Runaway to the Stars: Page 111

Woo woo new chapter! And it features: a resplendently over-rendered zucchini plant. Exactly what you're reading this comic for.

Transcript

Rasheed reaches through the large prickly leaves of a zucchini plant growing in a hydroponics medium to cut off a zucchini fruit with his pruning shears. Talita walks past the door to the administration wing warily as she leaves the recycling plant, watching Idrisah talking to an avian intern who is using a desktop computer. Idrisah doesn't appear to notice Talita.

Runaway to the Stars: Page 111

Woo woo new chapter! And it features: a resplendently over-rendered zucchini plant. Exactly what you're reading this comic for.

Transcript

Rasheed reaches through the large prickly leaves of a zucchini plant growing in a hydroponics medium to cut off a zucchini fruit with his pruning shears. Talita walks past the door to the administration wing warily as she leaves the recycling plant, watching Idrisah talking to an avian intern who is using a desktop computer. Idrisah doesn't appear to notice Talita.

28 thoughts on “Runaway to the Stars: Page 111

  1. My zucchini’s last year got wiped out by squash vine borer–one day I will win the war against them!
    This does beg the question: if everything is grown in greenhouses in a controlled environment, how are the plants being pollinated? By hand? Or is there an agriculture arm dedicated to maintaining pollinator species, like bees?
    And, another tangential thought: if there are bees in the hab and Talita or one of the avian citizens were stung by one, would the sting venom be super dangerous (with their differing biological chemistries) or basically do nothing?

    1. Probably do nothing. They’d have different biomolecules that it wouldn’t be meant to react with, it’d be like being injected with a random synthesized protein from a laboratory: Probably not great health-wise but unlikely to be especially dangerous either.

      1. I mean, it’s been said that sophonts can straight up die (from something like anaphylactic shock) if they eat other species’ foods, so I’d be inclined to believe that “mild” poisons from other evolutionary trees (eg. bees to, say, centaurs) could pack a rather nasty punch in contrast to the sting and itch we feel

    2. > how are the plants being pollinated? By hand?
      That’s at least a *possibility* for zucchini … maybe not so much for the other plants they grow …

      > is there an agriculture arm dedicated to maintaining pollinator species, like bees?
      Well, “animal agriculture” – more specifically, of *invertebrates* – *exists*
      https://www.runawaytothestars.com/comic/rtts-pages-27-and-28/
      though the purpose we’ve been *shown* so far is to produce food for sophonts. I suppose that also having two or three small beehives (quarantined from each other so as not to result in a single point of failure) wouldn’t be a problem in terms of space, but it might get tricky to provide the bees with enough of a selection of plant species to keep them going year ’round …

      … and now I’m wondering whether there might be dedicated beehive ships wormhole-hopping from habitat to habitat, similar to how beekeepers on Earth relocate their hives into orchards etc. in current major need of pollination services …

      > if there are bees in the hab and Talita or one of the avian citizens were stung by one, would the sting venom be super dangerous (with their differing biological chemistries) or basically do nothing?
      I vote for “do nothing”, the rationale being that *if* their ongoing presence were needed *and* they were a danger to them, it would’ve been noticed and rectified *somehow* (GMBees?) *ages* ago.

  2. Jawas when you ask them if a droid is in good condition:

  3. The new main character of the comic appears

  4. The idea that terrestrial plants like zucchini made it off-world to live amongst the stars, utterly delights me.
    Plus, that’s a gorgeous panel.

  5. The resplendently over rendered courgette has my entire heart and soul (apologies. not american enough to call it anything other than a courgette. just feels weird). The LEAVES the little SPIKES the FLOWER the FRUIT ough it captures the plant so well…. if this entire comic became loving portraits of vegtables I would be so seated for that honestly that plant is just too gorgeous I gazed at it lovingly for quite a while before I moved onto the rest of the page. And I will gaze at it some more after I post this comment no doubt.
    And another avian outfit!!! I love their fashion.

  6. My goodness, I could look at that zucchini for hours. Any agriculture worldbuilding in RTTS has me rattling the bars of my enclosure

  7. Rasheed the noble warrior fighting the good fight against the spider mites indulges in a great victory: the humble zucchini

  8. When we get our printed copy of this book, and are avidly and enthusiastically subjecting our friends and family to it, this zucchini plant is going to be one of the very first things we make them look at.

    “Look at it! Look at this! LOOK AT THE ZUCCHINI! This is a COMIC!”

    And they will understand.

  9. While growing zucchini in an entirely controlled environment has the obvious benefit of avoiding seasonal gluts, it has unfortunately spelled the end of National Sneak Some Zucchini Onto Your Neighbor’s Porch Day.

  10. Bear-on-a-tricycle

    I love your resplendently over-rendered zucchini plant! It’s beautiful! If, in between chapters, you just drew a bunch of over-rendered vegetables, both from Earth and other planets, I would definitely be here for that. Artists doing art is always welcome. (And I love the way you art!)

  11. I can SMELL the zucchini plant

    1. Saaaame. With an added “augh” because I don’t like the smell. :p

      1. I like the smell! It’s got good memories associated with it. They should make zucchini plant scented candles

  12. Your horticulture background is showing 🙂

  13. ZUCCHINI!?! MY BEST FRIEND COMPACT BUSH-FORM ZUCCHINI!?! IN SPACE?!

  14. its nice to look at a gorgeously rendered plant after the last chapter leaves you thinking about the grim fate of bip’s crew

  15. Can’t wait to find out what especially high-resolution zucchini has to do with this escape heist.

    1. [comic promptly takes an unscheduled detour through a strangely familiar plotline]
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1925_serum_run_to_Nome

  16. that is exactly what squishes look like, wonderful! and it looks like it’s fruiting well

  17. Huh, so that’s what zucchini plants look like

  18. Resplendently over-rendered plants is exactly what I’m hoping for every time I open a new webcomic page 🙂

  19. Honestly, if I didn’t want to see resplendently rendered organisms, who would I be? Fortunately: when a whole chapter is named after something, it’s important to feature the titular eponym!

    ……right?

  20. Using gloves to protect against the fearsome defenses of the zucchini plant… smart. Something I think I’ll do every time and yet somehow every year I end up in there, wrenching the fruit off the stems with my bare hands…

  21. That zucchini plant is marvelous.

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