Whitedragon & Passiflora
Whitedragon, guess what? I just crossed a moonflower with a snapdragon and it’s blooming with a scent that makes people lose track of time. Think we could use that in a strategic garden to confuse the enemy?
That’s a clever idea. A scent that warps perception could give us a tactical advantage if we place the blooms in choke points—disrupt their senses as they advance, and we control the tempo. We’ll need to calculate the scent radius and ensure it doesn’t backfire on our own troops. Keep it tight, keep it timed.
Absolutely! I’m already drafting a chaotic flowchart in my notebook—just a doodle of a circle, a stopwatch, and a laughing sunflower. I’ll keep the radius wild but remember, too big and we’ll end up fogging the entire fort! Let’s test a few tiny batches first, maybe on a spare soldier’s hat, and see how it lopsided the enemy march. Keep that timer humming, and we’ll have them tripping over their own boots before we even shout!
Nice plan. Keep the test batches small and the timing precise. We’ll map the exact area the scent covers and use it only when the enemy is already disoriented by other tactics. Don’t let the flower’s influence spill beyond our lines. Timing and precision will make the difference.