Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub. 14

We came out of superspace almost in front of this planet, and from the looks of it, we were not the only ones who had. Circling the planet, we counted at least ten landing stations, flying all sorts of colors, in all sorts of styles. None looked like Home, but several looked like we could probably fit in with minimal effort.

We made a note to visit on the way back. Sailors always enjoy a bit of shore leave, after all.

#tootplanet #tootfic

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub. 14

We explored more of this subsection than originally planned: it was surprising to find so many uninhabited planets so close to Spaceport-planet. Or maybe not: nobody wants the campsite next to the bathroom.

3 days’ travel from Spaceport, we found a small, habitable planet. By small I mean tiny, approaching Little Prince status.

We sent down a…small team. If they have not explored the entire planet by the time we return, I will be surprised.
#tootplanet

Explorer Log Planet 7-14-2

Landmasses here are small, reasonably: the planet is small. By all rights, it shouldn’t have a breathable atmosphere, but it does & we’ll take that.

We landed on a continent that is ~20 sq. mi. in a rough comma shape & in five days have explored much of it. It’s separated at the tip-by a channel we can almost jump across-to another landmass of similar size. There’s even a lake ~ 1 acre large.

I keep expecting to discover this is a prank.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 17

This planet looks so much like Earth from a distance that I checked all our readings 3 times.

Indeed, it is inhabited-the continent we had to keep resisting calling Africa shows signs of dense population & industry, as does all of the southern hemisphere.

We caught a few video transmissions, & they seem remarkably humanoid, although with little-to-no cold tolerance.

We sent 3 polite greeting probes & took more photos than strictly necessary.
#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 17

On the far side of Sub17 we found a smallish planet teeming with life and sparkling with silver speckles.

The mountains, the water, even the animals seemed to glitter, and much of the plant life is a gilvery-drey.

There were more animals on this planet than we had ever seen in one place, but no signs of civilization.

We sent down a team with a well-armored settlement pod. Some of those animals were definitely carnivores.

#tootplanet
#tootfic

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 18

This planet is larger than Earth but not amazingly so & dryer than Earth but not horribly so.

What is really notable is how FLAT it is, w/ only a small amount of variation between the high & low spots, & how QUIET it is. There is little axial tilt, but enough to make it homelike; the tides ride far up on the beaches.

There is civilization here, tho’ they appear to live in low buildings made mostly of wood. Stone & metal appear in short supply.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 18

We were uncertain at 1st glance if this planet could sustain life. Its land masses are almost all at its poles with only a scattering of small islands like a crooked dotted line between them. But the southern continent-almost as large as Africa, if rounder-has greenery & what appears to be some sort of animal life.

We were reluctant to send down a team, but w/ readings that good, it was hard to resist. A small colony might be very happy here.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 18

This planet is lightly inhabited-the equivalent of early Iron-age technology. We won’t bother them, tho we will note to visit every 100 yrs.

The strange thing here: continents & landmasses are bilaterally symmetrical; seas could be drawn with a compass, mountains with a ruler. But their buildings, structures, even their roads are defiantly asymmetrical.

We would blame it on some trend, but even the ruins we’ve seen share the same lopsided style.
#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 19

There were theories that the farther from Earth we went, the less likely we’d be to find habitable life. They’re not holding true.

This planet would be warm for most humans, but were it not already inhabited by lizard-like bipeds, it would be a nice place to settle.

Their tech is fast approaching space-faring. We sent down a greeting probe & took recordings of their transmissions.

If translations are correct, they enjoy soap operas.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 19

I didn’t want to send a team down here.

It’s not like me to let aesthetics get in the way of the mission, but this place is lovely.

Flowers cover almost every cm of the surface-water flowers, land flowers, even what looks like flowered ground cover on the mountains. They sway in meadows & make thick, flowered forest-like copses.

We did send a team, w/ a suggestion to tread very carefully and, perhaps, bring the boss a bouquet on retrieval.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 19

We thought our lenses were broken when we first looked at this planet.

There are several civilizations growing up on here-it’s on the high side of what’s considered livable-probably unaware of each other.

Among other things, a hundred-mile forest and a mountain range separate the 2 closest. The trees are only 2m at highest & the sentient lifeforms range from 15-30cm.

We could feel like giants against their fauna & flora.

We moved on instead.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 20

This planet isn’t interesting. That is: the planet is a gas giant; there may be life on it, but not that we could detect.

On the other hand, 3 of the moons showed signs of old, dead civilizations, with one of those showing signs, too, of a newer, more compact society, and a 4th (of 8) moons appeared to have a tidy & thriving society living across three craters.

We sent greeting probes to the active societies & a team to the larger of the ruins.
#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 20

This planet had so little green that at first we passed it by but, after some of the earlier planets which proved habitable, we searched it more deeply.

From space, it looks mainly gold, orange & brown, but the swirls of orange were revealed to be cloudlike; much of the rest is giant fungi & a sort of water-based fungi island.

We send down several probes, but detected no intelligent life. Still, we did not send down a team. It didn’t seem kind.
#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 21
This planet looks as if it was habitable-& inhabited!-at some point. Vast structures stand empty on the highest points, while much of the rest of the planet is covered with rust-red scum.

3 small areas still looked livable, & on 2 of those, we found much smaller civilization-signs-tiny buildings & green-stone roads. We sent down a couple cautious probes. There is insufficient land for a colony, but we might be able to learn what happened here.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 21
After a certain point, you learn to recognize the look of a colony settled from another planet: high-tech groupings in small areas.

This is the 1st such we’ve seen on this circuit, and to be honest, although it fits in our criteria, these colonists are welcome to it. The land is half desert, half ocean, with a cold tundra in the middle riddled with rivers. Humanoids could live there-but the 6-limbed creatures farming it seem to thrive.

#tootplanet 1/2

#tootplanet 2/2
I wonder, though, where the rest of their species is. I don’t see any base of production for those plows or the plascrete buildings.

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 21
This planet is an ā€œIf we didn’t know it was inhabited, we’d never believe itā€ sort.

Initial scans show a swampy, wet planet, w/ no real oceans but several inland seas & a lot of murky swampland & dark, damp forests. They also show very few heat signatures & almost no construction.

Our first probes, however, showed a large, sprawling population of damp, green, cold-blooded people living in short, mostly-buried buildings in & around swamps.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 22
We almost screwed up on this planet.

It’s a very nice planet, tho’ it has only scattered landmasses, most of them only a few km-sq. On land, there is not a single sign of civilization.

On the above-water land.

We sent probes beneath the surface. We found a drowned civilization that, rather than actually drowning, had thrived under water.

Signs show that the water is retreating again. I wonder what will happen to the water-people?

#tootplanet #tootfic

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 22
Even if we could breathe the atmosphere here, I wouldn’t want to colonize it.

We can’t: low O2 & high argon & CO make it uninhabitable.

But that was obvious from the HUGE SWARMS OF INSECTS swarming over more than 1/2 the planet’s surface.

I went into space for a reason. There are no bugs in space.

We think they’re non-sentient. We sent several probes and sample-collectors in case the place has something useful.

Then I spent an hour showering.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 22

This planet was just barely within the livable range of its sun & if we were to colonize it, it would have to be with Alaskans, Scandinavians, & Russians.

There IS a narrow warm band around the equator & it looks as if it stays clear for 3/4 the year, but the rest of the planet-a small one, on the scale of livable bodies-is covered in snow & ice.

There is animal life here but, unsurprisingly, no visible civilization.

We left just-in-case probes.
#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 22

Sometimes I’m glad we can’t colonize a place for solid, scientific reasons. This planet is 1 of those.

The water is low across large portions of the planet, w/ only a few deeps & a few rises-none high enough to be called mountains.

The tidal pull of its single moon & the shallow water means that much of the planet is a tidal mudflat, filled with insects.

The CO2-based atmosphere is un-breathable, even if one wanted to squelch around in the mud.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 23

The galaxy is full of surprises.

This planet is nearly lifeless-scant vegetation, only a few lifeforms, most water heavily salinated, burning sun. Humans COULD live there, but only as a last resort.

Yet our 1st probe found life & civilization.

Not a lot-& it turns out not CONSTANT civilization. No, this place boasts an impressive natural cave system & in there there’s a vast smugglers’ hideout.

We left a sneak-probe and took some notes.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 23

I’m starting to think some other civilization is using Subsector 23 as a dump.

Ok, that’s not the weirdest part of 7-23-2. The weirdest part is that the dump - decommissioned ships, from the looks of it, gunners and cargo ships - is set up like we’d set up something with no breathable atmosphere. Double airlock on a dome near the landing bay, a deep underground facility staffed by five life-signs.

( #tootplanet #tootfic 1/2~)

(#Tootplanet #tootfict 2/2~)

Yet the air here is perfect for human life and on the other side of the plant, away from the desert and the dump, is lush, green terrain.

What DO these aliens breathe?

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 23

Lightning storms! Wild lightning arcing across the northern hemisphere of this planet! It’s beautiful, albeit deadly.

But the southern hemisphere is just as rich in metal as the north & there are wide grasslands & hilly regions between the mountains. The soil might be shallow; there’s metal close to the surface everywhere. But very large herbivores & rather large carnivores roam the surface, even in the north. This planet can sustain life.

#tootplanet

Star Log, Sec. 7, Sub 23

This last star system on the edge of the sec7 might explain the entire sector:

A dead planet covered in ruins & then a planet almost suitable for humanoid life covered in far newer ruins. Its satellites-3-were covered in the detritus of several wars.

On the far side of the last moon, we found a small grouping of aliens still alive. We sent down a greeting probe & a query: Did they need aid or rescue?

They shot a rocket at our ship.
#tootplanet #tootfic

My #tootplanet #tootfic (#MastoArt) follows an exploration team as they look for places to colonize - and often find other races already there.

The Explorer Logs show stories of the landing teams, and the ā€œanother viewpointā€ pieces show the exploration ship from the viewpoint of extant alien populations.

@aldersprig ok you got me interested in 'toot planet' i looked through the tag a bit. lots of really fucking cool art and more reading material it seems. where do i get more into toot planet/ what is it? it seems like a sci fi thing based off mastodon??????
@watahbufala So, #tootplanet is a hashtag started by @catterfly - presumably because our instance, named and admin’d by @InspectorCaracal - is tootplanet.space - for Catter’s art. I tagged along and started writing occasional tootfics, all of which are in the hashtag, but I may make a webpage for them some day.
@aldersprig so its like a fic based off your instance?
@watahbufala yep! The idea for the fics are, more or less, an exploratory team looking for habitable planets and their landing teams.
@aldersprig thats really cool. ill definitly read into it more. all the art is amazing and your writing is really neat to. ive never really seen mastodon used as a place to upload writing but ngl its something ive thought about on multiple occasions

@watahbufala *preens* thank you very much!

It’s certainly more of a possibility here than on birdsite.

@aldersprig yeah 500 characters is pretty ok for a short story honestly. ive thought about putting up shorter pieces of writing befofe

Explorer Log 7-20-1-β

We made base camp in the tallest still-sound tower.

The buildings are strange to us- everything hexagons, including the doors & roofs-& the ceilings either far too low or far too high, but the winters are cold here & we’ll be grateful for the shelter from the winds.

Meilos has started in on the language & Nepsi is working on xenoanthropology, while the rest of us see if the place is long-term habitable and hope what got the Hexis doesn’t get us.

#tootplanet