I passed through the Dryman's Point region on my way back from DW2 along the Sagittarius-Carina arm, and noticed the abundance of Notable Stellar Phenomena and peduncle trees in the region. I've recently headed back out there (with a Carrier now). Checked out a nebula and stumbled across the DSSA Dryman's Hope.
I've heard that there's a Dryman permit-locked region, but I couldn't find it. Did some googling and discovered that it's actually in an adjacent region, the Norma Expanse. Apparently all stars in the sector named "Dryman..." are permit-locked.
I suppose that if a small portion of the Dryman sector extended into the Dryman's Point region (i.e. the "pointy bit" of the sector), that might justify the name "Dryman's Point" for the region, but that isn't the case. There's a gap of over 3,000ly between them. I've tentatively identified DRYMAN FF-J b25-3 as the easternmost system in the Dryman sector (by fiddling with the galmap, I don't know if there's a better way). I took my Carrier to the nearest unlocked system and explored the local area, nothing unusual (though I was a bit surprised to find little trace of anyone else, it's almost all unexplored: I would have expected the perimeter of a permit-locked region to have more evidence of people prowling around it). Given the curvature of the region border, there might be a slightly shorter gap elsewhere between the Dryman sector and the Dryman's Point region, rather than directly along the east-west axis, but not a lot in it. Currently heading anticlockwise around the locked sector in my Phantom, looking for a route in (unlikely, I know), and dragging my Carrier along in 500ly jumps. When I get a clear run to Sag A*, I'll take my JumpConda in a neutron speedrun to Vista Genomics at Explorers Anchorage.
I know that some names were assigned by Frontier, and some were adopted from the community. Does anyone know where "Dryman" came from? And how it came to be used for both a star sector and a galactic region, which aren't even in the same place? Does seem a bit odd.
I've heard that there's a Dryman permit-locked region, but I couldn't find it. Did some googling and discovered that it's actually in an adjacent region, the Norma Expanse. Apparently all stars in the sector named "Dryman..." are permit-locked.
I suppose that if a small portion of the Dryman sector extended into the Dryman's Point region (i.e. the "pointy bit" of the sector), that might justify the name "Dryman's Point" for the region, but that isn't the case. There's a gap of over 3,000ly between them. I've tentatively identified DRYMAN FF-J b25-3 as the easternmost system in the Dryman sector (by fiddling with the galmap, I don't know if there's a better way). I took my Carrier to the nearest unlocked system and explored the local area, nothing unusual (though I was a bit surprised to find little trace of anyone else, it's almost all unexplored: I would have expected the perimeter of a permit-locked region to have more evidence of people prowling around it). Given the curvature of the region border, there might be a slightly shorter gap elsewhere between the Dryman sector and the Dryman's Point region, rather than directly along the east-west axis, but not a lot in it. Currently heading anticlockwise around the locked sector in my Phantom, looking for a route in (unlikely, I know), and dragging my Carrier along in 500ly jumps. When I get a clear run to Sag A*, I'll take my JumpConda in a neutron speedrun to Vista Genomics at Explorers Anchorage.
I know that some names were assigned by Frontier, and some were adopted from the community. Does anyone know where "Dryman" came from? And how it came to be used for both a star sector and a galactic region, which aren't even in the same place? Does seem a bit odd.