Tsaytsa Camp

The Tsaytsa of the continent of Bazwebwe are nomads, and often make camps to rest in during the night. The quality, size, and location of the camp all depends on outside factors such as the season, amount of those present in the avita, and time until sunset when the camp is made. Other factors like the ground, or the amount of neighboring vegetation, may also influence aspects of the camp.

Features
Most, if not all camps, are centered around a fire of some kind, where the food that was gathered during the day is cooked. Fires are usually made on logs, and surrounded with other logs for the purpose of use as a chair. A plain, typically wooden roofing may be placed above the fire for the purpose of alleviating rain.

Camps always contain at least one sort of shelter, usually a wickiup, though the amount usually ranges between two and three. Each wickiup tends to face towards the campfire present at the center of the camp, or away from the winds.

The majority of camps contain petroglyphs nearby, usually detailing where the avita arrived from, or legends told at the campfire. Very few petroglyphs are made without a camp present nearby, unless they are very few in number.

Other, less common features, include basic fencing around the camp, or drying racks for large pieces of hide such as vexilloids or rabbits, for any given situation where the drying of hide or other thin objects is needed.