Northern Romanovtsa

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For other Romanovtsa, see Romanovtsa (disambiguation).

The Northern Romanovtsa is a  Fauna item.


Northern Romanovtsa
The Northern Romanovtsa
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Magically designed to produce vegetation, the Romanovtsa is one of the few magic touched creatures to be successfully mass-cultivated by catfolk.
Type  Fauna
Obtainment Method Husbandry, Pouches
Cost N/A
Sell Price 1,555 
Flavor
Nature  Hardy
Position {{{position}}}
Taxonomy Class Mammalian
Stamina +
Rarity
Debut Date

Obtainment

Usage

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Faunapedia Entries

Main Article: Faunapedia

General Observation

Magically designed to produce vegetation, the Romanovtsa is one of the few magic touched creatures to be successfully mass-cultivated by catfolk.

Entry I

The first recorded domestication of the Romanovtsa happened during the Third Era's "Year of Winter," when the fields of what later became Northern Harvest went grey and barren. It was an agonizing cold spell. Catfolk were growing hungry and desperate.

Wynne Thistlepaw, a tortoiseshell farmer with the stubbornness of a mule, spotted wild Romanovtsa munching grass along Bayberry Ridge. Thanks to the ridge's unique harkestone sediments, their fluffy coats had sprouted tiny clovers.

The story goes: For three moons, Thistlepaw lured a young Romanovtsa down with sugared bayberries. Her neighbors thought she'd lost her wits. Magic-touched beasts had maimed plenty of catfolk before. But when harvest came, Thistlepaw's once-dead fields exploded with life. "Dumpling," as she named the beast, had shed enough valuable crop to fill her storehouse.

The news traveled faster than a fox in a fit. Come the following spring, half the nearby villages were raising their own Romanovtsa. A breeding initiative was immediately taken up by the catfolk of Harvest, with pairs carefully selected for temperament, vegetation variety, and fertile potency.

Carrots were favored in the region for their taste and versatility, and became the iconic image of the Northern Romanovtsa, though hundreds of varieties of Romanovtsa populate Kotemara today.

Entry II

Despite its considerable size and bulk, rivaling most domestic catfolk in height, the Romanovtsa is remarkably docile. The Northern variety is especially so, after hundreds of years of rigorous, selective breeding. Though Romanovtsa that are not socialized can be territorial.

Often described by shepherds as “aggressively affectionate,” Romanovtsa are well-suited to agrarian life with catfolk. They enjoy frequent socializing, and are known to headbutt their keepers when happy. They walk in herds, using a series of stamps and taps to communicate aggression or distaste, rather than brandishing their horns. With such soft vegetables atop their head, the animals have adapted new mannerisms.

They require a minimum of two acres of open soil to graze upon, and must be rotated between fields every three harvests to prevent magical fatigue. Farmers trim their horns once a moon, depending on variety. A well-tended Romanovtsa can remain productive for upwards of forty seasons, making them a highly valuable asset to agrarian villages.

Variants

Gallery

References