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I missed the watercourse part of the equation. Is it smooth? I guess thats in the eye of the beholder.
In the end, what looks right to your eyes is what matters (not in the cliche your layout should be what you want way) as our perception of landscape is very much artificial. The reality is that most people don't see the landscape and recognize the various distinctive features. They recognize and recall focus points, often dramatic or human features, but also form an overall sense of the landscape based on texture, color and scale. This is why often crude renditions of important features "look" right: the cotton ball deciduous forest is an example of this. Individually, they sure don't look like trees, but as a whole, they satisfy the sense of what the forest looks like. The same applies to rock or the landforms and especially water features (which as modelled are often abominations of reality).Amen!I put a lot of waterways on my NE scene layout because I knew around them is really only where you'd see exposed rock. Maybe at the top of a weathered knoll (why I'm driven to have rock formations at all on a NH-clone layout is a whole nother story). But because of the waterways the rocks will be somewhat smoother and rounded than usual than in rock molds.But I'm a big believer in drainage as part of the scenic look. You should be able to tell where the water goes on the layout when it "rains", even if there is no water running through those paths now. A really great idea on a layout I saw was a streambed with no water in it, but bright green silflor tufts running a thin line down the middle, with dead dry grass everywhere else. Couldn't see water but your mind assumed it was there.