Thank you for your condolences. Your compliment would have meant a great deal to my brother: he loved his work.
First, I will be glad to go and make observations at Dover, and inform you about the sparks and their timing afterwards. You mentioned they are gaining a minute a day, but beginning on which date?
If I understand you correctly, the difficulty you see in the wards is in the interaction of the three, particularly the first two. How then, would adjustments with the stone at Dover improve things?
I remember hearing something about Ireland around January of 96, but of course, no one told me any meaningful details.
When you say unintended consequences, can you expand on that further? Whatever you can provide that would assist me in explaining to others the urgency or necessity of the matter would be helpful.
(For example, while high seas and sudden snow are a problem, I expect I will be asked how this is different from something like the bad spring storms in 1995, which did tremendous and unusual damage, but did not obviously link to other similar problems.)
Regarding the dragons, I will have to inquire of the representative from Stornoway, and it may take some time. How urgent or necessary is that data for your adjustments? I understand that those currently in charge there are being exceedingly protective of their dragons and their territory.
You mention that you considered opal a bad choice. I gather that the other stones are not opal? I admit, I'm curious about the mechanism itself. It sounds like an exceedingly complex bit of magic.
no subject
Date: 2015-05-27 07:10 pm (UTC)First, I will be glad to go and make observations at Dover, and inform you about the sparks and their timing afterwards. You mentioned they are gaining a minute a day, but beginning on which date?
If I understand you correctly, the difficulty you see in the wards is in the interaction of the three, particularly the first two. How then, would adjustments with the stone at Dover improve things?
I remember hearing something about Ireland around January of 96, but of course, no one told me any meaningful details.
When you say unintended consequences, can you expand on that further? Whatever you can provide that would assist me in explaining to others the urgency or necessity of the matter would be helpful.
(For example, while high seas and sudden snow are a problem, I expect I will be asked how this is different from something like the bad spring storms in 1995, which did tremendous and unusual damage, but did not obviously link to other similar problems.)
Regarding the dragons, I will have to inquire of the representative from Stornoway, and it may take some time. How urgent or necessary is that data for your adjustments? I understand that those currently in charge there are being exceedingly protective of their dragons and their territory.
You mention that you considered opal a bad choice. I gather that the other stones are not opal? I admit, I'm curious about the mechanism itself. It sounds like an exceedingly complex bit of magic.