Wayfinder
What It Points To
Section titled “What It Points To”These people keep direction when the usual markers disappear. They do not need every step shown; they hold a moving map in their head and test it against each small sign. You’d spot this in the friend who says the phone map is wrong and gets everyone home by memory after one look at the sun.
Integration property: Keeps a mental map by stitching together small signs — swell, star, wind, distance traveled
Card Universe
Section titled “Card Universe”No visual seed is available for this NatureType yet.
No Card Universe role has been assigned yet.
Ingredients
Section titled “Ingredients”Multiple Natures (MNs)
- Adventurous Nature
Multiple Intelligences (MIs)
- Interpersonal Intelligence
- Logical Intelligence
- Spatial Visual Intelligence
- Intrapersonal Intelligence
- Naturalistic Intelligence
Active Traits
Section titled “Active Traits”
thinks in volumes and routes
reads natural systems
long-arc patient
high analytical precision
drawn to risk and exposure
Adjacent NatureTypes
Section titled “Adjacent NatureTypes”- Sea-Sky Wayfinder (Sailor — vessel-handling dominates over pure navigation)
Where It Shows Up
Section titled “Where It Shows Up”Careers
Section titled “Careers”- Ocean Navigator (traditional or modern) (primary) - Crosses featureless open water, holds internal model of position against natural signs, corrects continuously.
- Expedition Guide or Wilderness Navigator (primary) - Leads parties across unmarked terrain, reads natural systems for direction, maintains safety.
- Pilot (aviation, maritime) (primary) - Maintains internal model of position and trajectory, reads instruments and environment for continuous correction.
- Desert Guide or Caravan Leader (secondary) - Navigates without landmarks, reads subtle environmental cues.
- Mountaineering Guide (secondary) - Routes across unmarked terrain, reads weather and conditions, makes real-time navigation decisions.
- Search and Rescue Navigator (adjacent) - Orients teams through unmapped or obscured terrain under time pressure, reads landscape features to establish position and route when instruments fail.
- Hold internal model of position and bearing across featureless terrain (primary)
- Read natural signs (stars, swell, wind, bird behavior) for position correction (primary)
- Make continuous navigational adjustments without instruments (primary)
- Teach followers the system and maintain group confidence (secondary)
- Assess risk and redirect course based on weather or terrain changes (secondary)
Hobbies and activities
Section titled “Hobbies and activities”- Navigation practice and wayfinding skill development (primary)
- Travel to remote or unfamiliar territories (primary)
- Study of navigation history and traditional methods (secondary)
- Mentoring others in route-finding and wilderness travel (secondary)
Life roles
Section titled “Life roles”- Young navigator learning routes and reading natural systems (primary) - Building confidence and spatial model development.
- Master navigator trusted to lead across long distances (primary) - Prime years of expertise and reputation.
- Elder navigator teaching the next generation traditional methods (primary) - Transmitting wayfinding wisdom and ecological knowledge.