The discussion continues for some time before weariness sets in, and it is decided that they will embark in the morning and head upriver with a planned detour of visiting the goblin chief should his location become apparent. And so the party makes their sleeping arrangements (with Oren spending most of the evening guarding Grabbo the goblin), and sleep quickly overtakes them.
The morning comes too soon, as it is wont to do in the midsummer, and Mrs. Cogs offers a hearty breakfast to those who wish to partake before they depart. Grabbo seems rather uncomfortable in the coming daylight, as it is commonly known that goblins are nocturnal. He doesn't burst into flames, however, and so he will be fine.
The walk from the Cog's farm to the weir and pool (a reasonable starting point for heading upstream) is short and easy. It takes less than an hour and the sun is still high in the sky, though midday starts making its way to afternoon. Without any incident, the group arrives at Speaking-Fish Weir.
A weir of large, loosely piled boulders stretches across the Dovedale River. It looks as if it might be possible to cross the river by stepping on the tops of the moss-covered stones. A 50ft-diameter pool has formed behind the weir. In normal times, the pool would be much larger and deeper, but the water has retreated to show cracked mud along the banks. Now that the river has been reduced to a trickle, the pool is only 2ft deep at its deepest point.
Colorful gravel lines the bottom of the pool. Rushes and willows, many of them drooping in the artificial drought, grow along the banks. Two 6ft tall, 2ft-diameter stone pillars stand at the top of the pool, one on either side of the river. A narrow footpath winds its way through the grass and reeds up the side of the pool and along the east side of the river. The footpath goes right by one of the stone pillars.