Bobine Dragons are large, herbivorous, bipedal reptiles. They tend to mate in Early Spring and give live birth in Late Summer to a single calf, which they will raise within the Herd. One Bull protects and watches over the Herd, fighting off rival Bulls and protecting the Cows and Calves. The calves remain with their mother until the age of six years, when they are weaned and will remain as a part of the herd until the age of twenty years, at which point they will leave to start their own Herds. One Cow will only birth one calf every three years, and will nurse up to two at a time.
Young Bull calves spend their days butting heads for dominance and experience for later in life. Young Cows spend most of their time frolicking and playing, staying close to their mothers. Cows with calves under a year old will generally carry their calf around between their shoulders, carefully sliding them off to let them nurse, then using their small, otherwise useless, wings to maneuver the calf back onto their back.
Bobine Dragons will eat 1/3 of their body wait in a day, and will travel from field to field, grazing down to the roots and moving on. They tend to follow rivers, as they also require a very large amount of water, especially when nursing calves.
When raised by humans as an infant, Cows are ridable and very people-friendly, where as bulls tend to be very temperamental and hard to predict. Strangely enough, Bobine Dragon bulls and domestic bulls tend to get along very well, no one is sure why this is.
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Just a sketch on my dragon species, Bobine Dragons. I love them <3 And yes, the Cows do have udders
All (c) Prince of Spades
Young Bull calves spend their days butting heads for dominance and experience for later in life. Young Cows spend most of their time frolicking and playing, staying close to their mothers. Cows with calves under a year old will generally carry their calf around between their shoulders, carefully sliding them off to let them nurse, then using their small, otherwise useless, wings to maneuver the calf back onto their back.
Bobine Dragons will eat 1/3 of their body wait in a day, and will travel from field to field, grazing down to the roots and moving on. They tend to follow rivers, as they also require a very large amount of water, especially when nursing calves.
When raised by humans as an infant, Cows are ridable and very people-friendly, where as bulls tend to be very temperamental and hard to predict. Strangely enough, Bobine Dragon bulls and domestic bulls tend to get along very well, no one is sure why this is.
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Just a sketch on my dragon species, Bobine Dragons. I love them <3 And yes, the Cows do have udders
All (c) Prince of Spades
