Based on my rudimentary Latin, the title can be loosely translated as āBack/Return to Lifeā, I think. In the episode, itās a fungus, although itās unclear if that is its scientific or colloquial name. There is no āvitusā genus as far as I can tell, although grapes belong to the vitis family.
The stardate is 868858.7, which places it in late 3191. It is 3 weeks into the Fall semester, so mid-to-late September, although theoretically, if 1000 stardate units equal 1 year, it should be November 9.
Lura mentions signing up for Calica, which appeared on a sign in SFA: āKids These Daysā. The series is its first appearance in lore. As we see later, itās a pretty brutal organised sport that is supposed to prepare cadets for combat.
Darem is either bi- or pansexual (and Caleb implies polyamorous as well).
Lura was a War College graduate, which makes sense since the Academy had yet to reopen until a year or so prior to the start of the series. While weāre at it, the etymology of the word āshenaniganā is uncertain, but Iām fond of the theory that it derives from the Irish word sionnachuighim (shun-NEH-huay-em), or āto play the fox.ā
We met Kelrec, the Commander of the War College and Nahlaās counterpart, in SFA: āBeta Testā. He is apparently really into tea. We find out that the ātransport first year cadets against their willā prank was first done years ago by Academy cadets who teleported their victims to the top of Alcatraz prison.
Nahla calls the Vitus Relux the āempathy flowerā and notes itās actually a fungus. It only blooms at night and has the ability to parrot the voices around it. The Art of War, attributed to Sun Tzu, is the classic Chinese treatise on warfare which has been studied and quoted for over a thousand years. My favourite aphorism from it is, āAll warfare is deception.ā
Krebsā Talaxian furfly was mentioned last episode as well. Jay-Den is apparently a pacifist, objecting to participating in violence of any kind.
Iām not sure how Luraās metaphor about the āforce of a thousand tachyonsā works, because theoretically in some equations, tachyons - hypothetical particles that travel faster than light - have negative or imaginary mass, and in any case wouldnāt exist in Newtonian space.
Reno describes a lapling as āfuzzy, mean like a koala, cute like a targā¦ā Believed to be extinct by the 24th century, we saw what was allegedly the last surviving specimen in Kivas Fajoās collection in TNG: āThe Most Toysā. The mascot isnāt exactly the same, more like a stylised version.
Klingons do have fondness for blood in their cuisine. Thereās rokeg blood pie (TNG: āA Matter of Honorā, bloodwine (TNG: āGambit, Part IIā), gagh is kept in barrels of blood (LD: āwej Dujā). Bregit lung was mentioned in DS9: āSons and Daughtersā, as was grapok sauce to go with it, although they didnāt say it also had a blood component then. Heart of targ was also mentioned in āA Matter of Honorā.
Nahla says sheās got 352 years on Kelrec. She said she was 422 in āKids These Daysā, which makes him 70 years old.
The mugato mascot costume is, however, more accurate to what was seen in TOS: āA Private Little Warā and LD: āMugato, Gumatoā.
Tardigrades, or water bears, are microscopic extremophiles. In the Star Trek universe, however, macroscopic alien multi-dimensional versions of them existed and were used as navigators through mycelial space for the Displacement-activated Spore Hub Drive (or spore drive) in DIS Season 1, until they figured out how to infuse tardigrade DNA into a human who then served as a navigator.
I really want those warp-core polka-dot jammies.
Reno and Lura are a couple, and she talks about how she left a āstarship on the edge of creationā (Discovery) for her, so placing this after DIS Season 5. Reno mentions NiāVari cuisine, NiāVar (ātwo-formā) being the current name for Vulcan, renamed after the reunification of the Vulcan and Romulan peoples. Krada leg is another Klingon dish.
The belaklavion (or just klavion), a Bajoran instrument, was first mentioned in TNG: āPremptive Strikeā. Ro Laren claimed that her father played the klavion to drive away the monsters under her bed as a child.
The turbolift shaft at least looks normal and not like the vast eldritch space weāve seen in DIS and ST: āQ & Aā.
While obtaining Kelrecās DNA will fulfil the trace DNA requirement of the biometric scan, simply growing an eyeball from it wonāt work to replicate the retinal pattern. Thatās because our retinal patterns are not determined by DNA but are formed as the blood vessels grow in utero (similar to fingerprints), and are unique even among identical twins. Either way, they would still have to have a snapshot of Kelrecās retina.
As explained in āBeta Testā, Tamira uses a neuroinhibitor because her emphathic abilities are more intense than other Betazoids.
The Vitus Reflux is a protected species under Starfleet Regulation 268.4, which makes harming them before they reach the adult stage a crime. Separately, there is also an Endangered Species Act (DIS: āMagic to Make the Sanest Man Go Madā), which requires Starfleet captains encountering species on the list to escort them to a sanctuary.
We find out later that Nahla was one of those responsible for the original transporter prank. There are a bunch of starship models on her shelf, including what looks like an Excelsior II-class, a Galaxy-class, an Intrepid-class, an Oberth-class and even an NX-01-class.
I havenāt had a chance to start watching yet and probably wonāt for a while, but Iām dying to know. Have they said whether The Doctor in this show is the one that came back with Voyager, or the backup from Living Witness?
He said in SFA: āKids These Daysā that he added an aging program to himself 500 years ago and he appears to remember the kids from Protostar, so this is the Voyager Doctor.


