St Brendan
The pause at the station is brief, enough to settle things with Marlo. Their destination is Mission San Lorenzo, a small town on the "Rain Coast" of St. Brendan. From here, it is the far side of the planet.
St. Brendan is drier than Earth, with almost all of its land being in the great continent that covers most of the Northern Hemisphere. Much of it is very dry, very harsh desert. But planets are enormous, diverse places. Along one stretch of the continent, the coast runs east-west, south of the equator. There is a current in the ocean to the south that brings cold water up from the south pole. North of this coast is the planet's highest mountain range. The arrangement brings cold moist air up from the south, and traps it against these equatorial mountains. The result is rain, and a very wet climate, with rain almost daily, despite the planet being dry overall.
If it was a planet with a well developed biosphere it would be thick forest, but here there is only mile after mile of slimy blue green muck. The rain has carved into the land where it can, and after many years of this, the blue green carpet is actually a forest of a sort- but made of pillow like lumps of slippery squish sitting atop little mounds of stone, some as big as cars, separated by the rivulets and streamlets of rainwater.
Where the rain fed streams meet they form rivers, and these form larger river. San Lorenzo lies close to one which joins four others in a large bay, like fingers on a glove. The little town here has no navigational equipment of its own, and of course it's cloudy, it usually is, so the pilot will have to land using the radar image of the terrain, and then visual when closer in. But not to worry, that's how Neil Armstrong set down on the moon. Pilots have been doing this for a long time now.
This wouldn't work where the water was more crowded, such as near a more populated area. But human settlement is thin, here. There is plenty of room in the bay in which to set down a starship.
You wouldn't be able to see the town of San Lorenzo itself until on final approach, down out of the cloud deck.