Author Topic: Prompt of the week!  (Read 47239 times)

thegreyarea

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #750 on: July 11, 2022, 07:31:33 AM »
Thanks dmeck, Róisín and Tehta! ^-^ It was so fun to draw! I just hope it doesn't work as nightmare fuel, and that the copyright owners don't decide to sue me...
I also hope not many 5 y.o. see this, and if they do... Well, then I blame the parents that left a disaccompanied 5 y.o. loose on the Internet! :)

And I think this last good night of sleep helped me to organize my thoughts about the following story. Why rush to the end? Why not take the time to develop it? Why not present you, my friends, just the first part?

An Ancient Tale

Spoiler: show

Kauní looked at the dead animal Takâ held in his hands in a mix of interest and disgust. "What's this?" She asked.

Her friend Takâ put down both halves of the small beast together on the ground. "It's hard to tell, but seems like a Kii-Buú 1 to me, If you don't consider the large claws, long teeth and all the rest..."

It pained Kauní just to look at the distorted, uneven thing. Her grandmother, being the tribe's Yaí, had made sure that she grew up knowing every animal in the forest and the ways they were all part of the World's harmony. Yet in these dangerous days much of the original balance was lost, and that little abomination was another bitter proof of that.

"So, why did you bring that... thing here? You know it's dangerous."

"I didn't bring it. I caught whatever this is on our side of the water. It moved unsteadily, as if drunk, but was on our side! I don't think it could swim, but maybe it rode on some floating trunk..."

Kauní felt as if a cloud eclipsed the sun. "I must tell grandma. You, gather some people and search for more along the igarapé 2."

Takâ nodded and ran back into the dense woods, his pale skin reddened by the sun. After all the time they have been friends it still seemed odd to Kauní. Everyone else in the tribe shared the same dark brow tone, therefore no one ever got that pinkish red, even after spending the whole day under the sun.

And, she knew, Takâ was well aware of that difference. That was the reason behind his insistence on getting the ritual tattoos, just like Kauní and all the others. Yet even those lines and symbols looked different on his arms and legs, the dark marks in stark contrast with that milky canvas.

Soon, she recalled, it would have been eight years since Takâ, that back them called himself Tiago, showed up on a small boat, alone and half-dead. It was the last time they had any news about the people and the vast World beyond the Amazonian forest, a world that was becoming more and more a distant, blurred legend.

Her grandma took care of the young man, that had just turned 16, curing whatever had made him throw out anything he tried to eat and feeding him until he eventually got better. And then they gathered to hear the news the boy carried, and found they were even worse than the tribe's elders feared.

That strange disease everyone called simply "The Rash" had spread to all places, driving that proud and reckless civilization to collapse. What remained were scattered, frightened and desperate people, fleeing from their cities, fighting for food and medicines.

Also, as it has been heard before, the disease also affected all animals that suck at their mother's teats, except cats. Grandma nodded when Tiago told that part, as if she understood why. One day, she said, Kauní would understand too.

The tribe's council, she remembered, gathered for three long days, and then came with a conclusion. The Creator, the Universal Grandfather, must had decided to take a nap, and the dark spirits that hate humankind seized the chance to unleash that terrifying disease while He slept. The tribe should wait in their land for the day He would wake up and cleanse the world.

Until then they would cut all ties with the other lands and people, indigenous or not. No one should leave their lands, except for fishing, and only when the sun was up, for the dark spirits were afraid of the light.

Later they would find out how to deal with marriage, because they wouldn't be able to meet people from other tribes as was customary, and marrying inside their own tribe was undesirable, almost incestuous. Hopefully, the elders said, the Creator would wake up soon and that wouldn't become a problem.

Luckily their lands formed a large island, nested between the great river and a smaller channel. Her grandmother, that held the Kumu knowledge about the spiritual world, claimed the good water spirits, summoned with the proper incantations, would protect the tribe.

And then Tiago was given the choice between staying as one of them or leaving, forever.

While walking to grandma's maloca 3, Kauní relived how happy she was when the boy announced that he would stay. They were roughly the same age, and she liked to hear his stories about the world beyond the forest, and also the many fantasy worlds from the books he had read. Sadly the tribe had few books, and they were for study, not to hold amazing tales.

Tiago decided to adopt a new name for his new life, and surprisingly asked Kauní for a name. That made her very happy and a bit insecure, because naming people was an important gesture, usually reserved for the elders, since names carried power and could influence a person's fate.

After some hesitation Kauní suggested Takâ, the name of a white mushroom she liked. To her great relief Grandma approved, saying that was a wise choice, and had her teaching the boy about the tribe's ways from that day onward, until Takâ knew them as well as anyone born on the island.

---

All that crossed Kauní's mind while she walked, good memories that helped her put aside the fear from the disease and the monsters it created.

Her grandmother, Kaunana, was inside, cooking. When she saw the worry on Kauní's face she stopped and gestured for them to sit together on a small bench. A great sadness descended upon her when Kauní told about the beast.

"The incantations must be waning. After some time the water spirits get distracted, or go to other places, because the rivers are so vast." Grandma paused, as if her mind was wandering somewhere else. "Isn't it ironic? When we finally get rid of those miners and farmers that wanted to destroy the forest and the rivers to satisfy their greed, then we have to face this... darkness."

Kauní nodded in agreement. "So all it takes is that you make new incantations? And the good spirits will come back?"

"I wish it was that easy, my dear." She stood, walked to the fire and began to stir the cooking with a wooden spoon. "I'm getting older, and I'm afraid no longer having in me the strength needed to summon the spirits."

She tasted the food, added a few herbs and pointed at Kauní with the spoon. "It will have to be you, my dear, to do it."

"Me?!" Kauní replied. "But... I'm not ready! There's so much I don't know! You taught me many things, but we never spoke about this. I'm not a Yai yet, and surely not a Kumo! I... I wouldn't know where to start!" She stopped, noticing a faint smile at her grandma's face. "What's the funny part?"

"My dear child, I had exactly the same reaction when my grandma said I'd have to heal our land because the previous harvest had been so meagre. I doubted, but she new I had the ability, and I know you will be capable to do that, as soon as the ritual is complete."

"You mean... the peregrination?"

"Yes. You must visit the sacred places to gather the knowledge. Then you will became a Kumo and have the power to do what has to be done."

Kauní was caught in a mix of emotions. Surprise, excitement, pride... and a growing fear of not being good enough for the task. However she trusted grandma. If she believed...

"When?" She asked, her voice a bit unsteady.

"Tonight. Mother moon 4 will be high in the sky. I'll guide you 5."

---

They sat face to face at a clearing right in the middle of the island, a small fire burning close. Kauní observed the light from the flames dancing on her grandmother's face and, farther away, a few members of the tribe, forming a circle around them. Her parents were there, her brothers and sisters, Takâ, Curú and a few more she couldn't recognize in the dark.

The moon had reached the highest point in the sky while they both sang and smoked the sacred cigars, and everybody and everything seemed to move slowly, dreamily, following the song's slow rhythm. Kauní's eyelids were getting heavier and heavier...

Grandma gestured her to lie down on a cushion of leaves they had set, and so she did, still grasping the old woman's hand, suddenly extremely aware of every detail on the wrinkled skin. They looked at each other and spoke, simultaneously, in blurred tones. "Now we sleep, and our souls travel together."

The moon seemed to fill the whole sky as Kauní closed her eyes and let herself drift away.

---

She was walking on a narrow strip of sand next to a large river, so large that she couldn't see the opposite margin, and grandma was there, holding her hand. There were fireflies everywhere around them, and the tattoos that covered their bodies seemed to give out a soft bluish glow, just like the small insects. Actually, she noticed, the trees, the sand... everything seemed to glow a little in blue tones.

"Now, my child, we don't have time to visit all the sacred places this time, for they are many. Each place, or Wametisé as we Kumoa call it, houses a part of the knowledge the Universal Grandfather, or its demiurges, gifted to our ancestors when they, still in spiritual form, arrived on these lands inside the mighty snake-boat, coming from the sunrise."

"I know the legend."

Grandma smiled. "Forgive me, dear. A part of me you will always see you as a child. Come, walk with me." She said, and they headed for the river, and, to Kauní's surprise, began to walk on the water. They didn't sink, just walked over the surface, as if there was something solid beneath their feet. Grandma didn't seem surprised, though.

"Now there are three places we must visit so that you can relive the knowledge inside your soul and become aware, capable of connecting with the spirits.
The first will be the house of language. That will enable you to communicate with the spiritual beings.
Then we will go to the house of incantations, so you know the proper rites to summon them and how to ask for their protection..."

"And that's all?" Kauní asked. She wanted to begin. She felt that doing this was her destiny, the purpose of all she have learned since childhood, when Grandma begin to teach her the names of each plant and animal.

"I said three, remember? In the end we will return to the great hole next to the Ipanoré waterfall, the Place of Birth, where our ancestral spirits became human at the end of their journey. We will go inside, and when we emerge you will be able to fully use the knowledge and hold it forever inside your soul."

That didn't seem hard to Kauní, even if she had no idea on how the knowledge would get inside her. But she trusted grandma would. "How hard that could be? Let's go!"

Grandma smile widened. "Yes, let's do it. We are lucky because the places are far away, but distances in thought work in a different way. The better you remember a place, the faster we get there, and I've been in those places when I was young. Come!"

And they walked over the water, and there was a veil ahead, like a curtain made of heavy rain. They crossed it, and Kauní looked back. She could no longer see the river and the trees. There was just dark, still water under them, and a dark sky above. A few stars could be seen, above and below.

"Where are we?"

"We are in between, the place that it's not."

"And how we get to our destination? I see nothing."

Grandma pointed at her own head, and then at Kauní's. "It's all in here. It has always been. Remember."

Kauní tried to remember, to imagine the Wametisé of language. First came sound, voices speaking on many languages, and then a new veil of rain appeared ahead of them. Through it she could see the blurred outlines of rocks and trees.

"See? I told you."

"Is this... my memory? Or yours?"

"Ours. They have been passed forward by our ancestors since they became humans."

Kauní was considering that when she heard a noise behind them, as if something heavy had dropped on the water.





Notes

This story is inspired by the fascinating Tukano indigenous mythology and in the little that I gathered about their traditional practices, but I'm not by any means a specialist in that field, so there may be things that are misunderstood or simply wrong. There wasn't time to make a deep dive into that rich culture... So this story is not intended to be a truthful depiction of their beliefs and traditions.
And of course I mixed things a bit, inserting Stand Still Stay Silent's own mythology, trying to make an interesting story.

And yes, of course I plan to write what happens next. :)

BTW It isn't easy to find content about these people and their culture, and it's even harder in English. Here's the Wikipedia link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tucano_people (but that is more focused on languages, geographical distribution, etc... and really overlooks their mythology)

Additional Notes referenced in the text:

1: The Tukano name for the agouti (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agouti), a large rodent similar to a Guinea Pig, (Agouti is also called "Cutia" in Portuguese).

2: Igarapé is the indigenous name for a small, nameless river or channel, similar to a brook. Note that "small" as compared to very large amazonian rivers, meaning that an igarapé might still be 20 or more meters across.

3: Amazonian typical indigenous hut, with low walls and a high, sloped roof. It has a wood structure and is covered with straw. The floor is just compacted ground, and people many times sleep in hammocks.

4: In their mythology mother moon and father sun had one child, earth.

5: The dream ritual is entirely my creation, even if they do smoke sacred cigars and sing on their rituals. I also don't have evidence on how woman participate on them. The info I have just points that a Kumo (plural Kumoa) usually visits the sacred places "in thought", using the tales from older people to be able to locate and recognize the places. Nevertheless they do have actual locations in maps and, when possible, they physically visit these places.


Edit: just added a few minor corrections here and there. This wasn't proofread, after all, and new things always come when one reads its own work again (well, that's true for me...)
« Last Edit: July 11, 2022, 09:27:01 AM by thegreyarea »
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Jitter

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #751 on: July 11, 2022, 07:32:31 AM »
Thomas the Troll Engine returns!
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thegreyarea

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #752 on: July 11, 2022, 08:26:33 AM »
Yes, Jitter! Maybe they could launch a limited series of toys! Those "fingers" could be made with some soft rubber, with octopus-like suckers underneath so it can stick to any surface...  ;D

And below are some images that relate with the story. More will come in time.

Spoiler: show

Elevations showing a maloca:

(source: Marussi, 2004)

A young boy and his canoe on a large igarapé (or small river, it's not clear on the source):

(source: survivalinternational.org)

A Tucano bird. The name comes from another indigenous language (tupi-guaraní) and means "Hits Strong":

(source: Brazilia Zoo)
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dmeck7755

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #753 on: July 11, 2022, 08:48:16 AM »
Thanks dmeck, Róisín and Tehta! ^-^ It was so fun to draw! I just hope it doesn't work as nightmare fuel, and that the copyright owners don't decide to sue me...
I also hope not many 5 y.o. see this, and if they do... Well, then I blame the parents that left a disaccompanied 5 y.o. loose on the Internet! :)
It is not close enough for copyright infringement.  (Though if you are familiar with the stories you will get the connection :) )

An Ancient Tale

This is great!!  I really like SSSS stories with other cultures point of Views.  (I remember Róisín wrote quite a few I had enjoyed)
Fate gives all of us three teachers, three friends, three enemies, and three great loves in our lives. But these twelve are always disguised, and we never know which one is which until we've loved them, left them, or fought them.

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #754 on: July 12, 2022, 06:34:03 AM »
Grey, that is a fascinating story. All I know about the Tucano folk is some of their plant lore and folk tales, most notably the myth of yagé woman. Plant magic is of interest to me. The only dream-world like area I have met in South American folklore is the one accessed by following the roots of plants or the mycorrhizal web down into the world of the dreams that live below the earth, a concept that turns up in plant-using magical systems across the world. And I know the tale about their remote ancestors coming from the Milky Way in a great serpent-ship.

Some of the Amazonian magical systems also have the concept of a world below the waters. Fascinating stuff. I am curious to see where you take this tale.
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thegreyarea

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #755 on: July 12, 2022, 11:10:38 AM »
This is great!!  I really like SSSS stories with other cultures point of Views.  (I remember Róisín wrote quite a few I had enjoyed)
Thanks, dmeck! I'm with you. I really enjoy these different points of view. So much that I set this last story at the roughly the same moment in time when "The Wanderer" happens, i.e. on year 8. ;)
Grey, that is a fascinating story. All I know about the Tucano folk is some of their plant lore and folk tales, most notably the myth of yagé woman. Plant magic is of interest to me. The only dream-world like area I have met in South American folklore is the one accessed by following the roots of plants or the mycorrhizal web down into the world of the dreams that live below the earth, a concept that turns up in plant-using magical systems across the world. And I know the tale about their remote ancestors coming from the Milky Way in a great serpent-ship.

Some of the Amazonian magical systems also have the concept of a world below the waters. Fascinating stuff. I am curious to see where you take this tale.
Thank you so much, Róisín! I should know better, but you surprised me here. I was convinced no one would know about the serpent-ship myth... but of course you know!

I just wish I had one tenth of your knowledge! But no, nowhere near that. I grew up in the Amazon and never heard (that I recall) anything about the Yagé woman. I had to google Yagé just now to find out what it is, even if I did know the Tukano and other people from the forest used some plants to produce perception-altering/enhancing effects (hence the "sacred cigars" on the story). But even google couldn't find the "yagé woman"... So, if you ever feel inclined I'd love to hear that tale.

I also never heard about the "root network" dream world! It's a fascinating idea, that matches with some recent findings that point to the ability trees would have to "communicate" using their interwined roots... And what a huge network the Amazon forest would be!

I did hear about some tribes having an underworld. They even say the world is divided in three: The World Below, the Middle World and the World Above. Humans, of course, inhabit the Middle World... Isn't it fascinating how that ressonates with so many traditions and cultures around the World?

Nevertheless the dream world in this story is directly inspired by the one in SSSS, and not by any deep cultural research on my side...

I really found intriguing the idea of those sacred places that hold the knowledge, and the need to visit them, even if in thought, to acquire and become able to use such knowledge. That, together with the exploration on how a tribe could (would?) survive in the SSSS world, was the inspiration for this story. Hopefully I'll be able to continue in interesting ways. :)
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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #756 on: July 13, 2022, 03:29:45 AM »
Grey, I would love to see more of this tale. You likely know that in many of the tales of South and Central America, Earth is the eldest child of Sun and Moon. Yagé woman, whose embodiment is the caapi vine, may be either a younger sibling, or the child of Sun and Earth, or a separate creation of Sun, depending where you are. She breaks off bits of herself, often bits of her rainbow-coloured vinelike tail, and gives one to each tribe, from which grows their local variant of caapi.
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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #757 on: July 13, 2022, 06:14:19 AM »
Finally read this, grey! A fascinating world; definitely looking forward to the next installment.
(And hmm, yeah, if the Rash as an upside it's environmental... although it certainly plays havoc with the ecosystem, in its own way.)

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thegreyarea

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #758 on: July 13, 2022, 08:55:23 AM »
Grey, I would love to see more of this tale. You likely know that in many of the tales of South and Central America, Earth is the eldest child of Sun and Moon. Yagé woman, whose embodiment is the caapi vine, may be either a younger sibling, or the child of Sun and Earth, or a separate creation of Sun, depending where you are. She breaks off bits of herself, often bits of her rainbow-coloured vinelike tail, and gives one to each tribe, from which grows their local variant of caapi.
Thanks, Róisín! And now I know about the Yagé woman...
I don't know if she will show on the story, anyway this mythology also includes several "demiurges" or "demigods" that interact with the spirits and/or humans. As an example in the "house of Crafts" the spirits met one of these superior beings who gives them the knowledge of craftsmanship. There's another that teaches them to make the Yagé tea, IIRC...

But I found no reference on who created the demiurges. The Sun and/or the Moon, the Universal Grandfather Himself, or someone else? There are dark, negative spirits that inhabit the World Below. Who created them? (Sigh) So much to discover...

BTW it seems odd for a woman to have a tail in this context. In a land inhabited by so many monkeys I guess the tail in a human-like figure would probably feel to much "monkeyish"... So the hair seems a good alternative. What do you think? Have you heard of any tale where she gives them her hair?
Finally read this, grey! A fascinating world; definitely looking forward to the next installment.
(And hmm, yeah, if the Rash as an upside it's environmental... although it certainly plays havoc with the ecosystem, in its own way.)
Thanks Tehta! The next part is my priority. :)

And yes, the rash would eliminate the most harzadous enviromental agent that exists... us. On the first years it would be a mess, because of our absence, together with the large majority of mammals (IIRC the consensus was around a 97% mortality rate, leaving the remaining 3% for trolls/beasts and a small amount of immunes).

But soon (a few decades?) a new balance would be achieved, and other animals would fill the empty niches. The populations of birds and reptiles would explode, and, in the Amazonian forest, I believe most beasts and trolls would soon be eliminated by them (alligators, snakes and jaguars - that are felines, and therefore immune - are already the most dangerous predators in the area), besides being isolated by the rivers. Oh, and there are piranhas! and electric eels!  ;D

Images under spoilers:
Spoiler: show

Isn't it beautiful?


Isn't it big?


Isn't it a fluffy, amazing cat?


Isn't it a lovely little fish?


Isn't it shocking that these hunt in packs and can electrocute a cow (or a human)?

Actually writing this story I realized that the river system in the Amazonian would act pretty much the way the Saaima lake system in Finland, with water bodies cutting the progression of anything that can't fly or swim, with the extra that, unlike Finland, there isn't a road network here, and bridges... Well, there are no bridges AFAIK, unless in the larger cities (that are just two: Belém and Manaus). So without boats any infected animal would have to go a looong way to reach a point to wade through.

All that makes me believe that a good number of isolated tribes could, indeed, survive, as long as they don't get contaminated in the main wave of infections. The problem in the long term would be that they still could be suddenly contaminated by a beast/troll, considering how long they live even without food...
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dmeck7755

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #759 on: July 13, 2022, 09:38:50 AM »
Grey great pictures.

Did the anaconda recently eat?  Its belly is larger and rounder than the rest of it..
The jaguar picture melted my heart.  That is a beautiful photo
Big sharp teeth!!


But soon (a few decades?) a new balance would be achieved, and other animals would fill the empty niches. The populations of birds and reptiles would explode, and, in the Amazonian forest, I believe most beasts and trolls would soon be eliminated by them (alligators, snakes and jaguars - that are felines, and therefore immune - are already the most dangerous predators in the area), besides being isolated by the rivers. Oh, and there are piranhas! and electric eels!  ;D



It would be interesting if things can eat trolls/beasts (other than other trolls beasts)  Unless like the cats they band together to destroy the admonition that the rash created
Fate gives all of us three teachers, three friends, three enemies, and three great loves in our lives. But these twelve are always disguised, and we never know which one is which until we've loved them, left them, or fought them.

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Jitter

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #760 on: July 13, 2022, 09:40:04 AM »
Grey, with the return of magic, maybe everyone or most of the peple of the tribe could sense the grosslings like Lalli does? They live in very close relationship with nature and communicate with the spirits to start with, so could conceivably be a lot more attuned to the spirits than the Y0 Scandinavians were. And a lot more ready to benefit fully from emergence of powerful mages.
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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #761 on: July 13, 2022, 10:21:04 AM »
It would be interesting if things can eat trolls/beasts (other than other trolls beasts)  Unless like the cats they band together to destroy the admonition that the rash created

If nothing else, they'd kill them in self-defense if attacked.

Some of the trolls/beasts might know better than to attack them, though.

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #762 on: July 13, 2022, 01:17:55 PM »
If nothing else, they'd kill them in self-defense if attacked.

Some of the trolls/beasts might know better than to attack them, though.

For some reason though, I think I remember that nothing can eat a troll (other than other trolls beasts) 
Fate gives all of us three teachers, three friends, three enemies, and three great loves in our lives. But these twelve are always disguised, and we never know which one is which until we've loved them, left them, or fought them.

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Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #763 on: July 13, 2022, 01:55:46 PM »
I think I remember that too; though I don't remember where from. At some point when Minna was answering comments, from her in the comments, maybe?

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  • JOE guardian, SS Kuru keeper, Finn with some magic
  • Preferred pronouns: She/her, they/their
  • Posts: 4190
Re: Prompt of the week!
« Reply #764 on: July 14, 2022, 04:07:23 AM »
It was the mosquitoes - blood sucking insects die if they suck grossling blood, so there are mosquitoes only where there are no grosslings (i.e. in Lehtos).

Apparently grosslings smell similar to the animals they used to be (to mosquitoes anyway) so that mosquitoes get fooled to sucking them.
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Proud ruler of Joensuu Airport, Admiral of S/S Kuru on the Finnish lake systems. Also the Water Mother.