The Carto
The Carto is the garden galleon in the Lycea where Connie Furr and the Wolf appeared after Connie took Angel Dust aboard the Galleon cathedral during the Pollomart wedding.
Tinker's Engineering Room: The brass plaque contains the Celestial words for "acceleration" and "deceleration" on a diagram with a lever or slider.
Tailor's Main Sail: The rose gold plaque describes rope tension.
Soldier's Cannonade: The gunmetal plaque describes trajectory arcs and angles for shooting a cannon.
Sailor's Prow: The bronze plaque contains the Celestial words for "triangulation" and "declination" alongside Common cartography terms such as "zyzygy" and a map of compass points.
Rich Man's Helm: The silver plaque contains the Celestial words for "Port" and "Starboard" and a circular diagram of steering wheel technology.
Poor Man's Crew Quarters: The copper plaque contains words in Celestial pertaining to the different stations of a ship that a crew could be sent to.
Beggar Man's Crowsnest: The rusted plaque contains the Celestial words for "angle" and "bearing" and a sextant style diagram of the numerical degrees of angles.
Thief's Cargo Hold: The black metal plaque describes the relationships between weight distribution and movement.
Layout
Connie and the Wolf arrived in a cabin containing a star chart of the Carto's layout. Each important part of the garden galleon corresponds to a different deity of the Eight, and within each area is a plaque that, combined, teaches a person how to be a sailor:Tinker's Engineering Room: The brass plaque contains the Celestial words for "acceleration" and "deceleration" on a diagram with a lever or slider.
Tailor's Main Sail: The rose gold plaque describes rope tension.
Soldier's Cannonade: The gunmetal plaque describes trajectory arcs and angles for shooting a cannon.
Sailor's Prow: The bronze plaque contains the Celestial words for "triangulation" and "declination" alongside Common cartography terms such as "zyzygy" and a map of compass points.
Rich Man's Helm: The silver plaque contains the Celestial words for "Port" and "Starboard" and a circular diagram of steering wheel technology.
Poor Man's Crew Quarters: The copper plaque contains words in Celestial pertaining to the different stations of a ship that a crew could be sent to.
Beggar Man's Crowsnest: The rusted plaque contains the Celestial words for "angle" and "bearing" and a sextant style diagram of the numerical degrees of angles.
Thief's Cargo Hold: The black metal plaque describes the relationships between weight distribution and movement.
Current location