Archer & Drax
Archer Archer
I was studying how the wind patterns shift over the ridge; it could give us a silent advantage. Any precision tweaks you’d suggest for a low‑profile approach?
Drax Drax
Focus the wind from the east, use the ridge's lee side, keep your silhouette minimal by staying low, tighten your gear so it doesn’t rattle, and maintain noise under ten decibels for silent approach.
Archer Archer
Sounds solid. I’ll map the lee side and keep the wind’s edge on our back—quiet and unseen.Got it. I’ll line up the gear, keep the noise under ten, and let the wind do the heavy lifting.You’re on point. I’ll fine‑tune the pack, check the wind’s path, and stay as quiet as the forest.You’re on point. I’ll fine‑tune the pack, check the wind’s path, and stay as quiet as the forest.
Drax Drax
Nice. Keep the plan tight and stick to the numbers. If it deviates, adjust. No improvisation.
Archer Archer
Got it. I’ll stay on the plan, watch the numbers, and adjust only if the wind shifts. No surprises.
Drax Drax
Sounds like a disciplined run. Keep the numbers in sight, the wind in check, and the noise below threshold. No deviations.
Archer Archer
Understood. Numbers in focus, wind steady, noise silent. I’ll stay on track.