: He experimented with crops that were staples of the Canadian prairies— Flax, Peas, and Lentils .
Life in Edgewater moved to the rhythm of the custom trains that cut through the corners of the map. Elias spent his evenings at the , maintaining his fleet of Case and John Deere equipment under the glow of the workshop lights. When the grain bins were full, he’d watch the Canadian railcars pull away, carrying his hard-earned lentils toward distant markets. The Edge of the Frontier EDGEWATER SASKATCHEWAN V1.0.0.0
: At the built-in cow farm nestled between fields 13 and 8, Elias discovered he could feed his dairy cows direct grain—like peas and corn—into the troughs, a local secret for keeping productivity at 100%. The Rhythm of the Rails : He experimented with crops that were staples
Unlike the farms he’d seen before, Edgewater required specialized techniques. To find success here, Elias had to master the unique features of the land: When the grain bins were full, he’d watch
The air in Saskatchewan doesn't just sit; it stretches. For Elias Thorne, arriving at the coordinates of , the horizon felt less like a boundary and more like a challenge. He stood on the edge of the starter farm, looking out over the first of 69 fields that defined this rugged Canadian landscape. The Arrival at Edgewater
: For the first time, he wasn't just harvesting; he was swathing wheat, barley, and canola, letting them dry in the sun before the big pickup headers could bring them in.
Elias had inherited more than just land; he had inherited a legacy of grit. The map of Edgewater was a vast expanse of rolling hills and dense forests, where the "parkland" region’s poplars and birches stood as silent witnesses to the changing seasons. His first task was simple: survive the first winter, where the snow was known to get deeper than anywhere else he’d ever farmed. A New Way of Farming