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CheapSweets

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The Xerocolous Hraetnug

The Xerocolous Hraetnug

A brush pen sketch of a small dragon, with a pointed face, two long pointed ears, small wings and two legs that end in flat two-toed feet like a camel. It has a heart-shaped tip to its tail. It stands on a fairly featureless plain with dunes in the distance, and in the sky are a cluster of seven stars which corresponde to the Pleiades constellation.
A brush pen sketch of a mound of sand that small creatures are tring to pull their way out of. On the left of the mound, a neck with pointed head (and back-turned pointed ears) emerges. On the right, another neck and pointed head with alert pointed ears, the tops of two wings barely visible, and a two-toed foot peeking over the edge. Below this is another creature, clearly visible with two legs, a pointed head with pointed ears, and a tail with a heart shaped tip. It is lying on its back with wings oustretched on the ground, and its legs in the air.

My response to this week’s BestiaryPosting challenge, from @maniculum

Pencil sketch, then lines in Pentel brush pen. Originally meant to be a single image, but didn't work with the cropping...

Reasoning below the cut…

"It has wings but does not fly, and its feet are like those of the camel. When the time comes for it to lay eggs, it raises its eyes to the sky and looks to see if the star called Vergiliae, the Pleiades, has appeared, for it will not lay its eggs until that star has risen. When the Hraetnug sees the star, around the month of June, it digs in the ground, deposits its eggs in the hole it has made and covers them with sand. When it gets up from the hole, it immediately forgets the eggs and never returns to them. The effect of the calm, mild air seems to be that the sand in the summer heat hatches the eggs, bringing forth the young."

Honestly, it's been a week, so just a quick one this time. I genuinely had no idea what creature this this prompt related to, until last night I was lying in bed trying to sleep, and suddenly it seemed So Obvious… Curious if I've guessed this one right!

I ended up taking this one pretty literally. I was originally planning on drawing some manner of Beast, but the wings AND the egg-laying made me lean away from this. Rather than a bird, I ended up going for a fairly generic dragon (with That Head which keeps on coming up for some reason on the most unlikely creatures); many dragon illustrations don't look like they could fly anyway, so maybe the wings are more for balance (or cooling, perhaps?). The feet are taken pretty much directly from camels (including the pad underneath that is just visible on the raised foot); this along with the sand makes me think this is a desert dwelling creature.

I genuinely can't work out what Vergiliae relates to, but we also have the Pleiades in the sky.

I'm never going to miss the opportunity to draw cute baby animals, so have a trio of baby Hraetnugs clawing their way out of the sand once they have hatched :)

I think it ended up looking a bit like something from the Moomins...

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More Posts from Cheapsweets

5 months ago
Heres A Gnat Ogre (Holocephala), A Small Robber Fly That Is Indeed The Bane Of Smaller Flies Like Gnats
Heres A Gnat Ogre (Holocephala), A Small Robber Fly That Is Indeed The Bane Of Smaller Flies Like Gnats

here’s a gnat ogre (Holocephala), a small robber fly that is indeed the bane of smaller flies like gnats and midges. not much escapes the detection of those big round eyes


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5 months ago

In which I achieve a lifelong dream, of sitting on the seafloor with a bunch of giant Australian cuttlefish

a dark reddish brown cuttlefish looks at the camera with greenish brown algae in the background
a male giant cuttlefish looks at the camera, covered in scars, with his papillae eyebrows up.
a brownish yellow cuttlefish making its arms squiggly and eyebrows squiggly, hanging out among the algae.
Two tough guys perform a dominance display at each other, the one closer to the camerea doing a purple/maroon with white lines pattern, and the one farther from us doing the black and white passing cloud pattern

This morning I checked a major bucket list item off the list: hanging out w/Giant Australian Cuttlefish. They're super focused on mating, and are shockingly chill about people hanging around. I'd heard this was true, but whew, it was wild to experience firsthand.

It's a rare thing for an animal to reliably be found at a certain place & certain time. So often "lifer" animals depend on luck to seen. With these cuttlefish, so far it's been like clockwork. Late May-August, go to Whyalla in winter, and there they are, resplendent and numerous.

Good news:they're reliable + stunning. Bad news: Whyalla is a friggen hike from Philly & the water is a bit chilly (58 degrees F today). If you want to swim with them, you better get a thick wetsuit on and maybe be a bit cold (I was honestly too excited to be cold).

Seeing mating behavior up close was so completely amazing. The males perform dominance displays where they roll black bars across their body directly at another male. It's mind-blowing to see in person. They generally do it with the half of their body facing the other male.


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5 months ago
The 'Is this a pigeon' meme (an anime dude wearing glasses reaching out his hand toward a yellow butterfly). The anime dude is labelled 'Bestiary Scribe', the butterfly is labelled 'viper' and the dude is quoted 'Is this an elaborate mysogynistic metaphor?'

I had a careful read of the full text (without spoiling myself of any other entries) from the Aberdeen Bestiary... All I'll say is at least the author calls out 'ill-humoured' husbands too, but phrases like 'You emit a foul venom in the midst of your wifely embrace' are not making me massively positively inclined towards them...

Also, OMG the portholes...! 🤣

Bestiaryposting Results: Rabyeang

This one's posting a few hours later than usual, because due to various circumstances, we ended up recording an episode of the podcast this evening, so I didn't have time to get to it until now.

Anyway, odd and somewhat uncomfortable entry, some parts of it seem clear though. Genuinely interested to see what comes up because I haven't gotten around to checking in on it until right this moment.

Anyone who isn't sure what I'm talking about can find out at https://maniculum.tumblr.com/bestiaryposting.

The entry our artists are working from can be found here:

maniculum.tumblr.com
As a reminder, all previous entries in this series can be found at https://maniculum.tumblr.com/bestiaryposting . The Rabyeang is so called

If you want to join in on drawing the next one, that entry can be found here:

maniculum.tumblr.com
As a reminder, all previous entries in this series can be found at https://maniculum.tumblr.com/bestiaryposting . It has wings but does not

Art is below the cut in the order in which it was posted.

A drawing of an aquatic creature that resembles a shark, striped in black and blue, its mouth open to reveal many sharp teeth. A lamprey is attached to its side.

@silverhart-makes-art (link to post here) decided to go with an aquatic creature to make it easier for it to interact with lampreys, specifically a shark because they give live birth. I think the post here is pretty great, and including a lamprey is quite nice actually. Extremely cool-looking all around -- I encourage anyone reading this to check the linked post for a more detailed description of what's going on here and how the artist reached this design.

A sepia pen and ink sketch of two snakes winding around each other (a bit like a caudicus without the staff). One of the snakes' heads is clearly visible in profile, including a slitted eye; the others head disappers into the first snake's mouth. The scales on each snake are clearly visible.

@cheapsweets (link to post here) has drawn two snakes in the act of twining around each other as the female bites the male's head off. Kind of like a caduceus that's gone wrong somehow. Going in a snake direction makes sense, and the entwined pose I think makes it work. They have also included a rather cute bonus sketch in the linked post along with the explanation of their design, which I encourage y'all to check out. (Also thank you for providing alt text.)

A pink frame surrounds the side view of a creature sitting on green grass before a gold foil background. The creature is covered in swirly pink patterns and has the head and back limbs of a toad. Its forelimbs are bent like those of a praying mantis, but end in toad feet, and it has two additional limbs on each side. From its back, three young emerge, arms outstretched.

@coolest-capybara (link to post here) has made a very eye-catching but also somewhat... worrying creature by taking inspiration from Surinam toads and orchid mantises. The way those two inspirations are merged is really clever, I think, and as usual I love the medieval-inspired style. This is a creature I appreciate in drawing form but would probably find quite off-putting in real life, which I think is a sign of good design. (Also, thank you for providing alt text.)

That's it this time around, I'm afraid -- this particular entry doesn't seem to have sparked inspiration in many people. (Understandable.) So let's check in with the Aberdeen Bestiary.

A medieval manuscript illustration with a red-and-blue decorative border and a gold-foil background. The illustration shows two creatures, both legless and with that very particular medieval-animal head that has a somewhat canine structure and long, thin ears. One is biting the other on the nose. Three smaller versions of the same creature are emerging from very neat circular holes in the biting creature's side.

So, as I'm sure you've all guessed from the highly accurate illustration, this is the viper.

(I'm getting increasingly curious about what the deal is with this very specific head design you see on so many medieval creatures.)

So yeah, the bit with the lamprey is presumably complicated by the fact that one is an aquatic creature and the other terrestrial -- breath is going to be a concern, at the very least.

I think knowing it's a viper explains a lot of the entry: in the medieval metaphorical space, a viper is of course Very Wicked, so they really run with that here.

I wasn't aware vipers gave live birth, so I Googled it (apparently they do), and interestingly one of the top results was this Quora post:

Do vipers eat their way out of the mother?
Quora
Answer (1 of 5): No, they don't. While matriphagy (eating the mother) does exist as a survival strategy in nature, it is confined to certai

So apparently elements of this are still hanging around, if someone is asking on the Internet whether vipers really eat their way out of the mother. Also interestingly, the answer makes note of other medieval myths about vipers, including both the head-biting and the lamprey thing. (And also one that female vipers look human above the waist, which is a new one by me.) Instructional.


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