Fluffy's new home
Aug. 29th, 2021 08:22 pmI was searching Accio-Quote for something else entirely when I stumbled across a reference to Fluffy's whereabouts after Year 1:
Exactly how many dangerous things has Hogwarts released into the Forbidden Forest over the years? We know about Aragog and Mosag. The Ford Anglia might count, and Grawp. Now there's Fluffy. But that wouldn't be enough to make a trend. So...what else?
Is that where the Blast-Ended Skrewts ended up after the Triwizard Tournament? Were the Thestrals another of these "dangerous" releases? Have Hagrid and maybe Kettleburn spent fifty years tossing new creatures into the ecosystem? (We're probably lucky Norberta didn't end up there.) Do students regularly raise dangerous pets and abandon them in the Forest once they get too big?
No wonder the centaurs don't trust humans...
Also, we know Hagrid introduced Mosag so Aragog wouldn't be lonely. Did he sneak a Mrs. Fluffy while we weren't looking?
[Y]ou tend to find at Hogwarts that, erm, anything that's dangerous ends up in the forest ... so that's where Fluffy was released, so he's roaming round in the forest ...
Exactly how many dangerous things has Hogwarts released into the Forbidden Forest over the years? We know about Aragog and Mosag. The Ford Anglia might count, and Grawp. Now there's Fluffy. But that wouldn't be enough to make a trend. So...what else?
Is that where the Blast-Ended Skrewts ended up after the Triwizard Tournament? Were the Thestrals another of these "dangerous" releases? Have Hagrid and maybe Kettleburn spent fifty years tossing new creatures into the ecosystem? (We're probably lucky Norberta didn't end up there.) Do students regularly raise dangerous pets and abandon them in the Forest once they get too big?
No wonder the centaurs don't trust humans...
Also, we know Hagrid introduced Mosag so Aragog wouldn't be lonely. Did he sneak a Mrs. Fluffy while we weren't looking?
no subject
Date: 2021-10-13 08:48 pm (UTC)But it's weird to think it would always work out better that way. Or that the letters in the words would have such a strong effect. I expect it's more subtle, like the laws of wandlore were supposed to be.
Adding up the numbers represented by letters also just isn't very hard, so either Hermione and the other students are really bad at math, or the hard part is something else. Studying charts of possible meanings and choosing the correct one based on a bunch of factors, maybe. I mean, I imagine that working out what the number 9 means for a person's future is different from what it means for the number of stirs of a potion, and there must be fuzzy cases where it's hard to work out which meaning applies.
But it is also required for curesbreakers, and how would it be useful for that? Can you also work backwards somehow? Like, "Okay, they used a design with seven interlocked circles to make this protective enchantment, so here are the possible words which could be reduced to the number seven, and these are the ones which would resonate with the property of circularity, which gives us our first set of possible counter-curses to undo this deadly trap..." Trying to work out all of the possible combinations of numerical values which could be added up to make your number, and how that translates into letters, could be tricky. Though possibly mostly in the sense of being a real grind, unless they have equations to speed it up (and I haven't taken a math class in way too long to remember if I ever learned such a thing).