Elizabeth Culmer (
edenfalling) wrote2009-06-26 11:06 pm
Entry tags:
question re: seasons in Star Trek XI
The Star Trek: AOS story I am trying to write (still tentatively titled "The Light in Your Eyes," though I am growing less and less certain about that phrase's applicability) is set between the Enterprise's return to Earth and the ceremony and departure at the end of the film.
I am not familiar with the climate of San Francisco. Is anybody able to tell, from the brief scene-setting shots, what time of year it is meant to be? I'm guessing mid-to-late spring at the earliest, and late summer or very early autumn at the latest (judging by the foliage), but I'm not sure what San Francisco has by way of seasons, and, therefore, what months qualify as late spring or late summer.
I am not talking about calendrical or astronomical seasons. I am talking about seasons as defined by local temperature and plant growth. For example, spring doesn't really start in Ithaca until the first or second week of April, no matter what the calendar says about equinoxes.
So can anyone help me out? I need this information to judge the kind of off-duty clothes people might wear, and to figure the time of local sunset, which is important for two minor plot-related reasons, and which must be accurate because I am writing in Spock's POV!
Also, just as a point of information, I am assuming that in Star Trek's version of the 20th century, the Eugenics Wars disrupted global climate change enough that by the time it got bad, technology and/or a world government were in better shape to deal with it, so the future earth has basically our current climate, or even a slightly cooler one.
(Yes, I really am this obsessive sometimes.)
I am not familiar with the climate of San Francisco. Is anybody able to tell, from the brief scene-setting shots, what time of year it is meant to be? I'm guessing mid-to-late spring at the earliest, and late summer or very early autumn at the latest (judging by the foliage), but I'm not sure what San Francisco has by way of seasons, and, therefore, what months qualify as late spring or late summer.
I am not talking about calendrical or astronomical seasons. I am talking about seasons as defined by local temperature and plant growth. For example, spring doesn't really start in Ithaca until the first or second week of April, no matter what the calendar says about equinoxes.
So can anyone help me out? I need this information to judge the kind of off-duty clothes people might wear, and to figure the time of local sunset, which is important for two minor plot-related reasons, and which must be accurate because I am writing in Spock's POV!
Also, just as a point of information, I am assuming that in Star Trek's version of the 20th century, the Eugenics Wars disrupted global climate change enough that by the time it got bad, technology and/or a world government were in better shape to deal with it, so the future earth has basically our current climate, or even a slightly cooler one.
(Yes, I really am this obsessive sometimes.)
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hope that helps!
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Foliage can be a bit misleading, since the grass turns green when it starts raining and many annuals bloom through the winter. And of course, palm trees are evergreen. Deciduous trees are on more or less the same schedule as on the east coast, though.
Hope that helps! I paid no attention to the seasons when I was watching the movie, so I can't offer any specific insight.
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I also am not sure how much time passed between the Enterprise's return and the very end of the film. I am inclined to say it must have been at least three or four weeks (for repairs and bureaucratic wrangling, if nothing else), and possibly four to six months in order to let the cadets officially graduate and confirm their emergency promotions, as well as let the general staff sort through all the paperwork. And since everyone seems quite cheerful at Kirk's promotion/commendation ceremony, I am inclined to go with the 'several months' timeline, to allow everyone time to mourn and start recovering.
Which would imply that Kirk's hearing was in late April or early May, and his commissioning was in, say, early September. And the Enterprise returned to Earth probably within a week of when they left for Vulcan, so my story must be set around the first week of May. I can work with that.
Thank you so much for your help!
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Or maybe they're just late-leafing varieties? Trees do not turn green at uniform times -- maples are usually early, for example, while oaks are a bit later, and there's this one giant tree (possibly cottonwood?) a few blocks from my old apartment that often didn't start greening until two or three weeks after all the other trees had full-grown leaves.
Either way, I think that is further evidence that the movie proper (discounting the commissioning and final scene) takes place in the spring. Because if it were fall and some trees were already bare, I would expect the others to be changing color.
Thanks for the thoughts!