Meanwhile, Yvette is a happy little worker who has so much to do!! Her research and observations about plant physiology and healing are carefully packaged and prepared for delivery to the arcology. It's not really complete, because truly the march of progress never stops, but Yvette resists her perfectionistic tendencies. The theories are present and backed up by (a lot of) hard data, there are proofs and models about how to predict plant health and mend them. It's a hell of a lot more than what was known to general plant engineering before, even if it's not including all of the interesting lines of logic she's started down but hasn't tidily wrapped up with a neat little proof yet. What's here is enough to work from, so it's soon ready to be sent off to the drop off point without any kind of fuss.
From there she's back to cataloging which places would most benefit from having their plants returned to them. Where are refugees congregating, where are the locations that had the tech to support a large plant infrastructure, how close are they to Nai's tunnel network, how old are those, how long ago did they have their plants stolen from them, how likely are they to have been stripped down for parts. What will people immediately need, how many plants are necessary to comfortably fulfill that, what resources will be best created and then bartered off for human hands to do the things that plants have trouble with, and on and on and on. There's a lot, and she really feels like she should probably have a proper team with actual experience of logistics to figure all of this out, but, well. For now, she's all they've got, and if she makes a little bit of a mess of it and it's not as efficient as it could be, it's better than doing nothing at all.
Well, it's considered so by some members of this psychic trio, but perhaps not all.