This week's froggy friend is our 200TH FROG!!!!!!!!!! 200 OF EM!
listen HERE! :)
and see the Museums Victoria animation for the story of Tiddalik HERE!
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This week's froggy friend is our 200TH FROG!!!!!!!!!! 200 OF EM!
listen HERE! :)
and see the Museums Victoria animation for the story of Tiddalik HERE!
A small frog who acted upon a large and greedy desire. Tiddalik's guzzling of all water was an issue to everyone, and thus everyone had to come together to deal with the result of his unchecked drink.
Tiddalik
Image © Paizo Publishing, accessed at Archives of Nethys here
[The three themes I'm working with in April are PF2e conversions, wrapping up the World Tour of Oceania, and starting on commissions. This is all three! Commissioned by @vonbaghager. Tiddalik the Greedy Frog is one of the Australian Aboriginal monsters with the highest profile among Westerners, being the subject of children's books, children's plays and an episode of the PBS show Super Why! (sort of a superhero-themed Reading Rainbow analogue). Notably, this behavior is at least thematically consistent with real frogs. The water-storing frog estivates underground during the dry season in a mucus cocoon filled with water, sort of like a lungfish. ]
Tiddalik CR 7 NE Magical Beast This creature is a frog the size of a wagon, its body grossly swollen. You can hear the faint sloshing of water inside it as it moves and speaks.
Tiddaliks are monstrous frogs native to desert climes that survive the long period between rains by absorbing water like a living sponge. Unfortunately, they are peevish and cruel, and move from place to place absorbing as much water as they can, even if they don’t need it, simply for the joy of depriving others. In the desert, tiddaliks are seen as physical embodiments of selfishness and greed, and many tales and legends have sprung up around them. Some of them are even true—the idea that a tiddalik can be tricked into expelling its water with a hearty belly laugh is one of them. Unfortunately, tiddaliks are most easily amused by suffering.
A tiddalik rarely starts fights on their own—although they are carnivorous, they prefer to eat things that can’t fight back, sniping small game with blasts of pressurized water. These jets are also used as a defensive weapon until enemies get close enough that the tiddalik can grab them in its jaws and crush them. Few tiddaliks will bother to chase down fleeing enemies, but likewise they are often too stubborn to flee or surrender themselves.
A tiddalik is about ten feet in diameter. They weigh over twenty tons when waterlogged, and about one ton when empty.
Tiddalik is a monstrous frog from Australian Aboriginal legend. A famous tale tells of how Tiddalik awoke one morning with a great thirst, and proceeded to drink up all of the fresh water nearby. The other animals, dying of thirst, conspired against the frog, and made him laugh until the water spilled back out of him, replenishing the lakes, rivers and swamps.
Tiddalik is an important figure in Dreamtime legend. There is a statue of him in Warwick, Queensland, and several stories about him have been published.
Image source.
Monster master list.
Suggest a spook.
The Tiddalik is described as a large frog found in Aboriginal mythology in Australia. The Tiddalik is described as a large frog usually green in color with a large belly from drinking a lot of water. The legend of the Tiddalik is that a frog named Tiddalik drank all of the water from the lakes and all the wildlife and plants started to die so an owl came up with a plan to get the water back. An eel named Nabunum twisted himself into different shapes which caused Tiddalik to laugh and release all the water it drank.
This large bird friend wanted to show the stickies her lovely coat. She is a native New Zealand woodpigeon called a Kereru!
Legend goes that the colours come from the clothes that Maui was wearing when he changed into a bird to look for his parents in the underworld!
Do the froggies have any fun legends to share about their lovely coats?
Hello! 😊🐸😀🐸😀
Thank you for sharing such a beautiful friend!
The Stickyfrogs are very pleased to meet a Kereru friend and hear her story! They send a friendly wave and many Kereru treaties!
The Stickyfrogs would like to share their favourite story from the Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime. It’s about an Australian Waterholding frog called Tiddalik!
https://youtu.be/0y3Ta5xcKV4
Name: Tiddalik
Alternate Names: Tiddalik the Frog, Molok, Aglebemu (related)
Mythology: Australian Aboriginal Mythology
Size: Large, but can become huge by sucking in water
Environment: Rivers, Swamps, Bogs, Lakes, Jungles, Outback
In Mythika: Big enough to swallow a man whole, Tiddalik are the giant frog monsters of Mythika. While there are some variants (tree frogs, bull frogs, poisonarrow frogs) they share an ability to suck in great amounts of water, becoming bloated in the progress. They can shoot this water at their enemies, create their private ponds and lakes on other locations and become more durable.
Aglebemu are the Poisonarrow Frog version of the Tiddalik, they spit water infused with powerful poison to kill their prey and then swallow it whole. They sometimes block out rivers with their mass.
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiddalik