
If you don’t have any in your inventory, the Gerudo Highlands are a good place to find them. Calyban will only stop eating and littering in exchange for 10 wildberries. She’s throwing the rinds into the water, and that’s what’s causing Dalia’s trouble.
If you follow the water supply straight back past the palace, you’ll find Calyban sitting on the rooftops eating melons. Her garden keeps getting ruined by trash washing down the water supply. In the very northernmost corner of the town, you’ll find a little vai named Dalia. When you hand them over, she’ll reward you with a piece of jewelry.

You can also take a picture of a deposit with your camera and have your sheikah slate point you to nearby ore.
#You have found the helm of raedwald upgrade
If you don’t have enough already, you will accidentally collect some while looking for luminous stones to upgrade the radiant set (also in Gerudo Town), so start there. Find some ore, smash it, and you’ll probably end up with at least one piece. There’s not a lot of nuance to collecting flint. Speak to Isha, and she’ll tell you she needs 10 pieces of flint to reopen her shop. You’ll find the jewelry shop in the northernmost corner of the Gerudo Market. You could just wander around and collect things as you need them, but we’ll put notes in each of the sections below so you can plan a little better and save yourself some time. Your job is to solve the problems of four residents of Gerudo Town.Įvery quest will ultimately require you to hand over some of your inventory to complete. When you ask to borrow the Thunder Helm, you’ll pick up the ‘The Thunder Helm’ side quest. Investigate the helm to start a conversation with Riju. The Thunder Helm that Riju wore during the battle to reclaim the Divine Beast is sitting on a pedestal on her right. The most tempting reason to stick around is right next to Riju - no, not Buliara. The burial was probably of Raedwald, king of the East Angles, c.625.After defeating Divine Beast Vah Naboris, there’s still plenty to do in Gerudo Town. This remarkable iron helmet, found at Sutton Hoo in 1939, shows strong Scandinavian influence. If the Merovingian coins found there can correctly be dated no later than 625, the possibility seems very strong. His burial place is uncertain, but it has plausibly been argued that he was the great king for whom the elaborate and remarkable ship-burial at Sutton Hoo, near Woodbridge, was prepared. His date of death is not known, but was probably soon after his great victory, and certainly before 627. Bede complained that though Raedwald had been converted to Christianity in Kent, he had subsequently reneged, erecting altars to both faiths, ‘so that his last state was worse than his first’. Raedwald's son, Regenshere, was killed in the victory, which suggests that Raedwald must by then have been middle-aged or elderly. His reign can be dated roughly, since Bede related that he gave refuge to Edwin, and helped him to recover Northumbria by defeating Aethelfrith at the battle of the river Idle, c.616. He is placed as fourth in the line of bretwaldas of southern Britain, and though that probably overstates his authority, it indicates that East Anglia's period of influence came early. The most famous of East Anglian kings, is said by Bede to have been the son of Tytil and grandson of Wuffa the dynasty was hence known as the Wuffingas.
