rónán / sammy • it/he • 22 • otherkin blog! • see my carrd! • proshippers / zoophiles DNI
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getting dolphin species euphoria from playing some flash game i rediscovered from when i was younger, where you play as a dolphin and get to jump really high <3
#rón.txt#therian#dolphin therian#i'll take any species euphoria i can get lol#anyways so happy i found the game again i used to play it all the time as a kid#it's a very simple game but makes my dolphin brain happy. especially as a captive dolphin! i can do a lil tail-walk in it!!
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i would like in the future to learn how to swim properly...my aquatic kintypes are particularly important to me so i think it would be nice. i also think swimming with a monofin or even just regular scuba fins would be fun too!
though it does pain me that i'll never truly be able to swim like this :(

#rón.txt#therian#the only thing is i'm not particularly athletic#and also i have Crushing social anxiety so the thought of taking swimming lessons makes me nauseous for many reasons#hhrhrhrgfg. the curse of having a body not built for the water
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Orca socialising. Filmed in the Crozet islands, in the subantarctic Indian Ocean. From Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom - A man among orcas (2006).
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Photo taken by Paul Nicklen of National Geographic
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hmmmmm been pondering what ecotype of orca i am and i think. i am settled on north atlantic. i am a fish-eater for sure so this seems like the best fit
i do sometimes feel captive orca vibes but that might just be feelings from my captive dolphin type getting mixed in. and also just me thinking it would be nice to be rubbed and fed fish and ice lmao
#rón.txt#orca therian#don't feed wild animals. except for me you can give me fish and ice cubes please <3#also feeling a bit Fake over this kintype because i've been seeing other orcas in the therian tags#and i feel like i'm 'copying' them#but my brain just springs new types on me sometimes </3#i've known i've been a dolphin for a while though so a new cetacean type isn't completely out of left field for me
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Brown hyena, a handsome carnivore that is mostly solitary, and scavenges more than it hunts. Corpse disposal is essential to the health of the bushveld.
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An orca hunting herring. Filmed in Norway. From The Norwegian Fjords: Life in the Twilights (2018).
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Orca. Filmed in Norway. From The Norwegian Fjords: Life in the Twilights (2018).
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Offshore spotted dolphin Stenella attenuata attenuata
Observed by airvillanueva, CC BY-NC
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after weeks of being in seal/cetacean/seabird shifts i have gotten Whacked with a felid shift again....kibby cat time
my felid kintype is a shapeshifter-type deal. i call myself a cladotherian because i am all cats, but they're all the same kintype/entity/being/whatever. i'm a weird little cat cryptid thing. my appearance isn't constant

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#rón.txt#i am Bad at explaining sorry if this doesn't make sense#therian#cladotherian#feline therian
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been in a beaked whale shift these past few days which means i have been wanting to dive down into the deep ocean depths to hunt squid...it would fix me i think

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#rón.txt#therian#cetacean therian#it's also been making me crave squid/calamari despite never having tried it before. but i am now very willing lmao#(<- funny because i am also a squid therian but tbf humboldts eat smaller squids as well so it would be species euphoria for two types lol)
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An orca (Orcinus orca) breaches off the coast of Australia
by Alexandre Roux
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A bashful Cuvier’s beaked whale
“I had no real idea at the time what exactly a beaked whale is, but there was a little bit more pressure when the boat captain added “If you get a shot of it in the water, it will be the fifth in the world.” No pressure of course….so I hopped in and found this coming straight at me!
Back on the boat the captain’s suspicions were confirmed: It was none other than a Cuvier’s Beaked Whale. A 20-foot long cetacean that lives at a few miles below the surface and we were super fortunate to catch it during a breath.
Moral of the story–hop in the water no matter what and you might just end up with one of five images of a species in the world!” - Joseph Tepper
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