lyonheart wrote:Hi DMcCunney,
Welcome to the forums, please enjoy your favorite simulated beverage on the simulated forum!
I'm sipping virtual single malt as we speak. (That happens to be one of David's tipples. I was able to create the conditions at a con where he was GoH for him to sample the Bowmore Black, generally considered the best single malt ever distilled. If you can find it now, a liter will cost you about $7K. When I got to sample it at a different event, my response was "Don't bother me. I'm having a religious experience!" )
You've done some excellent analysis, and while the dragons have grown in weight from MTaT [ie @15,000 lbs], the wagons still can carry 27 short tons, so divide your American civil war 1 ton wagons by 27, and the hundreds or thousands of dragons mentioned in passing supporting the armies become very reasonable.
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I'm aware of the loads Safehold draft dragons can pull, and that fact is one of the things that makes Safehold viable at all.
The transport capability arguably exists to get the food to the front. but first you must have it to ship.
And the best transport capability requires the right conditions. The high roads are one part of the equation. The canals are arguably a larger one, and taking out canals by destroying locks is a tactic now used by both sides. Are the high roads sufficient if the canals are out of commission? For the volumes we are talking about, the answer may be "no." (I haven't seen numbers on the total amount of cargo that can move on a high road at any particular time and we've already been told some are less well maintained than others.)
And once winter settles in in the northern climes, nothing is moving in quantity any real distance till spring. If you don't have a considerable amount of supplies stockpiled relatively near the forces you have engaged in the field, you are in deep trouble come winter.
Regarding the support of the MH at ~3.5 million total, it still represents less than 1% of the CoGA population in western Haven still under the Go4's control when Dohlar/Silkiah is lost; so less of a burden for the border states and the temple lands food supply etc than some may think, especially considering Safehold's food preservation technology and the pre-war food surpluses that may yet not be fully consumed, combined with the lack of famine reports Duchairn hasn't complained about [not that he isn't rather worried about the future], the CoGA/Go4 agriculture may be better organised and prepared to provide the required surpluses than some realise, with distribution being the future bottleneck, as more dragons are drafted for the front.
Possible. My concern is more political and morale than logistics. The Border States and the Temple Lands may be able to do it, but I can't imagine they'll be happy about the burden, or the disruption it will cause locally.
One of the things I was thinking about for other reasons entirely was the challenge faced by the Bolsheviks after the Russian Revolution. Russia was a mostly agrarian nation with little industrial capability and next to no middle class. The Bolsheviks were aware Russia needed to become an industrial power. Doing that required moving a lot of peasants off the fields to the cities to become the core of an industrial workforce. But the peasants remaining would have to ship large quantities of food to the cities to feed those workers, and the standard of living of those remaining would drop. Lenin tried two totally unsuccessful voluntary efforts. When Stalin came to power, he removed the "voluntary". You did as the state told you, or you got shipped to Siberia or shot.
The morale of the faithful in the Temple Lands and Border States is already taking hits after the consistent reverses the Jihad has suffered in the field, and imposing real sacrifices on them for this will make that worse, especially if Clyntahn plays Stalin and says "Do it or else!"
Granted the labor loss to North Harchong is much greater than the border states and temple land food burden [being almost 2% of its population], but it should still be capable of food surpluses [albeit much smaller ones] or at least feeding itself due to the multiple growing seasons, plus the probability of most of South Harchong's own food surpluses are normally shipped to the north.
North Harchong may still be able to feed itself, but I'm not so sure about surpluses. And my impression is that South Harchong didn't previously ship surpluses to the north. North Harchong's agricultural sector was the least efficient on Safehold, but it could at least feed itself. (It would not have been able to expand to create South Harchong if it couldn't.)
It could very well be that the loss of the South Harchong food imports may be critical to North Harchong's food supply and stability, but we don't have any textev yet, but it wouldn't surprise me to see it in AtSoT with the complications you suggest.
Up till now, North Harchong doesn't seem to have needed to import food. That changes if its own agricultural sector collapses.
Of course all the weapons that South Harchong is unable to ship north will be available if or when they decide to choose an independent path.
The gun doesn't care who shoots it at what...
(Witness the contributions made by the Army of Justice to the rearming Army of Siddarmark. Their kit was inferior to what Charis was deploying, but any rifle is better than none.)
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Dennis