We know there's a box for North American miraculous', so here's my theory on what could be in them, starting with the one we know we have:
Eagle 🦅
Bison
Raccoon 🦝
Possum
Prairie dog
Squirrel 🐿
Grizzly Bear 🐻
Deer 🦌
Coyote
Rat 🐁
Alligator 🐊
Mountain lion
Skunk 🦨
Roadrunner
Rattlesnake
Longhorn
Bullfrog 🐸
Badger 🦡
Scorpion 🦂
Idk, I think it would be cool to see the whole box. I want new kwamis, Thomas.
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tag page
main:
#art
#info
#animalbehavior
#vintage
#plushies
#vids
#mycontent
#babyanimals
feline:
#cats
#bigcats
#tigers
#lions
#lynx
#leopards
#panthers
#cheetahs
#jaugars
#ocelots
#pallascat
#bobcats
canine:
#dogs
#africanwilddogs
#foxes
#fennecfoxes
#coyotes
#wolves
#raccoondogs
#manedwolves
reptile:
#lizards
#leopardgecko
#snakes
#ballpython
#turtles
#skinks
#crocodiles
#alligators
#iguanas
amphibians:
#frogs
#toads
#salamanders
#axolotl
#newts
fish:
#fish
#sharks
#bettafish
#eels
#jellyfish
#marine
birds:
#birds
#chickens
#owls
#ducks
#hawks
#penguins
#bluejays
#cardinals
#vultures
#corvids
#dodos
#pigeons
rodents:
#rats
#mice
#hamsters
#guineapigs
#squirrels
#chinachillas
bears:
#bears
#polarbears
#pandas
#redpandas
misc:
#dinosaurs
#okapi
#zebra
#capybaras
#hyenas
#squid
#octopus
#rabbits
#hares
#lemurs
#misc
#bats
#cows
#pigs
#sheep
#meerkats
#seals
#goats
#crabs
#possums
#raccoons
#thylacine
#tapirs
#quagga
#badgers
#moles
#skunks
#jerboas
#porcupine
#snails
#slugs
#sloths
#seals
#otters
#ferrets
#horses
#anteaters
#armadillos
#primates
#deer
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Made a list of animals that would be considered reportable to clan leaders following patrol that would lead to injury/death of clanmates. Feel like it can be made longer with something obvious I’m missing - this is just going on canon books and what would be impossible to miss, so scorpions seem a bit out of the picture. Snakes are here because “high amount of snake sightings at snake rocks” might be reported.
wolves - dogs - foxes - other cats - owls/eagles/hawks - bear - skunk - badger - weasel/stoat - bees/wasps/hornets - raccoons - snakes - rats - coyotes - cougars - porcupines - wolverines - possums - deer/elk/moose/wild horses (risk of getting trampled) - twolegs - predatory fish - otters - bobcats/lynxes
Bonus: link to a wheel decide here for people to spin for those wanting to spice up their story or roleplay with any of the above living threats
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Table Rock Lake Clans - List of Prefixes by Color
An exhaustive list of all possible prefixes in the Clans of Table Rock Lake
I may make a category list soon
Black
Ani - derived from the grove-billed ani
Ant - used for small cats
Bat
Bear - used for big cats - derived from the American black bear
Beetle
Black
Bramble - refers to the ripened fruit - derived from the blackberry bramble
Cherry - refers to the fruit - derived from the black cherry
Cicada - used for tabbies
Coal
Coot - derived from the American coot
Cormorant - derived from the double-crested cormorant
Cricket - used for solids or tabbies
Crow
Dark
Duck
Eel - used for long-bodied cats
Evening
Flint
Goose - used for black and white cats
Grackle - derived from the common grackle
Hornet
Loon - used for black and white tabbies - derived from the common loon
Mink - derived from the American mink
Night
Raven
Shade
Shadow
Skunk - used for black tabbies or black and white cats - derived from the striped skunk (tabby) and the spotted skunk (bicolor)
Smoke - used for tabbies
Soot
Spider
Starling
Storm
Swift - used for black and white cats
Turtle
Vulture - derived from the turkey vulture
Wasp
Weevil
Willow - refers to the bark - used for black longhairs - derived from the black willow
Brown
Bat
Bear - used for large brown cats - derived from the grizzly bear
Beaver
Beetle
Bison - used for big cats
Bittern - used for light brown tabbies with white - derived from the American bittern
Brown
Chicken - used for light brown spotted tabbies with white - derived from the prairie chicken
Chipmunk - used for small tabbies
Cricket - used for tabbies
Cougar - used for large light brown cats
Deer - used for light brown cats - derived from the white-tailed deer
Duck
Dust
Eagle - used for brown and white cats - derived from the bald eagle
Elk - used for large cats
Frog - used for spotted tabbies
Grebe - derived from the horned grebe
Grouse - used for spotted brown cats - derived from the ruffed grouse
Harrier - used for brown and white cats - derived from the Northern harrier
Hawk - used for brown and white cats - derived from the red-tailed hawk
Honey - used for golden-brown cats
Lizard - used for tabbies
Mantis
Mink - derived from the American mink
Moth - used for tabbies
Mouse - derived from the house mouse
Mud
Nightjar - used for spotted brown tabbies - derived from the common nighthawk
Oak - refers to the bark - used for tabbies - derived from the black oak
Oat - refers to the flower - derived from the wild oat
Pecan - used for tabbies - derived from the pecan tree
Quail - used for spotted and white tabbies - derived from the bobwhite quail
Rabbit - derived from the cottontail rabbit
Rail - used for dark brown spotted tabbies - derived from the king rail
Rat - derived from the brown rat
Rock
Rush - refers to the flowers - derived from the common rush
Snail
Soil
Sparrow - used for brown and white tabbies - derived from the house sparrow
Spider
Stone
Sycamore - used for big tabbies - derived from the American sycamore
Tawny - used for light brown cats
Teal - derived from the cinnamon teal
Thrush - used for spotted light brown and white tabbies - derived from the wood thrush
Turkey - used for big cats
Turtle
Walnut - refers to the nuts - derived from the black walnut
Weasel - used for brown and white cats - derived from the long-tailed weasel
Weevil
Wigeon - derived from the American wigeon
Wren - used for brown and white tabbies
Reddish-Brown
Alder - refers to the bark - used for tabbies - derived from the hazel alder
Cardinal - refers to the female of the species
Cedar - refers to the bark - used for tabbies - derived from the red cedar
Clay
Crane - derived from the sandhill crane
Ibis - derived from the white-faced ibis
Owl - used for spotted reddish-brown tabby and white cats - derived from the screech owl
Pheasant - used for spotted tabbies - derived from the common pheasant
Gray-Brown
Armadillo - used for tabbies
Bass
Birch - refers to the bark - derived from the river birch
Boulder - used for large cats
Coyote
Dove
Elm - refers to the bark - used for tabbies - derived from the American elm
Hare - derived from the American desert hare
Hickory - refers to the bark - used for tabbies - derived from the bitternut hickory
Kinglet
Lark - used for grayish-brown and white cats - derived from the horned lark
Lynx - used for spotted tabbies - derived from the bobcat
Magnolia - refers to the bark - used for tabbies - derived from the cucumber magnolia
Mole - derived from the Eastern mole
Pike - used for spotted tabbies
Pine - refers to the bark - derived from the shortleaf pine
Sand
Shell - used for tabbies
Vole - derived from the prairie vole
Warbler
Gray
Badger - used for tabbies - derived from the American badger
Bass
Bergamot - refers to the flowers - derived from the plant
Blizzard - used for spotted light gray tabbies
Boulder - used for big cats
Burdock - derived from the greater burdock
Carp
Chickadee - used for small gray and white cats - derived from the Carolina chickadee
Cinder
Coyote
Dark - used for dark gray cats
Dawn - used for light gray cats
Dove
Dusk - used for dark gray cats
Evening
Falcon - used for gray and white cats - derived from the peregrine falcon
Fog
Goose - used for gray and white cats
Granite - used for spotted tabbies
Gray
Gull - used for gray and white cats
Hail - used for light gray cats
Halcyon - used for dark gray or blue cats with a little white - derived from the belted kingfisher
Haze
Henbit - derived from the common henbit
Heron - derived from the great blue heron
Junco - derived from the dark-eyed junco
Larkspur - derived from the delphinium
Lichen - used for light gray tabbies
Lizard - used for tabbies
Lobelia - derived from the great blue lobelia
Loon - used for gray and white tabbies - derived from the common loon
Lynx - used for spotted tabbies - derived from the bobcat
Mallow - derived from the common mallow
Minnow - used for tabbies
Mint - refers to the flowers - derived from the hoary mountain mint
Mist
Mole - derived from the eastern mole
Moth - used for tabbies
Murk - used for dark gray cats
Nettle - derived from the American stinging nettle
Nuthatch - used for gray and white cat
Opossum - derived from the North American possum
Owl - used for large gray and white tabbies - derived from the barred owl
Pale - used for light gray cats
Pebble - used for small cats
Phacelia - derived from the purple phacelia
Phlox - derived from the woodland phlox
Pigeon
Pike - used for spotted tabbies
Raccoon - used for gray tabbies - derived from the common raccoon
Rain
Rock
Sage - derived from the wood sage
Shade - used for dark gray cats
Shale
Shell - used for tabbies
Shrew - derived from the northern short-tailed shrew
Shrike - used for gray and white cats - derived from the northern shrike
Silver
Slate
Sleet - spotted gray tabby
Smoke - used for tabbies
Soot - used for dark gray cats
Squirrel - used for gray and white cats - derived from the eastern gray squirrel
Steam - used for pale gray tabbies
Stone
Storm - used for dark gray cats
Sycamore - used for big light gray tabbies - derived from the American sycamore
Thalia - used for gray and white cats - derived from the powdery thalia
Thistle - derived from the common thistle
Titmouse - derived from the tufted titmouse
Trout - used for spotted tabbies
Vervain - derived from the blue vervain
Vetch - derived from the common vetch
Violet - derived from the birdsfoot violet
Wolf - derived from the gray wolf
Blue
Aster - derived from the flower
Blue
Bunting - derived from the indigo bunting
Chicory - derived from the common chicory
Gallinule - derived from the common gallinule
Glory - derived from the morning glory
Halcyon - used for dark gray or blue cats with a little white - derived from the belted kingfisher
Indigo - derived from the blue false indigo
Jay - used for blue and white tabbies - derived from the blue jay
Swallow - used for blue and white cats - derived from the tree swallow
Ginger/Red
Apple - refers to the fruit - derived from the wild apple
Ash - refers to the leaves - derived from white ash
Bergamot - refers to the flowers - derived from the plant
Blaze
Bramble - refers to the unripe fruit - derived from the blackberry bramble
Cardinal - refers to the male of the species
Dawn
Dusk
Ember - used for small cats
Evening - used for deep red cats
Fire
Fox - derived from the red fox
Ginger
Ginseng - derived from the American ginseng
Hawthorn - refers to the fruit - derived from the red hawthorn
Hazel - refers to flowers - derived from the Ozark witch hazel
Holly - refers to the fruit - derived from the meadow holly
Ivy - used for tabbies - derived from the poison ivy
Maple - refers to the leaves - derived from the red maple
Marigold - derived from the marigold
Morning
Lily - used for spotted tabbies - derived from the leopard lily
Oak - refers to the leaves - derived from the white oak
Persimmon - derived from the American persimmon
Plum - refers to the fruit - derived from the American plum
Pumpkin - refers to the fruit
Red
Spark
Sumac - refers to the leaves or berries - derived from the fragrant sumac (leaf) and the smooth sumac (berry)
Tanger - refers to the male of the species - derived from the summer tanger
Wasp - used for tabbies
Gold/Cream
Amber
Aphid - used for small cats
Apple - refers to the fruit - derived from the wild apple
Bee - used for tabbies
Blaze
Bolt
Daffodil - derived from the narcissus
Daisy - derived from the yellow ox-eyed daisy/black-eyed Susan
Dandelion - refers to the flower - derived from the weed
Dawn
Finch - derived from the goldfinch
Golden
Honey
Hornet - used for tabbies
Lightning
Locust - refers to the leaves - derived from the honey locust
Lotus - derived from the American lotus
Marigold - derived from the marigold
Morning
Mullein - refers to the flower - derived from the great mullein
Mustard - derived from the black mustard
Persimmon - derived from the American persimmon
Poppy - derived from the celandine poppy
Primrose - derived from the common evening primrose
Sand
Spark
Tanger - refers to the female of the species - derived from the summer tanger
Tansy - derived from the common tansy ragwort
Tawny
Velvet - derived from the velvet plant
Yellow
White
Aphid - used for small cats
Apple - refers to the flowers - derived from the wild apple
Avens - derived from the white avens
Bramble - refers to the flower - derived from the blackberry bramble
Blizzard
Bolt
Bright
Cherry - refers to the flowers - derived from the black cherry
Cloud
Clover - refers to the flowers - derived from the white clover
Cohosh - derived from the black cohosh
Cotton - refers to the seeds - derived from the upland cotton
Dandelion - refers to the seeds - derived from the weed
Egret - derived from the snowy egret
Flax - derived from the bastard toadflax
Frost
Gaura - derived from the gaura flowers
Hail
Haw - refers to the flowers - derived from the blackhaw
Hawthorn - refers to the flowers - derived from the red hawthorn
Hemlock - refers to the flowers - derived from the poison hemlock
Ice
Light
Lightning
Lotus - derived from American lotus
Milkweed - refers to the seeds - derived from common milkweed
Mint - refers to the flowers - derived from the hoary mountain mint
Mistletoe - refers to the berry - derived from the American mistletoe
Onion - refers to the bulb and flowers - derived from the wild onion
Orchid - derived from the Adam and Eve orchid
Pale
Parsley - refers to the flowers - derived from garden parsley
Plum - refers to the flowers - derived from the American plum
Rose - derived from the wild rose
Sage - derived from the wood sage
Sleet
Snow
Spark
Swan
White
Willow - refers to the catkins - used for white longhairs - derived from the black willow
Yarrow - derived from the common yarrow
Patched/Bicolor
Duck - used for black and brown cats
Eagle - used for brown and white cats - derived from the bald eagle
Falcon - used for gray and white cats - derived from the peregrine falcon
Grebe - used for brown and white cats - derived from Clark’s grebe
Harrier - used for brown and white cats - derived from the Northern harrier
Hawk - used for brown and white cats - derived from the red-tailed hawk
Iris - derived from the iris flower
Jaeger - used for black and white cats - derived from various jaegers
Jay - used for gray and white tabbies - derived from the blue jay
Nuthatch - used for gray and white cat
Merganser - used for black and white cats - derived from the common merganser
Patch - general bi/tricolor
Plover - used for black, gray, or brown and white cats - derived from the various species of plover
Scaup - used for black and white cats - derived from the greater and lesser scaup
Shrike - used for gray and white cats - derived from the northern shrike
Skunk - used for black and white cats - derived from the spotted skunk
Sparrow - used for brown and white tabbies - derived from the house sparrow
Swallow - used for blue and white cats - derived from the tree swallow
Thalia - used for gray bicolors - derived from the powdery thalia
Thrush - used for spotted brown and white tabbies - derived from the wood thrush
Weasel - used for brown and white cats - derived from the long-tailed weasel
Patterned
Speckle - used for spotted tabbies
Spotted - used for spotted tabbies
There’s others but writing them down would make this section bloated...
Tortoiseshell/Calico
Brindle - used for any tortie
Clay - used for brown torties
Copper - used for dark torties
Dapple - used for any tortie
Dawn - used for dilute torties
Dusk - used for dark torties
Eagle - used for darker torties - derived from the golden eagle
Ember - used for small torties
Evening - used for dark torties
Fox - used for diluted torties - derived from the gray fox
Fritillary - used for brown torties - derived from a tribe of butterfly
Grebe - used for dark torties - derived from the eared gribe
Kestrel - used for spotted red torties or blue torties - derived from the American kestrel
Morning - used for dark or dilute torties
Mottle - used for torties with little to no white
Oriole - used for darker torties - derived from the orchard oriole
Owl - used for brown torties - derived from the great horned owl
Pansy - used for any tortie - derived from the garden pansy
Patch - used for any calico
Pheasant - used for brown torties
Robin - used for brown torties - derived from the American robin
Skipper - used for brown torties - derived from the skipper butterfly
Squirrel - used for diluted torties - derived from the fox squirrel
Tawny - used for diluted brown torties
Toad - used for diluted torties
Towhee - used for darker torties with white - derived from the eastern towhee
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hello, i loved the hdm quiz and i'm curious: what was the full list of possible daemons??
hi, i’m so glad you liked it! :D so there are currently ~320 possible outcomes and i will type them up because i’ve gotten this question so many times! however i do add more periodically — about 50 have been added since the quiz was first posted
domestic doghusky, pug, golden retriever, cocker spaniel, german shepherd, bulldog, bloodhound, afghan, westie, poodle, chow chow, pomeranian, australian cattle dog, rottweiler, st. bernard
domestic catbengal, sphynx, persian, maine coon, tabby (DSH), siamese, lykoi, bobtail, russian blue, abyssinian, turkish angora, norwegian forest cat, cornish rex, oriental shorthair
viverroidhyena, aardwolf, meerkat, mongoose, fossa, fanaloka, binturong, african civet, genet
bovidbison, domestic cow, muskox, yak, water buffalo, cape buffalo, kudu, bongo, nyala, gaur
bearbrown bear, polar bear, black bear, sloth bear, sun bear, panda, spectacled bear, moon bear
xenarthrapichiciego, armadillo, sloth, silky anteater, anteater, tamandua
raptorvulture, osprey, hawk, falcon, secretary bird, eagle, caracara, goshawk, gyrfalcon
foxgray fox, arctic fox, fennec fox, red fox, bat-eared fox, simien fox, andean fox, corsac fox, rüppell’s fox
marsupialopossum, wombat, tasmanian devil, kangaroo, koala, bandicoot, quokka, pygmy possum, brushtail possum, sugar glider, tree kangaroo, wallaby, cuscus
owlbarn owl, snowy owl, screech owl, great horned owl, burrowing owl, eagle owl, great grey owl, little owl
primategorilla, chimpanzee, mandrill, gibbon, capuchin, tamarin, spider monkey, ring-tailed lemur, squirrel monkey, colobus, sifaka, howler monkey, orangutan, tarsier, loris
wild cattiger, lion, snow leopard, cheetah, ocelot, caracal, cougar, serval, jaguar, clouded leopard, lynx, jaguarundi
waterfowlheron, pelican, gull, goose, duck, swan, albatross, booby, shoebill, stork, puffin, sandpiper, flamingo
batflying fox, disk-winged bat, vampire bat, little brown bat, ghost bat, yellow-winged bat, sac-winged bat
musteloidraccoon, kinkajou, skunk, red panda, coati, ringtail, olingo, olinguito, cacomistle
perching birdsparrow, blue jay, raven, cuckoo, magpie, cardinal, dove, parrot, robin, blackbird, mockingbird, manakin, thrush
wild dogwolf, african wild dog, jackal, coyote, bush dog, dhole, maned wolf, dingo
deerwhite-tailed deer, moose, reindeer, mouse deer, fallow deer, elk, water deer, pudu
serpentblind snake, shieldtail, python, file snake, viper, cobra, boa, corn snake, garter snake, rattlesnake, milk snake, hognose, vine snake
mustelidstoat, badger, wolverine, polecat, marten, ferret, sea otter, river otter, tayra
antelopegazelle, duiker, impala, wildebeest, oryx, waterbuck, addax, reedbuck, dik-dik, eland
rabbitholland lop, cottontail, jackrabbit, snowshoe hair, pika, flemish giant rabbit
cavitavetoucan, woodpecker, hornbill, hoopoe, kingfisher, kookaburra
eulipotyphlahedgehog, shrew, mole, moonrat, desman
rodentrat, mouse, squirrel, hamster, beaver, capybara, guinea pig, porcupine, flying squirrel, kangaroo rat, gopher, chipmunk, gundi
insectant, beetle, mantis, ladybug, moth, butterfly, cockroach, bumblebee, firefly, wasp, grasshopper, dragonfly
arachnidharvestman, tarantula, black widow, orb-weaver, scorpion, horseshoe crab, trapdoor spider
reptilecrocodile, tortoise, chameleon, gecko, iguana, skink, komodo dragon, gila monster, tuatara, caiman, bearded dragon, snapping turtle, horny toad, tegu
caprineibex, domestic goat, bighorn sheep, domestic sheep, serow, mountain goat
swinedomestic pig, warthog, babiursa, wild boar, pygmy hog
equine (i’m such a horse girl there are so many horse options LMAO)arabian, friesian, thoroughbred, fjord, shetland pony, clydesdale, donkey, zebra, przewalski’s horse, akhal-teke, dartmoor pony, dutch warmblood
pinnipedharbor seal, leopard seal, elephant seal, sea lion, walrus
amphibianpoison dart frog, pond frog, glass frog, fire-bellied toad, common toad, bullfrog, salamander, axolotl
flightless bird (SO many people have commented that some of these birds aren’t flightless… i Know i just needed more birds for this category)kiwi, emu, ostrich, cassowary, kakapo, penguin, chicken, turkey, peacock
i’m considering adding camelidae and montreme to the main section but as of right now it’s just these 34 😊 for fun, the least common daemon is the pygmy hog — 5 people or 0.0002% of people got it!
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So exotic to me
Anonymous said: I know this has been asked, or at least mentioned, on your blog before, but what are the “common USA” animals that Australia doesn’t have? I know squirrels are one...
Let’s see if I can make a non-exhaustive list:
Squirrels
Raccoons
Opossum (our proper possums are different)
Wolves
Coyotes
Bears, all kinds (A koala is not a bear)
Moose
Some deer - There are 6 species in Australia, all introduced, but no white-tail or mule deer
Beavers
Ground Hogs
Moles that are not marsupial
Skunks
Weasels
Porcupines
Hedgehogs
Gopher
Lynx
Bobcat
Mountain Lion
badger
wolverine
Otters
Wild turkey
bluejay
cardinals
woodpeckers
hummingbirds
Hamsters
Gerbils
Chinchillas
And I’m sure I’ve missed some, but they’ve escaped me at the moment.
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Cherokee Vocab: Animals
Animal - ᎦᎾᏠᎢ (ganatloi)
Dog - ᎩᏟ (gitli)
Cat - ᏪᏌ (wesa)
Bobcat - ᎬᎮ (gvhe)
Squirrel - ᏌᎶᎵ (saloli)
Mouse - ᏥᏍᏕᏥ (jisdeji)
Possum - ᏏᏆᎤᏤᏣᏍᏗ (siqua-uje(ja)sdi)
Rabbit - ᏥᏍᏚ (jisdu)
Fox - ᏧᎳ (jula)
Raccoon - ᎬᎵ (gvli)
Skunk - ᏗᎵ (dili)
Beaver - ᏙᏯ (doya)
Badger - ᎢᏃᎵ (inoli)
Mole - ᎤᏝᎥ (utlav)
Groundhog - ᎣᎦᎾ (ogana)
Bear - ᏲᎾ (yona)
Deer - ᎠᏫ (awi)
Elk - ᎠᏫᏯᏆ (awiyaqua)
Buffalo - ᏯᎾᏎ (ya(na)se)
Panther, Lion, Tiger - ᎲᏓᏥ (hvdaji)
Wolf - ᏩᏯ (waya)
Coyote - ᏩᏯᎭ (wayaha)
Cow - ᏩᎦ (waga)
Horse - ᏐᏈᎵ (soquili)
Goat - ᎤᎦᏐᏣᏁᏛ (ugasojanedv)
Sheep - ᎠᏫᎤᏃᏕᎾ (awiunodena)
Pig - ᏏᏆ (siqua)
Chicken - ᏣᏔᎦ (jataga)
Fish - ᎠᏣᏗ (ajadi)
Frog - ᏩᎶᏏ (walosi)
Turtle - ᎤᎵᏩᏂ (uliwani)
Snake - ᎢᏯᏛ (iyadv)
Rattlesnake - ᎤᏦᎭᏘ (ujohati)
Alligator - ᏧᎳᏍᎩ (julasgi)
Bird - ᏥᏍᏆ (jisqua)
Owl - ᎤᎫᎫ (ugugu)
Duck - ᎧᏬᏄ (kawonu)
Goose - ᏌᏌ (sasa)
Buzzard - ᏑᎵ (suli)
Hawk - ᏔᏬᏓ (tawoda)
Eagle - ᎤᏬᎯᎵ (uwohili)
Turkey - ᎬᎾ (gvna)
Crow - ᎪᎦ (goga)
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That Comprehensive Lusus Post: Mammals
The Quick Rundown:
Total Mammals: 1210 (30.25% of all lusii -- so 30%)
What I expected to see lots of (and did): Dogs and cats. Oh my God, dogs and cats. But dogs have a lot of variation, and cats are cute. So I expected this.
What I didn’t expected to see lots of (and didn’t): Whales/dolphins (cetacea). While there’s lots of variation like a dog (at least in whales), there’s only a few castes that most would give a whale or dolphin lusus to. Overall, there were 23 in the cetacea category, which is ~2% of all mammals and 0.5% of all lusii.
What I expected to see lots of (and didn’t): Mongooses, Red and Giant Pandas and Okapis. There actually weren’t any Okapis, and while I didn’t expect many, I expected enough that I made a giraffidae category instead of just throwing Giraffes under other. The lack of pandas and mongooses legitimately caught me off guard. Mongooses/Red Pandas make up 0.33% of all mammals. Giant Pandas make up 0.5% of all mammals.
What I didn’t expect to see lots of (and did): I’m actually surprised how common sheep (sheep/ram) and cattle (cows/bulls/ox) in particular came up. I would have imagined canon Homestuck having both a ram and a fairy-bull would have discouraged more people, as I know a lot of those critique blogs would criticize someone for happening to use a lusus used in canon.
What I wish I saw more of: Okapis.
Alright, nothing too fancy with mammals, now to start breaking this stuff down
(larger version of the pie chart here)
CANINES
Final Counts
Dogs: 96
Foxes: 58
Wolves: 41
Maned Wolf: 10
Jackal: 10
Coyote: 5
Dingo: 3
Dhole: 1
Top 5 Dogs
Dog (nondescript) = 18
German Shepherd/Chihuahua = 6
Bulldog = 5
Pomeranian/Samoyed = 4
Rottweiler/Corgi/Weiner Dog = 3
Top 3 Foxes
Fox (nondescript) = 30
Fennec Fox = 10
Red Fox = 7
Other canine notes
While wolves have a high count, most wolves were nondescript. The next highest were dire wolves, with 6. All other wolves were no higher than a count of 2
There were a huge amount of variability among dogs. If someone wants to see the whole list, please message me.
Maned wolves acquired their own category by being neither fox nor wolf
FELINES
Big Cat: 64
Wild Cat: 59
House Cat/Nondescript Cat: 51
Top 3 Big Cats
Lion = 19
Tiger = 17
Sabertooth Tiger = 7
Top 3 Wild Cats
Mountain Lion = 20
Cheetah = 11
Lynx = 10
Other Feline Notes
Much like the high wolf count vs. low variability, the lack of top count for house cats is due to most being generic house cats, or only having a count of 1 for the specification
My favorite house cat was the person who had Schrodinger's Cat for a lusus.
BOVIDAE (cattle, sheep, goats, etc., very much a lot of your farm animals)
Sheep: 39
Cattle: 31
Goat: 26
Antelope: 11
Buffalo: 4
Bison: 3
Yak: 3
Bovidae Notes
If anyone would like to see the breakdowns of any bovidae, please message me. The only really interesting breakdown I found (i.e: at least 3 notably larger categories than the rest) I found were cattle, and there weren’t much more than 3 specifics anyway, and it’s hard to make a top 3 out of...3 -- btw, this applies to any of these that I don’t include a Top 3 of, since most of these were largely nondescript or limited to 1 or 2 per grouping.
RODENT
Rat: 29
Mouse: 16
Chinchilla: 9
Porcupine: 9
Squirrel: 8
Beaver: 4
Chipmunk: 3
Guinea Pig: 2
Hamster: 1
Jeroba: 1
Vole: 1
Patagonian Mara: 1
DEER
Deer: 43
Reindeer: 6
Dik dik: 4
Elk: 4
Moose: 3
MUSTELIDAE (Weasels, badgers, wolverines, etc., your trickster noodles)
Otter: 15
Badger: 13
Weasel: 12
Polecat: 11
Wolverine: 6
Marten: 5
Mink: 1
LAGOMORPH: (Rabbits and hares)
Rabbit: 48
Hare: 6
MARSUPIAL
Opossum: 10
Kangaroo: 7
Possum: 4
Tasmanian Devil: 4
Koala: 4
Tasmanian Tiger: 3
Wombat: 3
Numbat: 1
Wallaby: 1
EQUINES
Horse: 28
Donkey: 3
Mule: 3
Pony: 2
Zebra: 1
Quagga: 1
Equine Notes:
Most horses were nondescript, so I didn’t do a top count. If you’re curious, almost all specifications were draft horses. Namely: clydesdales.
Both ponies were shetland ponies
It’s funny to me that there was only 1 zebra in all 4000 lusii, considering Hiveswap/Friendsim features Zebruh Coddak, who has a zebra lusus.
PRIMATE
Monkey: 21
Ape: 8
Lorisid: 2
Top 3 Monkeys
Ring Tailed Lemur = 4
Capuchin Monkey/Monkey (Nondescript) = 3
Chimpanzee/Spider Monkey/Macaques = 2
Primate Notes
Monkeys were the first count where a nondescript monkey is lower than a specific species, while there are multiple species (so not including something like the lorisids, where it’s unlikely to have a nondescript lorisid)
SWINE
Boar: 18
Pig: 7
Warthog: 2
PINNIPED
Seal: 16
Walrus: 6
Sea Lion: 4
CETACEA (Whales and Dolphins)
Whale: 12
Dolphin: 11
Cetacea Notes
As stated above, I’m pretty sure the low numbers here is due to whales/dolphins making better fits for seadwellers than pretty much any other troll. That’s understandable, in the scheme of things
For those who may not know, you may be wondering why manatees aren’t listed here. That’s because manatees aren’t related to whales and dolphins! Manatees are found in the Sirenia family.
RACCOON-LIKE
Raccoon: 13
Red Panda: 4
Coati: 3
PILOSA
Sloth: 10
Anteater: 5
MOLE-LIKE
Mole: 8
Shrew: 3
Gopher: 1
Solenodon: 1
GIRAFFIDAE
This would have been Giraffes and okapis...if I found any okapi lusii.
Giraffe: 10
MONOTREME (Egg-Laying)
Platypus: 9
Echidna: 1
ODD UNGULATE
Rhino: 7
Tapir: 1
HERPESTIDAE
Mongoose: 4
Meerkat: 2
CAMELID
Camel: 3
Alpaca: 1
Llama: 1
OTHER MAMMAL
Everything that couldn’t be categorized into a supergroup. With the exception of giraffe, because seriously I thought okapis of those would come up. Simultaneously, I wasn’t expecting the Sirenia group to have more than the camels.
Bear: 44
Bats: 42
Hyena: 26
Armadillo: 12
Hedgehog: 9
Skunk: 6
Manatee: 5
Hippopotamus: 2
Pangolin: 2
Civet: 2
Dugong: 1
Stellar's Sea Cow: 1
Fossa: 1
Top 3 Bears
Bear (Nondescript) = 25
Brown Bear (includes grizzlies) = 8
Panda Bear = 6
Top 3 Bats
Bat (Nondescript) = 24
Vampire Bat = 7
Fruit Bat = 4
Overall Notes
There was honestly more variation than I expected to some degree. When I started doing this, I had to add the odd ungulate category. And in hindsight, I should have retroactively added a Sirenia category.
Unsurprisingly, common pets in North America is the most common. Not that such is a problem: Homestuck’s filled with American slang and written by an American. It’s just like how Changeling the Dreaming mentions puka fae should generally be common pets.
In general - and this is a trend across the board - a nondescript version is more common than a specific one. This is applicable both to species where there’s not many variants and species with lots of variants. However, the likelihood of specification is ultimately very much creator-based. i.e: Some creators gave whole names (e.g: Valaris Blacknose Sheep, Long Tailed Weasel, Hungarian Puli Dog) and some gave simple names (Sheep, Weasel, Dog). There’s nothing wrong with either one, I just found it interesting how it fell.
You’ll notice mutations like 6 legged or 4 eyed don’t come up. Because this was listing species and not mutations, these were largely ignored. Except for “9 tailed fox”. I listed those separately because I wasn’t sure if they were referencing back to myth or not.
After listing all of these, I might go back and figure out exactly how many extinct species there are.
If you’re looking for something no one’s ever done, I suggest pulling from the Camelid or Mongoose family. Or an Okapi. All I’m saying...unholy combination of a zebra, a deer, and a giraffe.
Anyway, that’s the big stuff for mammals! Next up, I’ll be counting all the birds.
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The Animalock Masterpost
So, here’s a list of all the Animalock drawings I’ve done. There are so many! And more still to come. I’ll try to update this every now and then.
Siamese and ginger cat
Red Irish setter and corgi
Otter and hedgehog
Bunnies
Porgs
Mice
Penguins
Goats
Elephants
Geese
Horse and pony
Foxes
Red pandas
Honey badgers
Bees
Bats
Owls
Deer
Raccoons
Wolf and black jaguar
Monkey and lemur
Geckos
Meerkats
Guinea pigs
Eagles
Llama and alpaca
Frogs
Lambs
Fennec foxes
Sparrow and hummingbird
Reindeer
Manx cats
Koalas
Squirrels
Piglets
Dolphins
Assassin bugs, Gila monsters, midwife toads, Komodo dragons, Epaulette sharks and naked mole rats
Giraffes
Doves
Afghan hound and Jack Russell terrier
Capybaras
Chipmunks
Skunks
Goldfish
Minks
Sloths
Hippos
Pandas
Ducks
Dik-diks
Humpback whale and sperm whale
Puffins
Pelicans
Seahorses
Cavalier King Charles spaniels
Pronghorns
Numbats
Sharks
Kinkajous
Goshawk and peregrine
Ferrets
Unicorns
Kangaroos
Seals
Bloodhound and Yorkie
Tortoises
Tigers
Okapis
Lions
Cats (again)
Mandarin ducks
Polar bears
Bears
Snails
Rats
Octopodes
Pikas
Pudus
Peacock and pheasant
Donkeys
Parakeets
Platypuses
Pugs
Orcas
Clownfish
Butterfly and moth
Rottweiler and bullmastiff
Flamingos
Earthworms
African wild dogs
Sand cats
Bluebirds
Parrots
Indian elephants
Beavers
Weasels
Wagtails
Wolverines
Skylarks
Hedgehogs (Sherlock is also a hedgehog)
Rhinos
Turkey vultures
Bushdogs
Lynxes
Dinosaurs
Common lizards
Impalas
Arctic foxes
Fossa
Blackbirds
Quokkas
Possums
Quails
Roedeer
Chinchillas
Zebra duikers
Black rain frogs
Groundhogs
Jackrabbits
Storks
Malayan tapirs
Ravens
Armadillos
Salamanders
Camels
Otters (John is also an otter)
Opisthotheuthis adorabilis
Crows
Wallabies
Marmots
Zebras
Cassowaries
Cats (again and again)
Leopard ferrets
Honey bees
Saimaa ringed seals
Long neck turtles
Bobcat and house cat
Banded mongeese
Dormice
Jackalopes
Toucans
Pink fairy armadillos
Walruses
Albino puppies
Mountain goats
Ducklings
Fox cubs
Deer and bunny
Baby penguins
Jackals
Caterpillars
Bunnies
Maras
Blue footed boobies
Korean crow-tits
Chinese water deer
Baby wild boars
Baby monkeys
Ladybugs
Flying squirrels
Woodpeckers
Emus
Seagulls
Egyptian maus
Coyotes
Highland cows
Ocelots
Sandpipers
Ball pythons
Rainbow trouts
Baby owls
Swift foxes
Hummingbirds (John is also a hummingbird)
Himalayan marmots (again)
Starfish
Ibex
Axolotls
Black melanistic barn owls
Miniature dachshunds
Greek shepherd dogs
Golden pheasants
Caracals
Kittens (again?)
Mongolian wild horses
Pygmy jerboas
Aardwolf pups
Piglets (again)
African pygmy goats
Manatees
Stork-beaked kingfishers
Baby bisons
Kakapos
Pied tamarins
Puppies (possibly golden retrievers)
Springhares
Mice (again)
Fawns
Chicks
Corsac foxes
Baby jacanas
Fennec fox pups
Muskrats
Kowaris
Leatherback turtles
Glass frogs
Borzoi and Staffordshire bull terrier
Norway lemmings
Llamas
Manatees (again)
Werewolves (worgen)
Sea lion pups
Giant panda cubs
Lion cubs
Vervet monkeys
Kittens (again)
Shiba Inu puppies
Eurasian jackdaws
Pink robins
Bunnies (again!)
Little blue penguins
Suffolk sheep
Polar bear cubs
Owl Sherlock and fox cub John
Baby meerkats
African penguins
French bulldog puppies
Cockatoos
Sun bears
Bunnies (YET AGAIN)
Scottish folds
Baby red pandas
Seal cubs
Red squirrels
Kittens (again!)
Baby capybaras
Jaguars
More puppies
Roosters
Cygnets
Donkeys (again)
Kittens (YET AGAIN)
Fruit bats
Puppy Sherlock and bunny John
Piping plover chicks
Bunny Sherlock and puppy John
Grasshoppers
More to come. I’m very grateful to anyone who has prompted me, I’m really enjoying myself :)
My Patreon / My Ko-fi / Animalock books / Animalock on Redbubble / Commissions
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Cigarette Themes
Nocturnal: bat, coyote, badger, mice, owl, hedgehog, binturong, chinchilla, rats, gerbils, fox, kinkajou, lion, jaguar, mink, moles, armadillo, possum, raccoon, skunk, scorpion
Aviators: different types of interesting birds, moths, insects, bats, bees, butterflies, moths, gliding lizards, flying squirrels, lemurs, crows,
Extinct or dinosaurs: rhinos, ibex, Tasmanian tiger, dodos, mammoth, saber tooth cat, river dolphin, spix macaw, ground sloth, glyptodon
Reptiles: lizards, geckos, skink, turtles, crocodiles, snakes, chameleon,
Marsupials: Tasmanian devil, thylacine / Tasmanian tiger, opossum, kangaroo, koala, wombat,
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bigass dump of all of my underdeveloped sonic ocs
Shift the Japanese raccoon dog (shapeshifter)
Mini the Corgi (gem manipulation)
Bana the Dog-faced bat
Shock the Hedgehog (sss hedgehog)
Licks the Gecko (shalia's former crush)
Emma the Ruffled lemur (leaper)
Azure the Parrot
Vapor the Gerenuk (smoke manipulation)
Wish the Squid (Super Emeralds/Wisp DNA)
Nimbus the Owl
Tuft the Snow leopard (super strength)
Apple the Jackrabbit (cook)
Spot the Lynx (soft edgy)
Forest the Fruit bat
Cascendo the Skunk
Scoops the Svalbard reindeer (ice cream manipulation)
Bandanna the Ethiopian wolf (fun boi)
Bolt the Pegasus (totally not a rainbow dash ripoff)
Cupcake the Ringtailed cat
Scrambles the Mouse (salt)
Paisely the Chinchilla (flower gal)
Dea the Raven (smart)
Oasis the Sand cat (sand manipulation)
Beanie the Civet (seamstress)
Light the Bear (forces thing)
Illusion the Jackal
Trinket the Coyote
Angel the Raccoon
Papercut the Jackal (hardcore edgy)
Glacier the Seal
Vine the Tiger
Andy the Hedgehog (forces thing)
Absolution the Mink
Cupid the Hedgehog (hopeless romantic)
Reverie the Goat (pretends everything is always ok)
Pulse the Songbird (DJ)
Page the Cockatoo (fanfic writer)
Tumble the Rabbit
Tango the Rabbit (dancer)
Lining the Hedgehog (smth to do w/silver)
Kamikaze the Penegrine falcon (speed)
Rapid the Zebra (sp eed)
Celerity the Cheetah (SPEEEEED)
Uni the Echidna (robot)
Violet the Ring tailed lemur
Parade the Pudo (team rose member)
Lake the Moose
Oreo the Pup (an ultimate mastiff)
Zeraph the Zeti
Cube the Chao/Mobian (has no specific species, just traits)
Widget the Wolf (gadget's name inspires me to make clones)
Foutenia the Porcupine (weed quills, blaze, 420)
Oki the Chicken
Doki the Chicken
Loki the Chicken
Martha the Red panda (red and black)
Xeri the Cat (nature lover)
Spirit the Nilgai (free spirit)
Deedee the Shetland pony
Martha the Elephant
Moonlight the Tasmanian devil (battle hungry af)
Onward the Giraffe (forces thing)
Amni the Unicorn (nurse)
Luchar the Badger
Lanzar the Badger
Volar the Pyrenean chamois
Kaboom the Boar
Harmony the Hedgehog
Bubblegum the Pink fairy armadillo
Rara the Manakin (based on the golden crowned manakin)
Warren the Meerkat
Mangle the Fennec fox (dangerously clumsy)
Mirage the Axolotl
Mallow the Tamandua
Batter the Tapit
Spectrum the Chameleon
Stout the Sea bear (sea big)
Bittersweet the Shoebill (seems nice, but is a shit talker)
Avalanche the Adelie penguin (can summon an avalanche with the eye rings)
Gauze the Chinstrap penguin (healer)
Cannon the Gentoo penguin (cannon summoner)
Seed the Tree Kangaroo (has something to do with trees)
Mallet the Red lemur (wields a mallet)
Strike the Crested serpent eagle
Pedestal the Porcupine (loves the spotlight)
Clover the Caiman (has good luck)
Digs the Prairie dog
Pal the Capybara
Alti the Tasier (pilot)
Boulder the Dog (resembles great pyrenees)
Velveteen the Iriomote cat
the Striped hyena
Party the Aardvark
Ash the Ring tailed lemur
Target the Mountain goat
Luna the Komodo dragon
Shield the Serow
Shine the Peacock
Tempest the Fox
Fizz the Cattle egret
Eternal the Aardwolf (Dark gaia energy DNA)
Serendipity the Secretarybird (helpful)
Mumur the Sloth (quiet bean)
Irid the Hippogriff
Dice the Okapi (game player)
Wristle the Bull
Cotton the Sheep
Candy the Donkey
Everlast the Sugar glider
Seafoam the Dolphin
Tri the Gazelle
Gift the Cabbit
Syz the Wolf
Maggie the Squirrel (former human)
Data the Genet
Glitch the Civet
Skye the Blue jay
Leap the Bilby
Epihany the Old dutch capuchine
Pip the Ruff
Jelly the Piculet
Dawn the Toucan
Dive the Heron
Pocket the Quoll
Milk the Jackalope
Muddle the Crocodile
Range the Batfish
Inferno the Longma
Sombra the Pheonix
Lilliah the Dragon
Viral the Tasmanian tiger
Jason the Griffon
Sparkle the Pegacorn
Burst the Nemean lion
Decor the Qilin
Lail the Dog (determined fighter)
Hoodie the Guinea pig
Bite the Chipmunk
Soru the Woodchuck
Rhythm the Hedgehog
Swipe the Reeves' muntjac (scythe wielder)
Swing the Possum (can hang around w/tail)
Heelies the Hedgehog (rollin around at the speed of heelies)
Favor the Capybara (good friend)
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Ucatch
Mouse and Rat Poison
Eeek! It's a mouse! Nasty little bacteria-laden, disease-carrying critter; hop in the car and down to the local hardware we go. Shelves full of 'death in a box' all with familiar labels: Hot Shot, d-Con, Generation, Rozol, etc. are conveniently stacked for easy selection. What the heck, just pick one. Home again, and read the instructions: "Keep out of reach of children and pets". No problem, we'll tuck the bait way back under that bottom shelf out of harm's way. There, that mouse will soon be toast!
Most people can identify with this scenario. Little do they know that the warning should also read "Keep out of reach of all things great and small, bright and beautiful", because it really is death in a box. The manufacturers are not required to divulge just exactly how lethal their toxic chemical concoction really is.
What Are Rodents?
Almost all rodents share teeth in common. That is, they have both upper and lower incisors that continue to grow. As you might imagine, to keep their teeth from overgrowing they must continually gnaw on something. Unfortunately, that usually means roots, fruits, seeds and plant stems fall victim to their dental needs. It can also mean your walls, floors and household electric and vehicle wiring will suffer expensive damage. There are a few rodents that are the exception to the rule and only eat fish or insects.
In my neck of the woods the rodents include deer mice, brown mice, voles, moles, possums, black and brown rats, grey, red and flying squirrels, chipmunks, wild mink, ferrets, shrews, beavers, muskrats, ground hogs and gophers. I'm sure there are others; I just haven't seen them yet.
Why Do We Need to Kill Rodents?
If you own a vineyard, for example, gophers can mean big bucks down the drain. Their burrowing messes up your root and soil systems, and they gnaw on your grapevine stems causing the plants to die. Rats and mice can spread infectious diseases, like Hantavirus. They carry lice, fleas, mites, ticks and other tiny critters on their skin and fur. As you can see, getting rid of mice and rats in our homes and on our farms is beneficial in many ways.
First Generation Rodent Poison
Also known as Rodenticides, they contain chemicals that specifically inhibit Vitamin K, preventing blood from clotting naturally. Warfarin is an active ingredient used in rodent bait. If you've ever had surgery and had to take a blood thinner to prevent clots afterwards, then you have most likely ingested that chemical. When used to kill rodents, the animal's blood becomes so thin that it cannot carry necessary oxygen to the brain, nervous system and organs and it dies.
First generation concoctions have a good kill rate; however it was thought that the critters might develop a tolerance to it. Thus the World Health Organization became involved and requested the manufacture of something much more toxic. Imperial Chemical Industries of London obliged and developed the new 'super rodent killer', also known as second generation rodenticide.
The second generation mouse and rat poisons kill much more slowly, but employ the same strategy: vitamin K is inhibited to keep blood from clotting. The rodent will go back for seconds, thirds, fourths and so on. By the time the rodent actually dies, it will have ingested many times the lethal dose. It then becomes a weapon of collateral destruction. There is nothing quite as tempting as a rat that is stumbling and slow to run away. Any of their natural predators will also be poisoned after ingesting them. Those include owls, hawks, vultures, eagles, raccoons, foxes; and yes, even the family dog or cat! Wild birds that feed on rodents, and our pets are especially vulnerable; but all animals die horrible deaths after ingesting second generation rodent killers.
What's more, the rate of rodent kill is high for the first 2 years or so of use of second generation poisons. After that the tolerance level is quickly reached and rodents multiply faster than ever! There is no backup plan.
Birds of prey that eat the poisoned rodents, or feed them to their young, develop tumors, bleed through their skin, become too lethargic to hunt, and either die from the effects of the poison, or starve to death. Our natural biological controls, specifically owls, hawks and vultures, badgers, coyotes, mountain lions, bobcats and skunks, among others, are being killed off by poison at an alarming rate. In fact, 79.1 percent of birds and mammals tested by Wildcare, a rehabilitation facility in San Rafael, California, were positive for rodenticides (according to Audubon Magazine, January-February, 2013 issue.)
What They're Not Telling Us
Our precious children are being poisoned by this stuff. Keeping the bait out of their immediate reach is no guarantee kids will not come in contact with it. The rodents are so slow to die that they move around the house for days, all the while trailing the bait along with them on their feet, tails and fur. This stuff remains stored in the liver, so there's no telling how far-reaching its affects will be on our future generations.
Veterinarians will tell you about the high poisoning rate in the pets they see due to the use of these lethal chemical concoctions. Our pets are members of our family. Losing them this way and knowing it could have been prevented is just unbearable. It's a very sad lesson to be learned.
In 2008, the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) declared that: "Second generation rodenticides posed an unreasonable risk to children, pets and wildlife." It gave manufacturers 3 years to stop selling the more lethal rodent poison directly to households. New York City is solidly behind this order, and agrees that the use of second generation rodenticides as a rodent control is unnecessarily risky to humans and wildlife. This is a strong endorsement coming from a rodent-infested metropolitan area!
BUT, the EPA left a giant loophole you could drive a train through: large quantity sales such as those to farmers, and tamper-proof bait boxes that are used by exterminators were exempted from the cease-to-sell order. The result is that predators and scavengers are just as poisoned from those rodents that have eaten from exterminators' 'sealed bait boxes', or bait set out by farmers.
To date, 26 out of 29 manufacturers of second generation mouse and rat baits have complied with the EPA order. The 3 that have refused to cease production of these poisons are:
1. Spectrum Group, a maker of pet care products (ironically) as well as 'Hot Shot' mouse and rat baits with the active ingredient BRODIFACOUM, which is the most deadly to pets and wildlife.
2. Liphatech, producer of 'Generation', 'Maki', 'Rozol'and 'd-Con' which contains BRODIFACOUM.
They also make Lysol, Woolite and French's Mustard!
3. Reckitt Benckiser, which is trying to drag this out in court, while innocents continue to die.
How We Can Help Stop the Killing of Our Natural Rodent Controls and the Poisoning of our Children and Pets:
Rodent Traps:
· USE safe alternatives to poison baits like old fashioned multi-use snap traps or covered disposable snap traps (so you don't have to see or handle the dead critter), which are available at the same store where the toxic chemicals are found!
· Humane pest traps-- that's what I use. Add peanut butter as bait, and take the live rodent to a location at least a mile away to release. You don't want them to end up back at your house! Also domake sure the release location is away from homes or farms. Be sure not to make problems for someone else!
· Electronic rodent killers. These seem to have mixed results depending upon where they are placed in conjunction with the actual rodent point of entry. More than one is usually needed to cover the area in question. Quite often our attic is mouse central, especially in the autumn and springtime. In order to make sure the whole area will receive the electronic shockwave that is the rodent repellent, we need to set up 6 devices. The use of a surge protector with 6 outlets is convenient in this case.
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Catch and Cook {Clean} DANGEROUS SNAKE on a STICK! Ep02 | 100% WILD Food SURVIVAL Challenge! https://youtu.be/cCoEYyvrYk0 The goal of The Wilderness Living Challenge Season 3 survival series is to GAIN or MAINTAIN body mass living only on 100% WILD FOODS! In this episode we catch and cook the venomous diamond back rattlesnake using primitive cooking techniques. Woodobo SPICE (FOR SALE): https://ift.tt/2V8Yr3N BOOKMARK THE FULL PLAYLIST (2 Episodes per Week): https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDg2Qmw9pKieXN2wWRF625WHH5YTYylMb Episodes will run every TUESDAY and FRIDAY 10 a.m. EST. Paypal Donations: https://ift.tt/2wlrgme t-shirts: https://ift.tt/2GLkLgB Bob Hansler: https://www.youtube.com/user/horsebackbob In this episode we catch and cook a diamondback rattlesnake over an open fire using just a stick. We weight-in and weigh-out and if we lose any body mass at all, we have FAILED the challenge! Unlike Naked and Afraid, ALONE, or Survivorman, there is no limit to the tools we are allowed to use. Living off just WILD foods is harder than you think! In this episode we set live traps for nuisance and fur bearing mammals which are legal in Texas including possum, raccoon, rabbit, skunk, armadillo, feral hogs, javelina, badger, fox, porcupine, bobcat, coyote, gopher, ring tailed cat, soft shelled turtle, red eared slider, rattle snake, water snake. We hunt FERAL hog too! We fish for catfish, alligator gar, long nose gar and drum, crawfish, crawdads, or yabbies, ghost shrimp, bluegill, rio grande perch, armored catfish, flathead catfish, blue catfish, alligator, freshwater clams, leopard Frog. All wild foods are on the menu! We seek out wild edibles including prickly pear cactus pads or nopal, cactus fruit or tuna, wild onions, mulberries, wild grape, Texas persimmons, pecan and anacua, mulberry, tasajillo, turks cap, yucca pods, cats briar, oion, chili pequin, duck weed, ground cherries, desert hackberry. Season 2 of The Wilderness Living Challenge: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDg2Qmw9pKieZifUoxhoiv6DqqKc6oGMP MEDIA Facebook: https://ift.tt/2BLdYhu Website: https://ift.tt/2XlcBkr Grohmann Knives: www.gknives.com Use code "WoodBeard" to get 10% off ASAT Camo: www.asatcamo.com หาธุรกิจ ขนาด เล็ก ที่ น่า ลงทุนอยากมี “ธุรกิจ ขนาด เล็ก ที่ น่า ลงทุน” เริ่มต้นยังไงดี. เริ่มต้นธุรกิจ ขนาด เล็ก ที่ น่า ลงทุนทำแนะนำ ธุรกิจ ที่ น่า สนใจแนะนำ ธุรกิจ ที่ น่า สนใจธุรกิจ sme ที่น่าสนใจอิสระบนโลกออนไลน์เข้าถึงทุกกลุ่มเป้าหมาย เป็นธุรกิจ sme ที่น่าสนใจที่มีความอิสระในตัวสูงมาก มีข้อดีมากกว่าข้อเสียการลงทุนใน แนะนำ ธุรกิจ ที่ น่า สนใจคุ้มค่าใช้งบประมาณน้อยกว่าธุรกิจแบบอื่นและได้ลูกค้าตามกลุ่มเป้าหมาย. Line: Love-Quotes โทร 094-3399030
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Catch and Cook {Clean} DANGEROUS SNAKE on a STICK! Ep02 | 100% WILD Food SURVIVAL Challenge!
Catch and Cook {Clean} DANGEROUS SNAKE on a STICK! Ep02 | 100% WILD Food SURVIVAL Challenge! The goal of The Wilderness Living Challenge Season 3 survival series is to GAIN or MAINTAIN body mass living only on 100% WILD FOODS! In this episode we catch and cook the venomous diamond back rattlesnake using primitive cooking techniques. Woodobo SPICE (FOR SALE): https://ift.tt/2V8Yr3N BOOKMARK THE FULL PLAYLIST (2 Episodes per Week): https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDg2Qmw9pKieXN2wWRF625WHH5YTYylMb Episodes will run every TUESDAY and FRIDAY 10 a.m. EST. Paypal Donations: https://ift.tt/2wlrgme t-shirts: https://ift.tt/2GLkLgB Bob Hansler: https://www.youtube.com/user/horsebackbob In this episode we catch and cook a diamondback rattlesnake over an open fire using just a stick. We weight-in and weigh-out and if we lose any body mass at all, we have FAILED the challenge! Unlike Naked and Afraid, ALONE, or Survivorman, there is no limit to the tools we are allowed to use. Living off just WILD foods is harder than you think! In this episode we set live traps for nuisance and fur bearing mammals which are legal in Texas including possum, raccoon, rabbit, skunk, armadillo, feral hogs, javelina, badger, fox, porcupine, bobcat, coyote, gopher, ring tailed cat, soft shelled turtle, red eared slider, rattle snake, water snake. We hunt FERAL hog too! We fish for catfish, alligator gar, long nose gar and drum, crawfish, crawdads, or yabbies, ghost shrimp, bluegill, rio grande perch, armored catfish, flathead catfish, blue catfish, alligator, freshwater clams, leopard Frog. All wild foods are on the menu! We seek out wild edibles including prickly pear cactus pads or nopal, cactus fruit or tuna, wild onions, mulberries, wild grape, Texas persimmons, pecan and anacua, mulberry, tasajillo, turks cap, yucca pods, cats briar, oion, chili pequin, duck weed, ground cherries, desert hackberry. Season 2 of The Wilderness Living Challenge: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDg2Qmw9pKieZifUoxhoiv6DqqKc6oGMP MEDIA Facebook: https://ift.tt/2BLdYhu Website: https://ift.tt/2XlcBkr Grohmann Knives: www.gknives.com Use code "WoodBeard" to get 10% off ASAT Camo: www.asatcamo.com https://youtu.be/cCoEYyvrYk0 อยากมีอยากหารายได้เสริมหลักแสน หลักล้าน คุณทำได้ งานลงทุนออนไลน์ ใช้โซเชี่ยล100% สร้างอยากมีอยากหารายได้เสริม 6หลักใน3เดือน7หลักใน1ปี เรียนรู้วิธี จากประสบการณ์จริง หาธุรกิจน่าทำ ที่ น่า ลงทุน ใน ปัจจุบันอยากมี “ธุรกิจน่าทำ ที่ น่า ลงทุน ใน ปัจจุบัน” เริ่มต้นยังไงดี. เริ่มต้นธุรกิจ ที่ น่า ลงทุน ใน ปัจจุบันทำอาชีพ หาธุรกิจส่วนตัว อยากมี “ธุรกิจส่วนตัว” เริ่มต้นยังไงดี. เริ่มต้นธุรกิจน่าทำส่วนตัว ทำธุรกิจออนไลน์ การทําธุรกิจบนอินเตอร์เน็ตธุรกิจน่าทำอิสระบนโลกงานออนไลน์ทำที่บ้าน รายได้พิเศษออนไลน์เข้าถึงทุกกลุ่มเป้าหมาย เป็นธุรกิจน่าทำที่มีความอิสระในตัวสูงมาก มีข้อดีมากสำหรับการลงทุนใน ธุรกิจออนไลน์ คุ้มค่า. Line: Love-Quotes โทร 094-3399030
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