The Timeliners also seem to have “The Cage” in April, though I don’t find any notes as to why exactly.
Maybe some kind of pun on the original name of its lead character?
The Timeliners also seem to have “The Cage” in April, though I don’t find any notes as to why exactly.
The Timeliners also seem to have “The Cage” in April, though I don’t find any notes as to why exactly.
If anyone is interested, I did update the relevant area of my timeline to adjust the month for “The Menagerie.” So now I have a month or less between “Court Martial” and “The Menagerie.”
https://startreklitverse.com/the-five-year-mission--month-by-month.php
Ryan - Actually the timeliners have 'The Cage' in March. Here's the footnote in the document - IDWNV produced a comic which retells the story of the “The Cage”. In order for 13 years having passed between the events of “The Cage” (TOS) and “The Menagerie” Timeliners speculate that “The Cage” must happen around the month of March. Spacing the episodes in this way assumes Spock was rounding a bit.
Ryan - Actually the timeliners have 'The Cage' in March. Here's the footnote in the document - IDWNV produced a comic which retells the story of the “The Cage”. In order for 13 years having passed between the events of “The Cage” (TOS) and “The Menagerie” Timeliners speculate that “The Cage” must happen around the month of March. Spacing the episodes in this way assumes Spock was rounding a bit.
Thanks, Darren. Don’t know how I missed seeing that.
For what it's worth, I have 'The Cage' in late April 2254, concurrent with Chapter 2 of the TOS eBook 'Seasons of Light and Darkness', by Michael A. Martin, as per the historians note at the beginning of the novella which says that McCoy's time on Capella overlapped with 'The Cage'.
Í have it in late December 2253, on account of the late December reference in chapter 1. That would place Pike giving up command around late April/early May 2265. I don't think that fits with The Captain's Oath, though.where do you place it
Í have it in late December 2253, on account of the late December reference in chapter 1. That would place Pike giving up command around late April/early May 2265. I don't think that fits with The Captain's Oath, though.
Speaking of the Pike era, I still try to keep as much of Vulcan's Glory in my personal continuity as possible, but I suspect that's about to get a lot harder to do.
While checking info in Gary Mitchell-era stories last night, I tripped over an interesting little tidbit. In Captain's Peril, Spock says he served aboard the Enterprise for "11 years, nine months, fifteen days" before Kirk took command. Five months and ten days longer that he served under Pike according to "The Menagerie." In reality, I'm sure it's just a timing error that didn't get caught in the editing process, but "in universe," I wonder of those "extra" months could actually account for time Pike spent away from the ship, either some of the stuff in Burning Dreams or his temporary command of Discovery. Probably best to just ignore it, but still an interesting thought, to me, at least.
I still lean towards the Pike-to-Kirk transfer happening in 2264 (whichever version), though. It gives more time for pre-"WNMHGB"/pre-5YM missions, and I think it fits better with the timing of Pike's command, even after Discovery. His second 5YM should end in 2263, and I figure there's a year of refit on the ship before she launches under Kirk's command.
I'm sure The Captain's Oath is incompatible with that, and Strange New Worlds definitely will be, so I know that idea is going to get blown out of the water. But for now, I'm holding onto it.
Huh. I haven't read Seasons of Light and Darkness, but I always thought McCoy's time on Capella was more likely to overlap with "Where No Man Has Gone Before" than "The Cage."
Although I suppose that, instead of trying to mentally edit the book as you read it, you could treat it as an alternate thing while still assuming that something similar happened in the main timeline.
To be honest, though, I always had trouble reconciling Vulcan's Glory with Trek continuity as it had previously been established. The premise that there had once been a ton of Vulcans on the Enterprise crew was hard to reconcile with TOS's stance that Spock was the only Vulcan on the crew and one of relatively few in Starfleet, and the Vulcan characters acted a lot more emotional than one would expect. Despite coming from Fontana, it felt pretty revisionist.
I don't buy the idea that Constitution-class missions are required to exist only in 5-year blocks. The idea that 5-year missions are the only existing mission profile makes no sense.
But ideas changed as the series went on, and in the Federation as we've come to know it, he simply couldn't be the only non-human in a crew of 400+, but he's the only one we ever saw. By the time we get to "The Immunity Syndrome," there was a Constitution-class ship crewed entirely by Vulcans. A lot of people have come up with various explanations for that, but I just tend to go with "there've always been Vulcans in Starfleet."
I don't think I've ever seen anyone make the assumption that they have to.
Two five-year missions for Pike just fits with the timing, with three/four years for refits and other assignments before/between/after as needed. I've never thought that's the only thing allowed for Constitution-class ships, just that it was common especially during Kirk's time, because of their capabilities.
I've seen lots of people assume that five-year missions were the default, and that the only possibility for Pike was two 5YMs with a year and four months of refits.
That's a fair point, but keep in mind that Spock was not with Pike from the beginning. Both Vulcan's Glory and Short Treks: "Q&A" showed him joining the crew after the mission had already been underway for a certain time. Early Voyages put Spock's arrival two years into a 5-year mission. Going by that, Pike would've been in command of the ship for roughly thirteen and a half years (minus his months on Discovery), so we're not just talking about two 5YMs and a bit extra. There's significant room for different mission profiles/durations.
Two five-year missions for Pike just fits with the timing, with three/four years for refits and other assignments before/between/after as needed.
Isn't Pike's tenure codified in DSC: "Brother"? When Pike introduces himself, his whole service record is on the viewscreen for all to see.
It annoyed me they had 5-year missions prior to TOS, because I quite liked Into Darkness' idea that theirs was the first.
It annoyed me they had 5-year missions prior to TOS, because I quite liked Into Darkness' idea that theirs was the first.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.