What Are Kettle Foxes?
Kettle foxes are fluffy and generally friendly; much like a raccoon and a fox mixed, that hatch from a crystal like eggs. Their diet consists of meats and fruits, but also many other foods. Their fur is soft and medium length, usually naturally colorful, neat and well kept. Kettle Foxes are known for being big curious babies and love attention. Most are the size of Timberwolves when fully grown, but some are known to be smaller. All Kettle foxes have crystal-like stones on their sides that release toxins from their bodies and keep them happy and healthy.
Physical Looks::
★ Kettle foxes are large foxes part of the Vulpes vulpes family.
★ Kettle foxes are the size of Timberwolves when fully grown; males averaging 95–99 lb and females averaging 79–85 lb.
★ Kettle foxes can see very well at night, their pupils are colored instead of black and that is because Kettle foxes can see 72 more colors then we can.
★ There species is found in tropical areas and their long toes help them walk through mud, pick fruit off trees, swim faster in water and run faster through the moist terrain. Kettle foxes have a very good sense of smell and can smell another from 2 miles away.
★ Kettle foxes have large ears and can hear a good distance, this is helpful at night when it gets dark, though they can see in the dark- having good ears helps.
★ The openings on their sides are stone-like and are attached to their ribs. These stones are warm to the touch and that heat that they're giving off: that's toxins from the Kettle foxes body, these toxins are completely harmless to humans and other creatures as they are in broken down microscopic amounts. This helps Kettle foxes stay healthy and live for hundreds of years. When a Kettle fox is sick it will let out higher amounts of toxins, some Kettle foxes naturally let out a higher amount, some even in a slime form, but it only gets slightly worse when sick.
★ Kettle Foxe's horns are made from hardened crystal, their horns are as hards as diamonds and will not break. Kettle foxes that have stag horns will shed them every year, other horn types will not.
Feathers::
★ Kettle foxes have feathers at the base of their tails. The Kettle foxes believe that the feathers will give them wings to fly when they die. These feathers can be lost or fall off but Kettle foxes do not replace their fethers; they believe it is bad luck in the afterlife.
★ Kettle foxes will puncture the sharp ends of the feather into that snug spot between their tail and back leg, there it is harder for them to fall out and over time the wound will heal around the feathers and keep them in place.
★ A Kettle fox isn't born with its feathers, and they don't just pick up a few. To a Kettle fox; their feathers are very important, the feathers reflect themselves in some way. Most Kettle foxes will kill a bird of great prey or smarts and wear its feathers, others wait for their's to come to them in some way.
★ A Kits feathers could end up being completely off from their parents, A kettle fox won't normally find out what their feathers are until they reach their teens. Some Kettle foxes will have the same feathers; as only natural or "real" feather designs can be used.
Diet::
★ Kettle foxes have a basic diet of both meats and friuts as well as most food groups. Kettle fox are known to eat foods like;
Grians:: Bread
Vegtables:: Pumpkin,pickles, potatos, corn, ect.
Fruits:: watermellon, bananas, strawberries, etc.
Meats:: fish, chickens/turkeys, pork, etc.
Deiry:: Milk, chesse.
Sweets:: Peanut brittle, candy apples, cakes, pies, etc.
★ Kettle foxes cannot have chocolate or wild herbs, these foods make them very sick and in large amounts can in a way poison them.
Breeding::
★ Kettle foxes mate for life. The two will build a nest and the female will keep her eggs warm and the male will find food. They will switch jobs daily until their eggs hatches.
★ The egg is solid and smooth like crystal, one egg is normally 20 lb, a hard shell to protect the kit. A female Kettle fox will fold the egg in a pouch in her stomach until it fully develops, she then lays her egg and keeps it warm for two weeks.
★ Kettle foxes can lay up two-three eggs, but it is most common for them to lay just one. Kettle foxes will breed up to twice in their lifetime, having up to 6 kits at most.
★ Kettle foxes do not interbreed, they have a sixth sense about who is family and tend to not interbreed. Any pup born from breeding family would result in only albino or melanistic babies.
Relationships::
★ Kettle foxes are very adaptable creatures, in colder tempetures their fur thickens but you can't really tell with out touching them.
★ In the wild; Kettle foxes live in groups called "skulk" normally made up of up to 15 other Kettle foxes. These groups may be all family or many families living together in one big group, as Kettle foxes are very accepting of one another and love to be surrounded by their kin.
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