Briar Patch


The Briar Patch, known to Klingons as Klach D'Kel Brakt, is a region in the Avalon Sector and Sector 441 containing dangerous space matter including the remains of supernovae, false vacuum fluctuations, metaphasic radiation and at least two habitable planets, one of which was a Ba'ku settlement. Ships in the vicinity had to travel at less than one-third impulse power to avoid overheating the vessel's impulse manifolds. The colloquial "Briar Patch" name used in the Federation was first coined by criminal geneticist Arik Soong in the 22nd century, a reference to the Br'er Rabbit of the 1880s Uncle Remus stories written by Joel Chandler Harris of Earth.

Nav-borderlands.jpg
The Borderlands
Stations
Major Neighboring Powers
Local Species
Stellar Cartography
Federation Presence

Edit this nav
The Briar Patch

The area known as the Briar Patch contained the stars SNC 461206 and UFC 8177. In the surrounding area, SNR 093120, UFC 9364, NGC 2812 and QSR 390021 were all visible on star charts of sector 441.

In May of 2154, Soong suggested the cloud as a hiding place for himself and a group of Augments aboard a stolen Klingon Bird-of-Prey, but his suggestion was rejected by Malik, the self-appointed leader of the Augments. (ENT: "The Augments")

In 2271, the region was the site of the celebrated Battle of Klach D'Kel Brakt, where Dahar Master Kor led the Klingon Empire in a glorious victory over the Romulan Star Empire. Nearly a century later, Kor was still fond of re-playing the battle in holosuites. (DS9: "Blood Oath")

By the 24th century, the region was part of Federation space. In 2375, the Briar Patch was the scene of the Battle of the Briar Patch between the Federation starship USS Enterprise NCC-1701-E and Son'a ships, following the discovery of a plot to relocate the Ba'ku. (Star Trek: Insurrection)

In 2390-2392, the astrographical sectors were redrawn such that it dominated two sectors - the Avalon Sector and the Borderlands

The location of the Briar Patch (highlighted in the red oval) taken from a magnified LCARS display
Ma-logo.png
Content from this article may have
come partially, or entirely from
 
Memory Alpha