The thing at the gate entrance is and upside down jug. I knew about them but couldn't remember why so I looked it up and found this answer on a steam thread: "It's a water jug hanging on a fence post. Out in the middle of Ukrainian nowhere hanging a jug on the fence post meant a house had a water source, either a well or a nearby spring. It was a sign for anyone passing by who was thirsty or needed to water their horses. In villages it was decorative, like a welcome sign."
lol I am busting with information 😆 Your initial problem of no charcoal in your trading post is because I'm pretty sure you forgot to set the resource supply to labourers. It has nothing to do with a warehouse. eventually you did run out of charcoal though so you would have been in the same boat, just a bit earlier because you would have sold a bunch of it instead of the smithy using it. I'm not sure but I think you could have too many women working in a couple places 🤔 ...you can get away with just one in the thatchery and granary for the first little while. so if you can free up a couple that way they can be labourers (by hand). You already figured out the wheat is useless without a windmill. (you can also feed it to animals..chickens for sure, and maybe horses? I know nothing about pigs I have never gotten them.) The farm now produces hemp seed so you can now feed the chickens (at least) hemp seed as well as linseed and sunflower although personally I try to save those because the oil workshop now also makes linseed oil and hemp oil along with sunflower oil. The barley is only useful to feed animals (chickens for sure, and I think horses) and for beer production. But I think the farm never grew it so you could change it before winter is over unless you plan to get some chickens right away. ok that's the important stuff...can't think of anything else right now and that was probably enough of an info dump anyways... lmao
nice start jessica look 4ward to it growing
Thank you, Kevin! I appreciate you being here watching :D
The thing at the gate entrance is and upside down jug. I knew about them but couldn't remember why so I looked it up and found this answer on a steam thread:
"It's a water jug hanging on a fence post.
Out in the middle of Ukrainian nowhere hanging a jug on the fence post meant a house had a water source, either a well or a nearby spring. It was a sign for anyone passing by who was thirsty or needed to water their horses.
In villages it was decorative, like a welcome sign."
Cool info! I love learning about the history of this amazing game
lol I am busting with information 😆
Your initial problem of no charcoal in your trading post is because I'm pretty sure you forgot to set the resource supply to labourers. It has nothing to do with a warehouse. eventually you did run out of charcoal though so you would have been in the same boat, just a bit earlier because you would have sold a bunch of it instead of the smithy using it. I'm not sure but I think you could have too many women working in a couple places 🤔 ...you can get away with just one in the thatchery and granary for the first little while. so if you can free up a couple that way they can be labourers (by hand).
You already figured out the wheat is useless without a windmill. (you can also feed it to animals..chickens for sure, and maybe horses? I know nothing about pigs I have never gotten them.)
The farm now produces hemp seed so you can now feed the chickens (at least) hemp seed as well as linseed and sunflower although personally I try to save those because the oil workshop now also makes linseed oil and hemp oil along with sunflower oil. The barley is only useful to feed animals (chickens for sure, and I think horses) and for beer production. But I think the farm never grew it so you could change it before winter is over unless you plan to get some chickens right away.
ok that's the important stuff...can't think of anything else right now and that was probably enough of an info dump anyways... lmao
That's awesome Heradev :) Thanks for sharing your tips!
Cool Ukrainian game love it
I love this game too! Such interesting historical content! :) I can't wait to expand the town!