Welcome To Rockport
Welcome to Rockport
A guide for travelers, settlers, and those born of Rockport blood.
The Setting
Rockport is an independent village of about 150 souls nestled between two rival kingdoms, standing a dayâs detour from the main border road. It owes allegiance to no lord; its affairs are guided by an Elderâs Council, a circle of grayâhaired villagers chosen by reputation, service, and long memory. Three natural springs feed three quarryâlakes, and an underground river ties them together beneath the basalt hills before carrying the waters away into the cavern deeps.
Here, fertile fields stretch across the south, orchards cling to stone terraces, and guard towers rise against the skyline. It is a village of stone, water, and wheatâstubbornly selfâsufficient, yet warmed by travelersâ tales and caravans that bring news of the wider world.
What Rockport is Known For
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Willowgold Wheat â A hardy landrace of golden grain, resistant to blight and storm. Its loaves are dense, chewy, and longâkeeping, famous among caravans as âtravelerâs bread.â
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Stone and Copper â Basalt is quarried for blocks and millstones; copper seams are dug from the northern hills. Stone meal (basalt dust) is spread over fields to renew their strength.
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Bountiful Fields and Orchards â Beyond wheat, Rockport grows beans, corn, squash, melons, apples, cherries, oranges, grapes, walnuts, pecans, olives, and maple groves for syrup.
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Pearls and Greenstone â Freshwater mussels sometimes hide pearls of good luster, while quarry rubble turns up faintly glowing greenstone crystals sought by alchemists.
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The Festival of Silver Eels â Each autumn, the eel run fills Millpond and the weirs with silverâscaled harvest. It is equal parts festival, food gathering, and sacred rite.
Who Youâll Meet
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The Elderâs Council â Seven elders, each with their own tale: an old priest, a retired adventurer, a farmer, a smith, an innkeeperâs wife, a butcher turned grandfather, and a foreign widow of noble birth.
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Craftsfolk and Tradesmen â Two smiths, two bakers, two butchers, two tanners, one alchemist, charcoalers from the forest, coopers, carters, wheelwrights, and herdsfolk.
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The Retired Wizard â Once a wanderer, now an old man with curious beans and a small tower garden, willing to trade lore for seeds.
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The Temple Clergy â A handful of priests and acolytes who tend rites of fertility, harvest, and reverence for water and land.
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The Guard â Twentyâfive in number, with thirteen fullâtimers manning the three tall towers and the rest serving as partâtime militia.
Life in Rockport
Life here turns with the cycle of field, forest, and water:
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Farmers raise wheat, beans, and squash; orcharders tend cherries, apples, walnuts, olives, and grapes. Families preserve maple syrup and fruit brandies for winter.
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Herdsfolk drive sheep, goats, and pigs through fallows and mastâfilled woods, turning stubble into manure and acorns into bacon.
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Fishers pull trout and pike from Deepstone, perch and crayfish from Willowmere, and carp and silver eels from Millpond.
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Craftsfolk keep the village running: blacksmiths, bakers, butchers, tanners, alchemists, charcoalers, and carpenters all have their place.
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Caravans and Merchants come by way of the Spur, buying surplus grain, salted pork, pearls, and stone, and selling cloth, salt, iron, and luxuries in return.
Festivals punctuate the year: spring blessings at the springs, harvest feasts beneath the willows, the silver eel festival in autumn, and winter breadâsharing in the temple when stores run thin.
The Three Lakes
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Deepstone (North): Cold, clear, and deep. Trout, grayling, and rare pearls dwell here. The basalt and copper mines rise nearby.
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Willowmere (East): Shallowest and warmest, rimmed with reeds and willow roots. It is the spawning lake, rich with perch, tench, crayfish, and nesting waterfowl.
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Millpond (West): Outflow lake where eel weirs and carp pens are kept. Its steady waters run the millstones and lead to the cavern river beyond.
The underground river flows Deepstone â Willowmere â Millpond, before slipping into the dark caves. Children are warned not to wander near the cave mouths when the air blows warmâit means floodwaters are coming.
Landmarks
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The Stone Temple and Mausoleum â Halls of reverence, memory, and communal law.
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Guard Towers (3) â Sixty feet high, with horns and mirrors for signaling danger or fire.
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The Mineworks â Quarry faces and mine mouths north of Deepstone, where stone and copper are cut.
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The Rockport Spur â A tenâmile detour from the great border road, dotted with shrines and travelerâs posts.
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Southfields and Orchard Row â Wheat and beans in the south, orchards and olives on the warmer stone terraces.
For Those Born Here
To be of Rockport is to be resilient like wheat and rooted like willow.
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You remember wading in willowâshaded shallows and racing to watch the first eels of autumn.
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You learned early which willow roots were safe to leap from, which shelves hid snapping turtles.
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You know the horn calls of the towers and the taste of bread glazed with maple.
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Stories from elders teach reverence for the land, and warnings against disrespecting the waters.
For Newcomers
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Show respect to the Elderâs Councilâpatience and courtesy are valued above bold words.
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Weigh your goods at the scaleâhouse; trade fair and youâll be treated fair.
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Lend a hand in planting or harvest, and you will be welcomed at any hearth.
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Beware the caves and the spring mouths; pearls and greenstone tempt many, but not all who go seeking return.
Rockport endures by water, stone, and wheat. May you find welcome within its fields and hearths.