair over her shoulder when they got up to go, smiling out of sheer nerves and wanting to hold hands with Willow but sure that wasn’t appropriate. What was in there? What kind of obstacles would she have to get past? How bad would it be?

At first, it wasn’t bad, but then James directed them to a big mud pit. She was relieved when he suggested an alternative to putting her feet in something she couldn’t see through. Getting dirty didn’t bother Gemma as much as the thought that the dirt might be full of things she couldn’t see, things that might touch her, grab onto her. She didn’t think she, personally, could be much of a help with the proposed plan, but she liked the idea that maybe, it could work that way.

She clapped her hands when Josh succeeded in making the mud not so bad to walk through, delighted that she wouldn’t have to worry about bugs or snakes or whatever else could hide in mud, which might not really hurt them since this was school but which would be really awful to have to deal with. It was with only a little caution that she put one foot on the harder mud first before following it with the other and beginning to follow Josh across, careful to stick to his footsteps to avoid falling off, into the softer mud to either side.

Once, she thought she felt it crack under her and gasped loudly, throwing out her arms as though trying to keep her balance on a beam. Then she blushed. "Sorry," she almost whispered, as though that would stop them from connecting it to her.
0 Gemma Bennett I can agree with that idea 251 Gemma Bennett 0 5


Aria Yale

March 27, 2013 5:03 PM
Aria was not at all perturbed by the fact that James and Josh both felt that none of the younger years (and thus, disposable teammates) would be decent at the Overseer position. Aria was thirteen, a third year, a Teppenpaw, and completely aware of the fact that she still had a lot to learn while at Sonora. She was great at potions having spent much of her life working with her mother who was the Medicine woman of their community, and she was pretty good with the rest of her classes, Charms and Care of Magical Creatures being next in line after Potions, but she would never jump the fence and declare that she would lead the team as the brain. For all she knew, the brain was the one who told them all the spells to use and that wouldn’t help them very much if the situation was too complex for her to know.

However, she was also aware that the rest of the team wasn’t necessarily athletic and that losing James to the Overseer spot may cost them in the long run. Aria knew what she was capable of. She grew up helping with the farm, taking care of the animals, gather supplies for her mother, on top of doing kid things like climbing trees, swimming in the pond, and just running around in general. She was small and meek looking, but that didn’t mean that she was weak. With James out of the picture physically, Aria knew that she would have to step up her game and prove that she could be an asset in the physical challenge.

With this thought in mind, she had dressed appropriately. Wearing sweatpants, a long sleeved shirt, sneakers (this was a new purchase for her over midterm that she was still trying to get accustomed to), and her unruly hair pulled back into a pony tail, Aria waited somewhat impatiently for their team to be called. She was lucky to be put into team six instead of having to wait all day like team twenty had to.

Their first obstacle being that of a mud pit, Aria was quite pleased. Only to be put off by Josh seemingly not actually wanting to work as a team together. He said anyone who knew how could help, but Aria got the feeling that he was only saying that. Still, she knew the spell and knew how to do it, so, she stepped forward and started to use the spell and watched as the mud hardened along as she went. Really, she was probably just reinforcing what he had already done, but it couldn’t hurt to make sure the mud was extra hard for everyone.

Gemma’s gasp and arm waving caused Aria to pause and look over at her with amusement. “It’s only mud.” Aria commented. “Even if you do fall, there are spells to clean you off. Don’t worry though; I think Josh’s spell work is spot on. We’ll be fine.” Aria hoped the first years weren’t too squirmy about things. Who knew what else the staff had in store for them.
6 Aria Yale I'll work equally as hard! 228 Aria Yale 0 5


Josh McLachlan

April 03, 2013 6:51 PM
Getting his team across wasn't as bad as Josh had expected. It was pretty easy getting them all to follow along. It did help that Josh knew what he was doing and spoke with authority. That same tone would never work at his uncle's house and only came out when he was having to lead a group of his peers. When he was young and lived in Scotland with his grandmother, he had always been left to his own devices except for meals and his lessons. He had almost always been alone and had grown into his skill by reading extensively and finding what he was interested in early in life. His desire to study and develop his skills had grown when he had moved around in his adolescence and continued even now in his sixth year.

However, all this went unseen by his relatives who cared only about what they could gain from housing the orphan and the child support they would receive from the patriarch. Everything was about money even if the McLachlans were infamous for having a fortune of blood money. Over time he had grown to not care that they didn't know the extent of his skill and so he didn't care to prove himself here at Sonora either. He was smart and he knew it and that's all that mattered.

What he did look for, however, were others who were as intelligent or as talented as he was. He enjoyed conversing with academics and others whom he considered on par with his skill and passion. He didn't believe that the effort mattered more than the quality. He believed that those who were skillful should use that skill and those who were not shouldn't try, but develop their skills behind the scenes as he had.

Of course, this was all subjective and Josh understood that. It did make social interactions a bit awkward, however. For the longest time Josh had believed no one really spoke to him unless they wanted something from him. Things had changed since two years ago when he had first transferred to Sonora and he was much more, well, civil than he had been then. Time really did heal, though not as quickly as he would have liked.

Aria helped and Josh was impressed that she was confident in her skills enough to do so. There was no way he could estimate her skill level unless he went back and tested her work on top of what he had already done. He simply continued on, leading the way and testing the dried mud with his foot to make sure it was firm before moving on. A few feet in, one of the girls gasped and he turned his head immediately, his wand at the ready and a spell on his lips to catch her. But she had regained her balance and Aria sounded amused. Josh didn't bother commenting, but nodded at Gemma and turned back to his work.

Once he was on the other side, he turned back around and looked at the rest of his teammates. As he waited for them, he brushed back his recently trimmed brown hair and took a look at what was ahead of them. He'd be able to see better once he approached it, but he sighed. "What's next, James?" he asked, waiting to move once the rest of his team had crossed. Once they began moving, he turned to Aria. "Thanks for your help," he said. "Some reinforcement was needed." The sort of relationship he wished he had with any of his younger cousins was how he treated his younger classmates. He had tried to act like an older brother to Darcie before her mom had completely warped her brain and Darcie's father had spoiled her to the core.

If one dug completely through Josh's tough exterior and searched the bottom of his heart, all he really wanted was to care for someone. It didn't have to be in a romantic way at all, but he wanted to care for people the way he had never been cared for. It was just really, really hard for him to show it since it had never been shown to him. One day, maybe, that would change.
0 Josh McLachlan Your help is noticeable. In a good way. 0 Josh McLachlan 0 5


James

April 06, 2013 4:29 PM
 
0 James Onwards to the Wall! (nm) 0 James 0 5