Month 6: Dragon Ages 11-12 months

Aug 13, 2007 17:05

Betweening and Flaming Begin

You and Your Dragon:
While you're still expected to salute and grant respect to full riders, it is understood that you are now in a very intense portion of your training. While full riders will have drills only a few days a week and even then for only part of the day, you are still learning. Most of your waking hours will be involved in drills. When the wings go out to fly Threadfall, the weyrling wing assists in resupply as often as not.

Although your dragons eat much more at a meal and those meals come less and less often, they're not quite done growing yet. They'll wean down to one meal a day, then less than that, with blues and greens making these transitions sooner than their larger siblings.

Between:
All of the practice forming and memorizing images will be put to use almost immediately: the eleventh month begins with lessons in going between. Dragons are made to between; they do so over short distances naturally, needing human help only to fix images from distant places in their minds. Still, betweening is dangerous business and it's not at all uncommon for a weyrling to go between for the first time only never to return. The threat of losing a weyrling hangs heavy over everyone, weyrlings, trainers, and even general riders about the Weyr. It tends to make B'rok and Issa both more strict than ever about rules and instructions being followed exactly. This is no time for negotiation.

Flaming:
Once betweening is mostly under control, you'll begin lessons in flaming as well. Weyrlings will be instructed in the vagaries of firestone, a lightweight phospine-rich rock used to fuel the dragons' flames. Firestone comes in a wide variety of purities and densities; purer firestone is reserved for use in Threadfighting, while some of the most impure isn't even fit to train weyrlings with and must be culled. Dragonriders don't spend their time sorting and bagging firestone - such tasks are left to the weyr's young laborers and other people who need to earn their keep - but riders must understand intimately how firestone affects their beast's performance in Threadfighting, so you'll all get to do it a few times as a part of your training. Basically, you take an unsorted heap of broken bits of firestone and sort it into heaps by purity, then density, then size. Finally the stuff is bagged - and of those bags, some will be retained for practice.

Ah, practice. During this time the weyrling barracks takes on a faint smell of phosphine, charcoal and ash. The smell is thankfully mild since so many of the weyrlings have moved out into weyrs of their own. The first few flaming lessons can be quite entertaining and it's not uncommon for some of the full riders and other members of the Weyr to turn out to watch dragons coughing up their first guttering, uneven gouts of flame. It's also not uncommon for eyebrowless or singe-haired weyrlings to be taunted gently in the living cavern! No matter how hard it may be to begin with, flaming is another one of those things that dragons do naturally, and with a little encouragement to swallow into their second stomachs and some help to stop them accidentally biting their tongues, they'll all learn quickly enough to char whatever they might point their fiery belches at.

As your independence and that of your lifemates increases, you will increasingly be viewed as junior members of the Weyr. This new status takes on a name: once you have your own Weyr and are cleared to go between without an escort, you are officially a 'senior' weyrling. Senior weyrlings rank junior weyrlings when both are present, and a wing of senior weyrlings may in some cases contribute more firepower to fighting 'fall than just resupply. Senior weyrlings may also indulge in alcohol, though public drunkenness will cause the privilege to be revoked.


Sample Schedule:
Senior weyrlings enjoy more freedom when they're not working. You may feel inclined to use more of that freedom resting and recovering rather than living it up, though - because senior weyrlings are worked hard in drills and Threadfall. At least twice a week you'll also have a shift flying elevator duty in the bowl.

6:00 AM - Wake up; aerial firestone toss to 'work up an appetite'
7:30 AM - Cleanup
8:30 AM - Breakfast
9:00 AM - Formation drills in the bowl until lunch time
12:30 PM - Lunch
1:30 PM - Lessons in betweening and/or flaming
4:00 PM - Free time
6:00 PM - Dinner
8:00 PM - Academic presentations or time to work on new straps
10:00 PM - Lights-out
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