Art introduction
seen from China
seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from Malaysia

seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Türkiye
seen from Iraq
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye
seen from Guatemala

seen from Algeria
seen from China
seen from Nicaragua
Art introduction
Umishika
Image © Matthew Meyer, accessed at Yokai.com here
[Perytons do not exist. I mean, even more than usual for the monsters covered on this blog. Rather than being a folkloric or mythological creature, a heraldic beast or a misinterpretation of a real animal, the peryton is a literary hoax perpetuated by Jorge Luis Borges in his book The Book of Imaginary Beings. Borges wasn’t particularly subtle--he claims that the manuscript describing the perytons dates back to Atlantis--but the peryton has been adopted as a semi-popular monster regardless. Borges wasn’t the only one to have thought that “what if a deer was scarier” was a good monster concept, as this sea monster from Yakushima folklore indicates.]
Umishika CR 4 CE Magical Beast This creature has the upper body of a stag and the lower body of an eel. Its teeth are canine and sharp, and its rack of antlers is keen.
The umishika are aquatic kin to perytons, and are believed to have been created in the same arcane disaster that made those savage chimeras. Umishika combine features of deer, eels and seals, and are just as savage and violent as perytons are. They are more social, however, gathering regularly into shoals in order to gang up on prey and drive competition away. They eat mostly fish, but view fishing vessels as competitors, stalking them and climbing up onto deck at night in order to kill and eat their crews.
An umishika’s shadow behaves strangely. It clings close to the monster, and when underwater distorts the umishika’s appearance so that it resembles the outline of a large fish such as a tuna or dorado. Umishika use this ability to approach close to prey with relatively little fuss, and may even attract predators or fishermen to them before the tables turn. An umishika’s teeth are sharp, but it uses them mostly to process food after puncturing it with horns and hooves. Although they branch like antlers, the horns of an umishika are not lost seasonally, and are found on individuals of all sexes.
🐜- what's he smiling for
-safe to reblog
Edit: mission don't forget to draw their beauty mark under their eye, level impossible.
🌹 -purely reaction based only-
🌹
-not happy with what they see, it seems. Papers recklessly stacked on the captains table with sticky notes to 'help him out' promised on the note waiting at the end of the table.
He seriously needed that much help? just how useless was this 5th captain that he needed a guide on how to do his own job.-
*puts spiders in your hair*
-They lift up a braid, attention now diverted from their task to a school of spiders taking refuge in their hair. Not that they would mind their company.
Issue is that bowl cutted laze about might say something or two of somethings about Kawari's newfound friends. Maybe if they could intertwine each spider between a few threads of hair, rattle their head a little less, and keep their head low, the lanky know-it-all wouldn't know so much.-
Right.
Ask box is open now.
🌹-
× keep track of delivered goods. No better way than perching up in a tree scribbling aimlessly on the corpse what you made a chair out of. Ironic.
It's certainly not what was being asked of them.×
[[Dont reblog to main accounts]]