Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Kaylna Country - Part 3 - Weird Landmarks, Towns and Babas!


 Weird Landmarks of Kalyna

Some places don’t just have stories—they make ‘em up while you’re standing there.”
—Stumpy Magree

 

The Green Vault

Ukrainian Nickname: Zernohrud (“Seed-Chest”)



Buried beneath layers of earth, encryption, and half-forgotten prayers lies the Green Vault—a seedbank from before the Hodgepocalypse, once managed by PryvitGrow, now controlled by the fungal diplomats known only as the Harvesters. Lush, humid, and alive in unsettling ways, the Vault is no longer a place of preservation but negotiation: its aisles of cryo-coffins, arcane hydro-tanks, and whispering flora form a living archive of crops long lost to the world above. Access is permitted—but only through “favors” owed, bargains struck, or memories harvested. Those who enter often leave changed, seeded with more than they came f

Plot Hook:

  • A dying village seeks a drought-proof barley strain rumored to still rest in Zernohrud’s third chamber, but the Harvester who guards it wants a song that hasn’t been sung since the war.
  • A former Vault technician-turned-scarecrow has reawakened and begun growing roots through a nearby town’s dreams—he wants his “archive key” back.

 

The Painted Crossroads



At this crossroads, the dirt has soaked up so much spell-chalk, runic ink, and baba footpaint that it’s turned into a living mural. Roads shift direction overnight, and travelers who pass through might end up in the past, future, or inside someone else’s folk tale. Locals say you must sing a verse before crossing—or risk becoming a footnote.

The Root-Choked Chapel



Once a wooden church, now consumed by massive, intelligent roots. It’s partially aboveground, partially underground, and entirely alive. The pulpit preaches itself. The pews grow moss cushions. Prayers whispered here may be answered by the trees, but the cost is never clear until the next full moon.

The Singing Stove



Deep in an overgrown clearing sits a cast-iron woodstove, still warm after all these years. No fire needed—it burns on memory. It sings old songs when fed family recipes, and warps reality slightly with each verse. Leave stew in it overnight and you may wake up having dreamt a life where everything went right. Or wrong.

The Weeping Milepost



Carved from old-world concrete and rebar, this roadside milepost constantly sheds faintly glowing water. Touch it, and you’ll see visions of those who died traveling—some remembered, some erased. It’s become a shrine to lost pilgrims, truckers, and adventurers who never made it home. Sometimes it whispers names in languages no longer spoken.

The Whispering Silo



A solitary grain tower on the vast prairie, its rusted ribs now hum with other people’s dreams. Those who sleep nearby often wake with someone else’s memory—sometimes helpful, sometimes tragic, always vivid. The Silo is said to record the lives of all who pass by and, on rare occasions, answers questions no one asked aloud.

Kalyna Country Transformed: Post-Apocalyptic Folkloric Map

ong after the world cracked and the stars blinked strangely, Kalyna Country did not simply endure—it remembered. Woven from ancestral memory, mutant resilience, and the shattered ley-lines of a forgotten age, this once-rural land has become a folkloric circuit of survival and spectacle. At its heart lies the Relic Roadshow—a mystical race across nine enchanted roadside wonders, each tethered to a sacred artifact tied to the land's soul. From neon-slick cities to fungal fortresses, psychic duck parks to haunted sausage plants, each stop tests more than strength—it challenges the heart, heritage, and humor of those brave enough to walk the path. For some, it’s a contest. For others, it’s a pilgrimage. But for the land itself, it’s a ritual. One that keeps the Dreamtime stable… and the foolish entertained.

Andrew: Where the Little Bears Play


Andrew is a quiet pocket of post-Hodgepocalypse tenderness—a humble town rebuilt by Little Bears, devoted to harmony, community, and protecting their cubs. With its garlic-scented streets and echoes of a forgotten premier, this settlement seems almost too soft to survive… and yet it thrives. Most homes are cozy, compact, and filled with laughter. The enigmatic Mischief Baba, George Netudyhata, watches over the town like a grandfatherly storm cloud—equal parts entertainer and enforcer. Despite its friendly tone, Andrew holds secrets under its soil: haunted grain elevators, flaming obelisks, and visions sent from the minds of Dreamtime titans. Its greatest trial sends adventurers beyond its borders, on a quest that tests care over carnage. In Andrew, the lesson is simple: kindness is not weakness, and the smallest heroes sometimes guard the biggest relics.

The Giant Duck



Perched in a tranquil park and surrounded by play structures and laughing children, the Giant Duck exudes an eerie calm—a slumbering sentinel of dream and memory carved from ancient polymer and imbued with a soul. This towering yellow relic is more than nostalgia made manifest; it’s a living node of transfiguration and empathy, echoing the hopes of youth and the bonds of trust. Unlike its louder cousins on the Relic Roadshow circuit, the Duck does not demand conquest but communion. To awaken it, one must return its wandering avatar—a living duck carrying its essence in the form of a keychain—and ensure it arrives unharmed, body and spirit. This sacred act of guardianship activates the Duck's magic, offering blessings to those pure enough to escort it through the madness of Elk Island Eldritch Park. But beware: even serenity has protectors, and not all birds are gentle.

Ed-Town: Where Every Road Becomes a Stage



The Big city of Kaylna Country, ED-Town is Strathcan’s beating, boot-stomping heart—a sprawling urban sprawl of busted neon, psychic festivals, and spiraling ambition. Founded on revelry and reclaimed ruin, the city thrives as a cross between an open mic apocalypse and a roadside attraction theme park. Beneath its cracked pavement and modular food trucks lies a community that runs on spectacle. Everyone is either performing, recording, or being watched by something arcane. The city’s patron is the Western Baba, Helen Gretzky, but she rarely shows herself. Instead, she lets the rhythm roll—her emissaries are punk cowboys, biker mystics, and retail prophets. Whether you're jamming in the alleys or battling in the backlot arenas, Ed-Town rewards flair over form, swagger over subtlety. Here, to walk the path of heroes, you first have to strut it.  For more details of this vibrant place, see the Book of Arrogance.

The Big Boot



Towering like a titan’s castoff and smelling faintly of ozone and oilskin, the Big Boot is a relic of raw evocation—born in a decade when glam, grit, and guitar solos ruled the land. Once a roadside photo stop, it now crackles with storm-forged power, pulsing with every thunderhead and festival beat that rolls through Strathcan. Legends say it was crafted from the leather of a dream-ox and stitched by forgotten gods of showmanship. To attune to the Boot is to earn its rhythm—to stomp, strut, shred, and survive. But the path to its activation lies through the Big Bad Shop, a gauntlet of musical mayhem and commercialized chaos run by Size 13 Rage, a family of minotaur rockers who believe that only the bold—and the loud—deserve the Boot’s blessing. Pass their tests or face the mosh pit of monsters, lasers, and style-based reality distortion.

Glendon: The Town That’s Just Trying to Feed You (and Bill You)



Glendon was once a sleepy little town where the most significant concern was whether the annual garlic butter ran out before the last tour bus. Home to the world’s most famous Pyrogy, it was a welcoming—if quirky—stop on the Relic Roadshow. But now, under siege by a Corpseman platoon, Glendon has traded friendly folk songs for whispered warnings. While undead checkpoints block the roads and playgrounds are converted into sniper nests, the townsfolk remain hidden behind closed doors, quietly rooting for the PCs from behind twitching curtains. If the party succeeds, they’ll be hailed as heroes with a celebratory meal worthy of legend—potato, cheddar, sour cream, and pride. Just don’t forget your wallet: the after-party always ends with a surprise bill. In Glendon, even a thank-you comes with a receipt.

The Giant Pyrogy



Glistening with steam, anchored to a slanted fork like a weaponized dumpling of destiny, the Giant Pyrogy is more than a roadside carb-load—it’s a bastion of community spirit and culinary abjuration. Once a tourist trap celebrating Eastern European prairie pride, the relic was awakened during the Hodgepocalypse, infused with defensive magic that makes it resonate with warmth, welcome, and a hint of passive-aggressive hospitality. Now, however, it has been compromised. The Corpsemen, ravenous undead soldiers of warped bureaucracy, seek to hijack its power for necrogastronomic purposes. To attune to the Pyrogy, the party must reclaim it from siege, defuse its sabotage mechanisms, and survive both the undead and the awkward locals who never expected outsiders to save their sacred starch. Only by reclaiming the relic and honoring its spirit can the heroes earn the Pyrogy Keychain, a charm that grants resistance to necrotic effects—and indigestion.

Mundare: The Town Where Meat Meets Mysticism



Mundare is a crossroads of clashing powers and salted legacies. Nestled among cranberry bogs and ritual farmland, it thrives at the strange intersection of culinary folklore and post-apocalyptic pragmatism. At its center is a three-way struggle: the sacred Orthodoxy templars hold fast to ancestral faith; the industrial Packenpocks Production LTD churns out meat and muscle for the region’s economy; and the now-missing Gothic Baba Vera, spiritual protector of the kielbassa, once kept balance between them. As tensions bubble like broth in a blood-filled pot, the town teeters toward eruption. Residents go about their daily lives—dodging Shuffalos, chasing haunted geraniums, and debating whether to fear or feast upon desecrator raids—but all eyes are on the giant meat in the courtyard. In Mundare, heroes aren’t forged—they’re cured.

The Giant Kielbassa



Coiled like a crimson god and glistening with mystic grease, the Giant Kielbassa is more than just a massive sausage-shaped monument—it’s a necromantic artifact of power, pulsing with heat, memory, and preservation magic. Once a folkloric blessing for long winters and family feasts, its essence was twisted during the Hodgepocalypse into a meat-bound conduit of arcane energy and now housed within the Meat Locker—part shrine, part slaughterhouse—this relic fuels ovens and freezes time, its aura able to cure flesh or chill hearts. Guarded by fire, ice, and bureaucracy, the kielbassa tests more than just brute strength. To claim its favor, one must endure its trials, survive its flavors, and confront the truths wrapped in casing: that power, like sausage, is often made from unseen gristle.

Smokey Lake: Where the Vegetables Watch You Back



Once a lakeside retreat, Smokey Lake has become a glittering test plot for psychic flora, retail dreams, and sentient tourism. Reclaimed and redesigned by the Harvesters, a telepathic plant race with both agrarian zeal and corporate ambition, the town is now equal parts botanical utopia and souvenir dystopia. Everywhere you look: pod people with serene smiles, psychic billboards urging consumption, and cheerful kiosks selling produce that might talk back. Despite the saccharine façade, danger simmers under the surface—from rogue flora in fast-food kitchens to nightmare entities walking out of drugstores. Holding the peace is an uneasy pact with the Porcipine Baba, who ensures visitors get a sporting chance to face the Pumpkin Trial. Smokey Lake may look like a family-friendly roadside attraction but stay too long and you might sprout roots—or worse, be recruited for product testing.

The Concrete Pumpkin Patch



Sitting in serene defiance of entropy and autumn alike, the Concrete Pumpkin Patch is no mere gourd. This titanic squash of shimmering polymer and arcane concrete radiates latent abjuration magic—protective, reactive, and temperamental. It doesn’t just defend the land; it remembers what threatens it. Infused with the psychic biocodes of the Harvester species and sanctified by the Porcipine Baba, Ester Kishka, the relic lies hidden within a crystalline labyrinth where thought becomes terrain. Its activation requires not brute force, but careful thought, empathy, and intuition—tested in rooms that challenge perception, identity, and emotional resilience. Only by surviving this botanical mind palace can one earn the Pumpkin Keychain, a charm of harvest protection and aura-based resistance. Beware, though: the pumpkin watches, and its defenses grow stronger the more foolish your intentions.

St. Paul: Homestead of the Stars



In St. Paul, cowboy hats pair with chrome jumpsuits and cattle calls echo alongside space beacons. The town is almost entirely inhabited by Marlarkoids, a proud, mystery-cloaked species who claim extraterrestrial heritage but live the lives of prairie settlers. Equal parts ranchers and retro-futurists, they build rayguns out of farm tools, quote galactic scripture with rural twang, and retrofit UFOs in backyard garages. The community blends frontier grit with Faustian flair, treating their landing pad as both shrine and workshop. Whether you're solving the mystery of a missing mascot, tracking stolen spacecraft components, or getting slimed in a grocery store, one thing’s for sure: St. Paul welcomes all who dream big—especially if they bring snacks, don’t question the lore, and are willing to play hockey under a saucer-lit sky.

The St. Paul UFO Landing Pad



Initially built in the mid-20th century as a publicity stunt, the UFO Landing Pad of St. Paul has become the symbolic and arcane endpoint of the Relic Roadshow. While it once offered little more than photo ops and tourism brochures, the Hodgepocalypse has turned it into something far more profound: a latent Conjuration nexus and gateway to the stars—or perhaps stranger places. To awaken its power, adventurers must clear residual hauntings, restore its arcane signal beacon, and contend with the sabotage of Julia Hellyer, an agent provocateur hiding behind small-town smiles. Those who succeed gain more than just the final Keychain Relic—they open a corridor of fate, setting the stage for future contact, conflict, or ascension. The prize? Fame, a paycheck, and the potential to ride a UFO into whatever lies beyond the edge of the Hallowed World.

Vegreville: The Town That Dreams in Color



Nestled in the heart of Kalyna Country’s warped prairie, Vegreville is a resilient settlement built on layers of tradition, dream magic, and stubborn agricultural pride. Though much of the original town was lost to the Hodgepocalypse, its people endured, rebuilding along a central strip where commerce, culture, and celebration still thrive. The city pulses with community life: greenhouses that whisper, breweries haunted by taxidermy spirits, markets peddling both pies and plasma, and shrines where faith fuels travel. Overseen by Mayor Sofia Kostash and protected by eccentric defenders like a talking quilt and a retired warbot named I.V.A.N., Vegreville has become the first checkpoint for glory-seekers in the Solstice Race. But beneath its festive surface lies a deep understanding: the Pysanka gives freely only to those who embrace both folklore and fury. Here, to race is to be judged—not just by the land, but by legend itself.

The Giant Pysanka



Rising from the dream-tilled earth like a monument to hope and heritage, the Giant Pysanka is more than a roadside oddity—it is a living relic. This massive, rune-etched Easter egg hums with divinatory energy, bound to the rhythms of the land and the will of those who seek its favor. Shimmering with forgotten glyphs and chromatic wards, it channels the echoes of ancestral prayers and future visions alike. To attune to it is to awaken a bond with the Dreamtime itself—a bond overseen by the Silver Baba, who records each attempt like a folkloric census taker. But such favor is not given freely; the Pysanka is guarded by the Earthbound Great Serpent, a horned wyrm of soil and memory that reshapes the ground around the egg into a living gauntlet of trials and tremors. Defeating it is possible surviving it with honor is preferable.

Vilna: Grit, Steel, and Fungal Resolve



The town of Vilna is a case study in post-apocalyptic adaptation: once flattened by fungal mutation, now reborn as a steel-clad mushroom metropolis built by the stoic and obsessive Trollitariots. These workaholic trolls live inside hollowed-out caps, repurpose bottle depots with psychic labor, and hold civic debates over who deserves adorable mutant elephants. They value sweat, schedules, and settlement rights—every mushroom in town is deeded, every metal panel documented. At the heart of their orderly chaos is a community that blends surrealism with socialist engineering: haunted churches, trash heap tigers, public libraries policed by gremlin-resistant reading policies, and enough skill montages to make any handyman weep with joy. Outsiders are welcome—if they help fix something. Just don’t break the rules. Or the ropes. And definitely don’t make fun of the mushrooms. They’re listening.

Mushroom Prime



Fused from three titanic stalks of bio-metallic mycelium and pulsing with green luminescence, Mushroom Prime is not just a building—it’s a biomechanical colossus, a post-Hodgepocalypse temple to grit, growth, and galvanization. At its core lies a metaphysical altar, a conduit between the Hallowed World and this reality, protected by labyrinthine fungal corridors, spring-loaded deathtraps, and territorial trolls with clipboard schedules. This living fungus isn’t simply grown—it’s engineered, each cap and stalk infused with psionic steel and the memory of every Trollitariot who climbed it before. To reach the relic within—the Mushroom Keychain, symbol of resilience, industry, and earthen strength—the party must endure obstacle courses, mind-warped spores, and an invasion of Hyperdemons trying to make this place a launchpad into the wider world. Mushroom Prime doesn’t just test adventurers. It records them. And if you're not memorable, you’re mulch.

Whoswho

The Eight Babas of Power

In Kalyna Country, where folk magic and post-apocalyptic mystery intertwine, the Eight Babas of Power stand as matriarchal guardians of the land’s strangest truths. These eccentric, formidable elders each rule over a different town, their personalities as distinct as the relics they protect. Whether guiding with cosmic insight, matchmaking with undead charm, or laying down frontier justice with spell-slamming revolvers, the Babas are equal parts protectors, meddlers, and living legends. Their influence shapes the spiritual and magical balance of Kalyna Country, and crossing one often means crossing them all.

Cosmic Baba



Alexander “Aleck” Molchan, better known as the Cosmic Baba, is a stargazing, cosplay-obsessed arcane powerhouse who guards the UFO landing pad in St. Paul. Clad in a starry robe over a lumberjack shirt and horn-rimmed glasses, he looks more like a fan-con fixture than a magical heavyweight—but don’t let that fool you. Aleck is a gentle, lawful good soul with a deep yearning to make first contact with actual extraterrestrials, offering aid to any who share even a whisper of alien knowledge. A master of arcane and cosmic forces, he hovers through the air, deflects magic like a pro, and throws around Gamma Blasts and reality-bending spells with nerdy enthusiasm. Just don’t challenge him to a costume party—you’ll lose, and he’ll still bring the fog machine.

Gothic Baba



Vera Polyakov, the Gothic Baba, is a black-garbed necromancer with a limp, a heart full of garlic-scented compassion, and dominion over the Great Mundare Sausage. Though she channels the grim art of White Necromancy, her magic is used for nourishment, resurrection, and romantic meddling more than malice. She commands corpsemen with uncanny ease, acting as a quiet architect of peace between the living and the dead. Despite her mournful aura and poetic leanings, Vera is an unabashed matchmaker who champions love in all forms and has little patience for heartbreakers. Kind, clever, and deeply haunted, she is a reluctant legend of the wastes—one part mournful aunt, one part death-powered deli matron.

Industrial Baba



Once a beloved elder named Helen Chornyi, the Industrial Baba lives on as a towering iron construct animated by soul-forged magic and Trollitariot devotion. Though encased in steel and bound to the bio-metallic mushroom fortresses of Vilna, her heart remains warm—if overbearing. She is a meddlesome matron who helps with a heavy hand, frequently making decisions for others “for their good.” Kind, clever, and practically immovable, she is a master of industrial magic and battlefield control, channeling spells through her massive frame like a living forge. Rumors persist that carrying a metal mushroom may allow her to travel—but until then, she rules her domain with stern affection and iron resolve.

Mischief Baba



George Netudyhata, the Mischief Baba, is a charming old trickster wrapped in blue jeans, suspenders, and the scent of wood shavings, with a ghostly dog always at his side and a glint of playful wisdom in his eye. Guardian of the Great Mallard Duck of Andrew, George is both a prankster and a protector, delighting in harmless thefts, misdirections, and "teachable moments" designed to help others grow. While he may bargain with sly grins and vanishing goods, he is fiercely loyal to children and will mete out justice to anyone who harms them. Underneath the mischief lies a strict code: every deal he makes is honored to the letter, and perhaps even the spirit if you earn his respect. Expect tricks, illusions, and laughter—so long as you’re not on the wrong side of his dog’s teeth.

Porcupine Baba



Ester Kishka, the Porcupine Baba, is a camouflage-clad recluse with a tassel-fringed jacket that bristles into spines when danger draws near. Crouched and squinty, she skulks through the wilderness like a spirit of caution and sharp lessons, letting her Harvester allies run things while she obsesses over secrets and survival. Though gruff and easily forgotten by outsiders, she’s fiercely loyal once bonded—and bound by an obscure ritual that, if properly performed, obligates her to help. A master of stealth magic and tactical strikes, she’s a prickly ally who favors indirect solutions and painful truths. Just don’t comment on her speech, and you might survive long enough to learn why she always travels with a packed bag and a silent promise.

Rose Baba



Rose Pieroginik, the Rose Baba, is a fiery, plant-bodied powerhouse in shoulder pads and heels, blending 1980s business ambition with arcane charisma and chlorophyll charm. Once a driven entrepreneur, her destiny was derailed by an encounter with the Harvesters, and she survived only by transferring her soul into a pod person’s form. Now the glamorous guardian of the Giant Perogy, she runs a bustling tourist-trap restaurant with a smile, a pitch, and a secret hunger for the next big opportunity. Fiercely persuasive and disarmingly friendly, she can charm crowds with pheromones or crush minds with spells. Of all the Babas, she’s the one most likely to offer you a contract—and the one you least want to disappoint.

Silver Baba



The Silver Baba, Sophie Obbizhysvit, guardian of the Great Pysanka of Vegreville, is a radiant elder wrapped in shimmering runes and divine insight, serving as the spokesperson and spiritual compass for the Babas of Power. Once forged by hardship, she now channels her strength into divination and justice, loathing arrogance and silently orchestrating poetic downfalls for bullies. Her gleaming attire stuns both in style and in combat, and her gaze can paralyze the unwise. Though reserved, she grants favors to those who uncover her hidden truths, appearing like a vision for a single round to tip fate’s scales. With foresight in her pocket and humility in her heart, the Silver Baba sees what others dare not dream.

Western Baba



Clad in worn leather, spurred boots, and grit-soaked wisdom, the Western Baba, Helen Gretzsky, is the arcane gunslinger of the eight—part wizard, part frontier legend. A master of evocation and raw force magic, she blends spellwork with sharpshooting, her long-bore revolver doubling as a spellcasting focus and symbol of justice. Gruff but good-hearted, she rides the line between law and freedom, protecting the overlooked and putting down the wicked with a steady hand and a flash of cyan flame. She’s seen strange things out on the range—stranger still if you know where to dig—and she doesn't hesitate to act when fate draws its gun first. Respect her boundaries, and you’ll find no more faithful ally this side of the Hodge Line.

Beyond the Babas - Key NPCs of Kalyna Country

Coach Danya Belski



Solstice Gym-Theologian of the New Cimmerians

Coach Belski is built like a shrine and talks like your favorite gym teacher crossed with a mystic firebrand. A revered mentor among New Cimmerians, he runs “Temple of the Rep” inside an abandoned curling rink-turned-sanctuary, where squat racks share space with votive candles and protein altars. He preaches the gospel of discipline through exercise, quoting ancestral sayings between sets and insisting that spiritual enlightenment starts with proper form.  Known for blessing barbell plates before competitions and officiating the sacred Trial by Burnt Barbell, Belski trains youth not just to lift—but to lift with purpose. He believes everyone has a “deadlift destiny,” and if you don’t know yours yet, he’ll help you sweat it out.

Plot Hook: Coach Belski’s prized anvil-dumbbell relic, the Burden of Saints, has been stolen before the Solstice Trials, and all the gym mirrors are now showing scenes of failure—some prophetic, some forgotten. To recover it, the party must track the thief through rival gym-cults, shadowboxing spirits, and a weightlifting ghost who refuses to rest until someone finally hits their PR.

Father Melosky



The iron backbone of Mundare’s Orthodoxy—a broad-shouldered priest who quotes saints mid-grapple and leads sermons with bruised knuckles and blessed sweat. Once a humble Basilian monk, he now trains “devotional wrestlers” in the Basilica-Bunker’s holy gymnasium, delivering faith through footwork and fearsome forearms. While the townsfolk respect his strength, they whisper about the day he knocked out a demon mid-prayer... and smiled.

Plot Hook:
During the Feast of St. Demetrius, an initiates' match ends in a vision of fire and betrayal etched in sweat on the gym walls. Father Melosky needs help uncovering whether it’s prophecy—or punishment for loving the fight too much.

 

Pauly PackenPocks,



 

The slick-talking, deal-making meat mogul of Mundare, is the founder and face of PackenPocks—the post-apocalyptic prairie’s most infamous meat processing empire. Charismatic, cutthroat, and always ready with a handshake or a sales pitch, Pauly rose to prominence after the collapse of inter-provincial trade barriers, flooding the market with his vacuum-sealed meats and catchy jingle: “Pick me up a PackenPocks!” Though he paints himself as a visionary feeding the nation, locals know him as a wheeler-dealer with a golden tongue and a silver knife, always angling for the next big contract, relic, or loophole. Rumors swirl about just what kind of meat makes it into a PackenPocks pack—but Pauly smiles, pats your back, and says, “Don’t worry, it’s local.”

Plot Hook:
A rival distributor has gone missing after accusing PackenPocks of selling “miracle meat” that doesn’t spoil—and might not die. Pauly hires the party to clear his name, but every clue leads deeper into the meatworks, where the sausages hum and the vats breathe.

 Kalyna Country Quest Hooks

The following are 10 playable quest hooks for adventuring parties traveling through Kalyna Country, each rooted in folklore, magical surrealism, and post-Hodgepocalyptic eccentricity. Use them as one-shots, campaign arcs, or side plots along the Relic Roadshow.

The Pickled Prophecy

A barrel of enchanted dill pickles begins whispering accurate predictions—then goes silent. The villagers believe the final message warned of a betrayal during the Solstice Feast. Now everyone’s a suspect, and the pickles are missing.

Trial by Barbell

A New Cimmerian gym-camp goes quiet after an initiation rite leaves the forest trembling. Rumors speak of a cursed barbell that lifted the lifter instead. Locals need someone to recover it before the next flexquake.

Relic Roadshow Sabotage

One of the Solstice Race checkpoints—the Giant Duck—is missing its living keychain again. But this time, the duck is laying decoy eggs filled with psychic traps. Why? And who’s tampering with the course?

The Singing Stove’s Lullaby

A villager accidentally left stew cooking in the Singing Stove and woke up speaking an extinct language, and can’t stop. Worse, their dreams now broadcast locally. The stove must be appeased before it starts a psychic storm.

The Sausage Knight Has Gone Rogue

The enchanted Kielbassa Golem of Mundare, normally a protector, has wandered off muttering strange anti-orthodoxy poetry. The Orthodox want it sanctified. The PackenPocks want it weaponized. The Baba wants you to ask it what’s wrong.

Ghost Wheat Harvest

A golden field has sprouted overnight in a zone scorched by leyfire decades ago. Locals who try to reap it disappear, replaced by smiling doubles. The field sings at night. The didukhs are starting to sway.

The Perogy Pact

Rose Baba has struck a temporary alliance with a rogue Corpseman band—but a love triangle, a cursed recipe, and a stolen soul-storage tupperware have thrown everything off. Unpack the emotional mess or risk undead litigation.

The Root-Choked Chapel Awakens

Prayers muttered in the wrong tone have reawakened the sentient root system. The chapel now preaches fire-and-brimstone sermons through wind chimes and tree bark. The villagers are starting to agree. Intervention is required.

Raiders of the Lost Recipe

A Living Recipe scroll from Redbog Hollow has gone missing, rumored to grant immortality through soup. Several factions want it. Unfortunately, it’s now in the belly of a Thornslither with a taste for poetry.

Return of the Baba's Scar

A psychic eclipse has caused the Baba’s Scar to start rewriting local reality. Trees turn into doors. People find versions of themselves arguing in mirrors. A brave team must descend into the crater to stitch the storylines back together—or be edited out of history.

 




Sunday, August 3, 2025

Kalyna Country – Part 2 - Where the Roots Remember

 

Classes & Paths of Kalyna Country

Adventurer (Rogue Analogue)



Adventurers in Kalyna Country are quick-footed, sharp-eyed folk who live between fields and fairy tales. They’re the ones who know how to cross crumbled bridges, bargain with gremlins, or unjam a relic gate with a spoon and a prayer. Whether sprinting across leyline-charged ruins or sneaking past Corpseman patrols, they survive through wit, guts, and a healthy dose of village gossip. Many adventurers double as couriers, scouts, and odd jobbers for towns too stubborn to die.

  • Prowler: The shadows under the Babas’ gaze, these figures move between legality and rebellion. Spies, smugglers, and freedom fighters, Prowlers ensure truths survive where laws do not. Their smiles may lie, but their loyalty runs deeper than grave-roots.


  • Scout: Trailblazers and survivalists who know every edible mushroom and every haunted tree by name. Scouts are the first to enter dream-distorted paths or blazing grainfields, marking routes with ribbon charms and chalked pysanka sigils. Some claim to hear the land whisper, guiding them like an old friend.


  • Scrap Foot: Daredevils of the open road, Scrap Foots are racers, delivery demons, and dust-cloaked legends of the Solstice Race. Whether carrying a giant duck keychain or fleeing a relic tantrum, they treat every journey like a stage. They’re fast, flashy, and fueled by perogies and pride.


  • Troubleshooter: Fix-it folk and relic wranglers, these tinkerers keep Baba relics humming and ancient tractors coughing to life. Whether it’s defusing a warded boot trap or patching a leaky leyline tap, they’re indispensable in every self-respecting village. They’re the ones grandmothers trust with the kettle and kids trust with a slingshot upgrade.


Channeler



Channelers are vessels for power—ancestral, arcane, or mechanical. Their magic flows from folklore, fuel, or faith, manifesting through dance, embroidery, or the wrenching open of haunted engines. Often blessed or cursed by a Baba, they balance emotion with expression, becoming icons in communities where miracles are maintenance work.

  • Faustian Mechanic: This path has conflicting origins.  One tale says it came from a shopping trip to the Great Western Mall of Edtown.  Other believe it started when the Malarkoids of St. Paul started educating the masses. Folk inventors who made deals with power through parts and prayers. They graft tractor engines into totem armor and coax spell circuits out of forgotten mall fountains. These mechanics barter with junk spirits and treat St. Paul as a sacred pilgrimage of salvage and weird wisdom.


  • Sentinel (Rushnyk Warden): Relic-bound knights who wear oaths like embroidered cloaks. Whether sworn under a solstice moon or by a field-shrine burning with visions, they uphold the old laws—wherever they still hold. Their rushnyks (embroidered cloths) aren’t just symbols but woven wards passed down in blood.  These also represent the warrior monks of the The Orthodoxy.


  • Witch: Kalyna’s Witches live in shrines, barns, and backrooms. Tied to spirit-world rhythms and seasonal rituals, they weave blessings into veils, soups, and lullabies. Often called Baba’s daughters (or sons), they heal with a glare and hex with a hug. Every Baba likely trained a witch—or was one.


Combatant

Combatants are Kalyna’s front-liners—warriors forged in scrapyards, sausage plants, and Solstice arenas. Whether brawling with shovels or swinging relic scythes, they embody the raw strength of survival and ritualized defiance. These fighters don’t speak in spells or sermons—they let fists, flames, and frying pans do the talking. From barnyard brawls to psionic duels at the local fairgrounds, Combatants prove that when everything else breaks, the body becomes the last sacred weapon.



  • Brute (Traditional)
    These are the kielbasa-clubbers, dumpling-duelists, and shovel-swingers who view strength as both an inheritance and an act of worship. Raised in the culture of the New Cimmerians, they live by a creed of community and raw might. Whether defending the Pysanka with a dented pot-lid shield or bare-knuckling a mutant hog during harvest, Traditional Brutes are revered folk warriors whose combat style is equal parts farmhand and folklore. 


  • Brute (New Age )
    New Age Brutes bring neon flair and old-school fury. Solstice racers turned gladiators, hockey-stick bruisers, armored cowboys—they weaponize speed and swagger. Found in stunt shows, brawl pits, and thunder-chariot jousts, these brutes are as likely to rev an engine mid-fight as they are to flex their embroidered armor. For them, every battle is a performance, and losing isn’t part of the script.


  • Commander

Commanders in Kalyna Country are not just tacticians—they're tradition-keepers, parade marshals, and kitchen-table negotiators. These natural-born leaders can transform a church choir into a resistance cell or turn last year's harvest into a rolling supply caravan. With booming voices and boots caked in leyline dust, they carry the weight of villages on their shoulders. Their presence is steadying—a reminder that even in the weirdest winters, someone still remembers the plan.

 

  • Deadeye (Marksman Path)
    Deadeyes are the guardians of the ridgelines—sharp-eyed snipers, duck-blind prophets, and iron-nerved duelists. With relic bows or bolted-together rifles, they protect borders, shoot omens out of the sky, and settle disputes with a single crack of thunder. Folk whisper about them like ghost stories: “She can shoot the lice off a Corpseman’s scalp,” or “He once winged a demon mid-jump.” During festivals, they win marksmanship contests. During invasions, they end them. Whether etched with saintly symbols or customized with leyline scopes, their weapons are more than tools—they're community promises.


Psychic

Psychics are the dream-drunk, leyline-tuned, emotionally explosive weirdos of Kalyna Country. They serve as translators for the land’s subconscious, interpreters of prophetic livestock, and counselors to those lost between timelines. They speak with ghosts, scream with storms, and sometimes cry radioactive tears. Everyone fears them a little. Everyone needs them more.



  • Eruptor
    Eruptors are emotional warheads with legs. Folk legends follow them like sparks—tales of villages vaporized over bad coffee or taverns levitated during breakups. And while some of those stories are mostly exaggerations, it’s true that Eruptors channel elemental chaos through their volatile psyches. Most keep their power tightly in check, unleashing it only with surgical fury—or just enough to make people think twice. Whether forging molten justice or bluffing with a flicker of flame, Eruptors walk the line between feared pariah and folk hero with terrifying grace.


  • Mentalist
    With a touch of a hand or a whispered poem, Mentalists unravel minds and soothe nightmares. They're the village therapists, lie detectors, and accidental prophets. Some wear folk masks to shield themselves from the thoughts of others—or to keep others safe from theirs. In a land where dreams can bleed into daylight, a good Mentalist is worth their weight in silver dandelions.


  • Psi-Warrior (Didukh Sentinel)
    These stoic protectors wield emotion as a blade, their weapons often bound in sacred harvest sheaves called didukhs. Sworn to defend dreamers and farmers alike, they stand tall at crossroads, watching for omens and monsters. Many wear capes embroidered with family griefs. When they raise their sheaves, winds hush and spirits take notice.


  • Rocker
    In Kalyna Country, songs are spells, and some instruments cry louder than bombs. Psychic Rockers blend bardic bravado with brain-shaking feedback, turning battlefields into concerts and roadside rests into raves. They’re the heroes of verse and volume, using psychic frequencies to bust undead skulls and raise festival spirits. Every Feylin has a favorite Rocker story. Every Corpseman has a tinnitus memory.


Ritualist

Ritualists are the engineers of the unseen—the ones who map the wind, bless the livestock, and rewire the bones of the world with ceremony and chalk. Often half-wizards and half-weather-vanes, they keep Kalyna Country’s balance humming, even when the harmonics go haywire.



  • Artillery Mage: These are recent addition to the ara, but the high magic and the widing road was just too tempting and the locals have started to learn this way.  These mobile spellcasters specialize in long-range arcane bombardment, often sporting embroidered goggles and glowing with neon glyphs and sass.


  • Magister: The Molfars, Archivists of dream-folk tales, these reclusive scholars haunt traveling mushroom libraries and shrine-buses. They read tea leaves and leyline pulses with equal clarity, translating forgotten Baba directives into village survival plans. Many are half-mad. All are vital.


  • Rainmaker: They have many names: Hradiwnky (hail-men), khamarnyky (rain man). Vital during droughts and celebrations alike, Rainmakers draw down clouds with dance, song, and ancestral curses. They walk the fields with thunder god tattoos and whisper to weather spirits like old friends. Every harvest season depends on their patience—and their rage.


e

Kalyna Country – Where the Roots Remember



Stumpy Magree’s Field Notes:

"Now don’t mind the twitchy squirrels or that whisperin’ wheat—Kalyna Country’s always been a bit... chlorophyllosophical."

Y’see, this isn’t just east-central Alberta anymore. Nope. Since the ol’ Hodgepocalypse came rootin’ through, this patch of prairie’s gone from quaint to quite quixotic. Kalyna Country—named for the highbush cranberry, bless her boughs—is now a sprouting land of dreams, folklore, and radical rootstock rewilding. Some folks say it’s the largest blooming museum in the world, at over 20,000 square kilometres! That’s more real estate than Prince Edward Island, if you’re keepin’ score in acres and echos.

And oh, it remembers. It remembers every settler’s sigh, every frog’s dream, every whispered wartime promise stuffed into the roots of a rushnyk and buried for safe-keeping.

Weather Forecast: Partly Ritual with a Chance of Rainchant

Kalyna’s weather don’t listen to the jet stream. No, sir—she listens to memory, prophecy, and maybe a few too many enchanted cabbages.

  • Spring bursts forth like a seed with caffeine: psychic blooms, amphibian philosophers, and rain that burns truth into the soil.


  • Summer is a fever dream of firestorms, gossiping dust devils, and crops that either bolt with joy or sulk ‘til autumn.


  • Fall hangs thick with golden fungal fog—the Amber Veil—where spirits get lost in their own nostalgia.


  • Winter is a snow-glitched broadcast, complete with animated drifts and frost glyphs muttering secrets only birches understand.


 Stumpy Magree, Sproutologist and Memory-Moss Tier III Interpreter

Beaver Hills Moraine — The Whispering Woodlands



"Now don’t go pickin' bark without askin’ first. These trees got opinions—and memories."
—Stumpy Magree

Once a hummocky pocket of boreal beauty and glacial leftovers, the Beaver Hills Moraine has since become one of Kalyna Country’s most politely haunted places. Here, trembling aspens sway even when there’s no wind, and jack pines creak with the sound of old gossip. You’ll find spruce thickets that echo back your footsteps, and willows that lean in to eavesdrop on your dreams.

Leylines knot beneath the mossy soil, creating what the locals call a harmonic tangle—suitable for ceremonies, bad for compass readings. Rare Wolffia still blooms in kettle ponds, though nowadays it hums lullabies and turns pink under full moons. Some say the trees here were the first to hear the Babas return and still blush when you mention their names.

  • Natural Traits: Trembling aspen, jack pine, black spruce, balsam poplar; rich wetland flora; home to moose, lynx, sharp-tailed grouse, and waterfowl.
  • Magical Features:
    • Trees with memory bark that replay past conversations.
    • Glacial kettles act as scrying bowls after rain.
    • Root systems share rumors across miles—watch what you say near a stump.
  • Cultural Use:
    • Preferred spot for vision quests, reluctant proposals, and psychic picnic lunches.
    • Rainmakers, Witches compete to maintain sacred groves—some trees have unionized.

Central Mixedwood Subregion — The Verdant Tapestry



"If the trees start hummin’ in harmony, don’t worry—that just means the land likes ya. If they start singin’ off-key? Run."
—Stumpy Magree

This stretch of land is where the boreal and the prairie had a long talk, shook hands, and decided to raise a family. A proper patchwork of aspen, spruce, and jack pine, stitched together with muskeg seams and low rolling hummocks, it’s as good for livestock as it is for leyline lounging.

Beneath the roots, the soil murmurs with warmth—a holdover from old fire spirits who took up residence after the Hodgepocalypse. New settlers speak of “green ghosts” that hover above berry thickets, guiding honest foragers and scaring off greedy ones. Aspen groves here are known to wander, slowly creeping from their original roots, following faint psychic melodies carried by the wind.

  • Natural Traits: Aspen, jack pine, black spruce; fertile glaciolacustrine soils; habitat for deer, coyotes, and migratory birds.
  • Magical Features:
    • Trees that rearrange themselves overnight to form glyphs when seen from above.
    • Soil holds emotional memory—walk barefoot and relive someone else’s first kiss or last regret.
    • Leyline intersections often marked by out-of-place plants (orchids, sunflowers, or giant mushrooms).
  • Cultural Use:
    • Ideal for berry-picking rituals, seasonal festivals, and druidic karaoke.
    • Widely used in teaching circles about leyline farming and emotional composting.

Dry Mixedwood Boreal Subregion — The Transitional Grove



"Now here’s where the trees start whisperin’ ‘bout grass, and the grass whispers back."
—Stumpy Magree

This is where forest meets prairie in a polite but tense neighborly standoff. Tall trembling aspens cluster like gossipy aunties, while balsam poplars lean in over sandy ridges as if eavesdropping on the bluestem. Hazelnuts grow wild, stubborn, and twisted—like most of the locals.

The land here isn’t sure what it wants to be, so it tries a bit of everything: hummocks, shale ridges, sinkholes full of frogs with divination powers. It’s one of the best places to spot transitional species—magical and mundane alike—like the infamous camoruffalo (half moose, half shuffalo, all attitude). Wetlands here don’t just store water—they store dreams, memories, and sometimes whole ghost villages if you aren't careful.

  • Natural Traits: Aspen, balsam poplar, beaked hazelnut, wild sarsaparilla; uplands over shale and sandstone; bogs and fens cover ~15%.
  • Magical Features:
    • Psychic frogs that only croak prophetic warnings during eclipses.
    • Floating lights known as “will-o’-wisps cousins” that lead you to secrets—or snakes.
    • Bogs where whispers rise with the mist, sometimes giving advice, sometimes taxes.
  • Cultural Use:
    • Popular with mystics seeking thresholds between states—forest/prairie, dream/waking.
    • Locals claim if you plant a wish and feed it sarsaparilla root, it may bloom into a quest.

Northern Mixedwood Subregion — The Boreal Frontier



"Cold don’t kill ya out here—it just puts your thoughts on ice for later. Makes for great daydreaming, if your nose don’t fall off first."
—Stumpy Magree

This is the edge of the wilds, where the land exhales mist and the moss listens close. It's colder than a snowman's handshake, with summers that flirt more than commit. Here the trees lean tall and hushed—black spruce bogs stretch endlessly, dotted with poplars that always look like they’ve seen something unspeakable.

The wetlands—fens, bogs, dream-pools—cover most of the region, and they’re brimming with spirit echoes. Some folks say the wind here doesn’t just whistle—it tries out lullabies, testing them on lost travelers. And when the auroras come, they dance to tunes the soil remembers.

  • Natural Traits: Black spruce, aspen, balsam poplar; fens and bogs dominate up to 80% of the area; lynx, owls, hares, boreal songbirds.
  • Magical Features:
    • Moss with memory—step on the wrong patch, and you might see a vision of someone else’s dream.
    • Ice that hums beneath your feet when the stars align.
    • Trees that exchange gossip by shedding frost patterns in arcane runes.
  • Cultural Use:
    • Place of solitude and reflection—ideal for oath-taking, exile rites, or secret Baba meetings.
    • Home to “singing traps”—spruce groves that replicate your voice to lure out truths (or enemies).

The Crystal Groves — Shardwood Wilds



"Pretty from afar, prickly up close. Just like my cousin Darlene. Only she doesn’t shatter when insulted."
—Stumpy Magree

Dotting the Northern Lats like scattered jewels in a snowbank, the Crystal Groves are haunting, breathtaking, and temperamental as a Baba with a bad foot. What look like radiant trees are psychic growths of quartz-like crystal, grown from wind-blown shards that nestle into the permafrost and feed on leyline resonance.

They grow for years, absorbing ambient magic, psychic leakage, and the occasional lullaby before becoming brittle and exploding into the sky like glitter bombs of doom. Entire harvesting towns have vanished in chain-shatter events—though a few lucky survivors come out “touched,” glowing eyes and all.

Crystal fragments are used in everything from woo-wear to psi-batteries to Faustian gadgetry. But harvesting them? That’s a ritual dance of science, instinct, and just a bit of prayer.

  • Natural Traits: Forms clusters 8–15 feet high; mimics tree shape with root, trunk, branch-like structures; germinates from wind-carried shards.
  • Magical Features:
    • Stores emotion, memory, and spell-resonance. Mishandle them, and you might hear someone else’s heartbreak—or last battle cry.
    • Old groves pulse in tune with Dreamtime moon phases.
    • Chain-shattering events are called “Shardstorms,” feared more than blizzards.
  • Cultural Use:
    • Harvested carefully for powerful psychic conduits and enchant-tech.
    • Ritual sites for binding pacts, storing ancestral echoes, or just a really dangerous wedding venue.

Central Parkland Subregion — The Mosaic Meadow



"Ain’t nothin’ patchworked better than Baba Marichka’s quilt—except maybe this land. Mind your step though—some of these wildflowers bite back."
—Stumpy Magree

If Kalyna Country had a grandmother’s garden, this would be it: a stitched-together landscape of aspen groves, fescue grasslands, pothole ponds, and whispering streams. The Parkland is Alberta’s old soul in a younger dress—bountiful, fickle, and just a smidge enchanted.

It’s where forests dip their toes into prairie dreams. The wildlife is abundant, the soil sings with fertility, and magic flows just under the surface like water in spring thaw. Even the weeds seem to grow in poetic meter. But don’t let the beauty fool you—folks say if you plant without offering a verse, your crops might grow upside-down or gossip about you.

  • Natural Traits: Aspen, fescue, rich black loam, ponds and wetlands; deer, coyotes, beavers, and hundreds of birds.
  • Magical Features:
    • Fields bloom in sync with music played nearby—common for bard-farmers.
    • Certain flowers act as magical reagents—but only if picked while reciting old rhymes.
    • Streams may rearrange themselves to spell prophetic warnings.
  • Cultural Use:
    • Breadbasket of Kalyna Country, favored for spell-farming, dream-gardening, and storytelling contests.
    • Location of seasonal gatherings where whole villages recite their year’s tale under the moon.

 Prairie Parkland Rewilded — With Bonus Portals



 

"The hills here don’t roll—they grumble. And if the soil starts singin’? Best drop a dill pickle and walk backward 'til the wind forgives you."
—Stumpy Magree

This stretch of Kalyna Country is where the land shook loose from old cartography and started drawing its conclusions. Once open prairie stitched with poplar groves and wetland seams, the Hodgepocalypse rewrote the script. Now the Parkland doesn’t just look different—it behaves differently.

Leylines knot like tumbleweed below the surface, and every glacial kettle might be a portal, a pond, or a poet depending on the season. Some hilltops are ancient Baba shrines that tilt slightly toward constellations that no longer exist. Old shrines spin, bogs belch out dream-gas, and the very soil carries memories like gossip—sticky and strange.

  • Natural Traits: Aspen and birch groves, glacial kettle lakes, rich loamy soil, pothole wetlands, rolling moraine topography with abundant wildlife.
  • Magical Features:
    Twisted Parklands: Trees hum when hugged and sometimes offer unsolicited advice.
    Black Soil Fields: Incredibly fertile if you barter with the under-root folk.
    Glacial Kettles: Reflect your true self—or your worst fear. Sip the water and dream for three days.
    Relic-Hills: Mound-top shrines built by pre-Baba pilgrims; now spin slowly at twilight unless properly anchored with an offering.
  • Cultural Use:
    • Pilgrimage route for seasonal ritualists, herbal diviners, and stargazers.
    • Popular among fortune-chasers, lore-hunters, and that one uncle who swears the duck god owes him money.

Elk Island Eldritch Park — Where the World Slips



"You ever walk through a fog and come out dreamin’ of a future that didn’t happen yet? Yeah, you probably wandered into Elk Island. Happens to the best of us. And the worst. And the duplicates."
—Stumpy Magree

Once a crown jewel of conservation nestled within Alberta’s Beaver Hills, Elk Island was famous for its lakes, forests, and its roaming herds of elk and bison. Post-Hodgepocalypse, though? It’s no longer just a park—it’s a psychic fracture zone where time and memory drip like melted snow into parallel puddles. Shuffalo migrate through in semi-lucid herds, guided by instinct and haunted lullabies. At the same time, the native lakes now act as mirrored portals into the Dreamtime—sometimes shallow reflections, sometimes bottomless thresholds.

Elk Island’s ecology still holds on: aspen stands, black spruce tangles, bog sedges, and rich marshes serve as anchors to the old order. But layered overtop, or underneath, or within are ripples of unreality. You'll find silver-antlered elk who speak only to the sleeping, bogs that whisper your forgotten regrets, and lightning-struck birch groves that try to rewrite your personal history.

Containment Protocol: Strathcan Militia Frontier Zone “E-17”

Recognized as Zone E-17 “Twilight Nest”, the park is under a fluctuating containment order by the Strathcan Militia, who consider it a Class Red Persistent Anomaly Site. Barbed psionic fences line the main ingress points, monitored by Auto-Scribes and Leyfield Calibrators. Patrols avoid deep incursion due to the risk of temporal bleeding, parallel hallucinations, and vanishing squads. Despite this, freelance adventurers and “ley-trippers” regularly bypass the perimeter in search of lost comrades or rumored relics.

Standard Warning: “Entering Twilight Nest without sanctioned ritual tethering is punishable by forgetfulness, duplication, or worse. Proceed with sealed dreamcatchers and backup consciousness imprint.”
— Posted on all official signage, largely ignored

  • Natural Traits:
    • Rolling moraine terrain, shallow lakes, marshes, wetlands
    • Boreal Forest canopy: aspen, birch, spruce
    • Wildlife: Bison, elk, moose, shuffalo, beavers, waterfowl
  • Magical Features:
    Dreamtime Rifts: Natural portals appear seasonally (and unseasonally), often centered around flyway ponds or ancient beaver lodges.
    Echo Fauna: Creatures that shimmer with “after-images,” some benign, others very not.
    Living Trails: Paths reconfigure nightly based on emotion density, lunar phases, and forgotten songs.
    Shuffalo Lures: Bioluminescent moss forms glowing herd shapes, confusing predators and travelers.
  • Cultural Use:
    • Still considered sacred ground by some Dreamwalkers, though entry is now taboo without psychic shielding.
    • Secret site of Baba communions during moonless nights—rumor has it even the Cosmic Baba avoids entering alone.
    • Has become the subject of art, religion, and at least three contradictory ballads.

Redbog Hollow — The Hum in the Muck



"Cranberries shouldn’t hum in harmony, and they sure shouldn’t know your name. But here we are."
—Stumpy Magree

Once just another lowland bog wrapped in boreal brush, Redbog Hollow has since fermented into something far stranger. Nestled in the wetter folds of Kalyna Country’s parkland edge, it was always a haven for rich flora—cranberries, sphagnum moss, tamarack, and sedges thick enough to lose a mule in. But after the Revelations, the hollow changed. The cranberries began to sing. Not out loud, no—at least, not at first. They hum in dreams, forming lullabies and warnings. The deeper you sleep nearby, the clearer the chorus.

Botanists blame arcane saturation, druids blame bog spirits, and the Strathcan Militia marks the place with skull-stamped caution tape and a “Do Not Snack” advisory. The real reason? No one knows for sure. But every year, more pickers vanish, and a few come back changed—glowing eyes, berry-stained teeth, or too full of poetry for comfort.

The bog itself shifts slowly, like it’s breathing. Old folk say if you listen long enough, it’ll tell you stories no one's supposed to know—about Baba betrayals, the time before times, or even your own future. Sometimes those stories come true. Sometimes you do.

 Ecology, Flora & Fauna (the ones that stay put, anyway)

  • Natural Traits:
    • Bogs, marshes, and peat wetlands with acidic pools
    • Cranberries (wild and... less wild), sedge, tamarack, pitcher plants
    • Wildlife: Waterfowl, black bears, bull moose, megafauna like the Mudsnout Wapiti
  • Magical Features:
    Humberries: Cranberries that pulse like heartbeats when danger nears; if eaten, they induce prophetic fugue states.
    Whisper-Peat: Clumps of moss that recite lost poems or mimic the last words of the drowned.
    Spirit Sinking: Step wrong and you might not fall in—you might fall sideways, into a memory not your own.
    Bog Eidolons: Mushy revenants made of peat and bone who offer riddles and regret in equal measure.

Strathcan Militia Status: Quarantine Zone “M-3: Red Hollow”

Classified as a Green-Red Zone, Redbog Hollow is under passive containment. The Militia maintains ritual ward-posts along traditional footpaths and sends in periodic "picker sweeps" to extract lost civilians (or what's left of them).

Containment is complicated by the bog’s mobile geography and "sedative aura," which causes many patrol members to nap mid-sweep. Use of gas masks, runed footwear, and anti-prophecy charms is now standard protocol.

Memo from Officer Brank Klyshko, 7th Watch Division:
“If the berries start singing your childhood nickname, extract immediately. Do not respond. Do not harmonize.”

Cultural & Folkloric Use

  • Traditional site of Autumn Pilgrimages by Baba-tied villagers, especially those seeking lost family or forgotten truths.
  • Home to whispered stories of the “First Canning Circle”, where a Baba taught the secret of soul-preserving jam.
  • Known to generate Living Recipes—parchments made of leaf-vein and bog ink that teach you to cook exactly what your soul needs (though sometimes it’s mud).
  • Has been declared a Dream Hazard by Strathcan psionicists, but remains a must-visit for hedge-witches, poets, and ambitious jam-makers.

Metal Mushroom Forest — Where the Spores Build Cities



"Back in my day, mushrooms went in soup. Now they file grievances and build suburbs. Times sure change."
—Stumpy Magree

Once the wooded borderlands near the town of Vilna, this patch of Kalyna Country has since been overtaken, root and relic, by the Metal Mushroom Forest, a spore-choked biome where fungi decided it was their turn to be architects. Towering 10–20 feet tall, these mushrooms don’t rot—they rust. Made of bio-organic metal and threaded with ley-conductive mycelium, they heal from damage if left undisturbed, forming groves of regenerating shelter, tangled canopy roads, and sometimes even functioning structures.

The forest is the domain of the Trollitariots—fey-born fungal collectivists with a militant work ethic and an unreasonable number of clipboards. They have converted much of the forest into a self-organizing sporepunk utopia: part commune, part fortress, part surreal bureaucracy. Their “city-hall-cap” mushrooms double as control towers, meeting chambers, and occasional defensive turrets.

But the ecosystem doesn’t just stop at metallic mushrooms. Spores here act like ambient software—infecting nearby life with fungal upgrades, including sapient moss, walking lichen, and grumpy tool-sprouting vines. It's beautiful in a brassy, buzzing, ominous kind of way.

Ecology, Flora & Fauna

  • Natural Traits:
    • Replaces native boreal forest with towering fungi
    • Bio-metal mushrooms with magnetic caps and conductive stalks
    • Spore clouds visible under moonlight—shift color with mood of the forest

Cultural Use & Folklore

  • Seen by techno-herbalists and forge druids as a holy site of biological industry.
  • Pilgrimage point for anarcho-alchemists, steam-witches, and fey labor radicals.
  • Occasionally emits a harmonic resonance that draws in lost souls, sonic mages, and the especially suggestible.

And, of course, the spores here never forget. Say something rude near a toadstool and it might file a complaint—with the weather.

The Baba’s Scar — Where the Star Fell, and the Baba Didn’t



"You know it when you see it. Or when you stop seein’. Either way, bring salt. And maybe say a prayer to a Baba who ain’t listening no more."
—Stumpy Magree

The Baba’s Scar isn’t just a crater. It’s a wound in the world, punched into Kalyna Country when one of the Eight Babas battled a Star-Thing that came screaming out of the rifted sky like a comet of spite. The stories change—some say it was the Western Baba, some say it was Gothic, and a few whisper that it was all of them, bound together like a storm. What’s clear is this: the thing fell, and it took a chunk of the world’s sanity with it.

Now the Scar glows faintly by day and blazes like a cosmic ulcer by night. It sings in radio static, drawing in memories and distorting time in fits and starts. Trees nearby grow in reverse. Birds speak in borrowed voices. The land grieves, and it does so loudly.

Surrounding the central crater is the Weeping Ring, a sickly halo of withered trees and warped underbrush, forever dripping dew even on the driest days. The ground here pulses with delayed echoes—footsteps, whispers, even old music from radios that aren’t there.

Ecological Remains & After-Effects

  • Natural Traits:
    • Former boreal mixedwood region; now mostly deadfall and mutated regrowth
    • Spoiled wetlands with glassy, oil-slick water
    • Scattered iron-rich soil “scabs” that shift when stared at too long
  • Mutated Fauna & Flora:
    Moonburn Vines: Grow in spirals and radiate soft light that causes confusion or inspiration
    Ash Elk: Once majestic, now ghostly and flickering—move in loops, never leaving the Scar’s edge
    Tearsedge Grass: Blades that drip saltwater and recite prayers in rustling wind

 Cultural & Folkloric Reverence

  • Pilgrims and zealots still visit the Weeping Ring, convinced they’ll receive visions from the fallen Baba
  • Some villagers blame the Scar for dreams of apocalyptic kindness—where people burn beautifully to save others
  • Once a year, on the Night of Unanswered Cries, nearby settlements leave bundles of dill, garlic, and song scrolls at the edge of the woods
  • Known to produce Echo Relics—fragments of Baba tools warped by the impact (used in some classes as arcane foci or dangerous relics)