Home › Forums › Windstone Editions › Ask Melody › Poad eggs
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May 28, 2013 at 12:23 am #897990
Yes, Kade’s poad has a name.
Hi Melody,
What is the name of Kade’s poad?
This is a problem. I am pondering a final name for Kade’s poad at the last minute! She always had a name, but, when I googled it, I found that it is a name of a product that might be copyrighted or trademarked. This is a problem!
Almost every silly word one can come up with is taken by someone, has been used as a character name in some famous book series, ( written long AFTER my character was named) -or has a dirty slang meaning…Hmm well I can see that being a problem. I’m sure something will come into your creative mind. 🙂
Life is beautiful.
May 28, 2013 at 12:39 am #897991Okay–I’m full of skittles. On my antihistamine on steroids stuff for an itchy rash I have–stuff is powerful. I love this thread–Poad eggs! And yes, I have one of those brown cuttlefish Poads and as I remember, it was described as a ‘he’. I think this is so–thought I heard this little fella fart some time back and it wasn’t a little dainty one either. It shook the whole table and got all the other Poads upset. Never saw anything like it–they were all looking around, clicking and pfthhhpthing trying to find out who the culprit was. That brown cuttlefish Poad just sat quietly, snickering to himself–I could see him shaking he was snickering so hard. Then came the odor–man, the odor! Even my dogs left the room and all my other Poads were scurrying off here and there–took me forever to gather them all together afterwards. Even the Fuzzies were offended–it was so hard getting them all from under the couch and off the drapes. Never smelt anything like it–rotten eggs and pepperoni pizza. Oh yeah, this is about Poad eggs–sorry for getting off the subject. Yeah, hatching Poad eggs would be cute–could paint them the colors they would be when they hatch–pass me more skittles! 😀
Yeah, that does sound like a male.
May 28, 2013 at 12:44 am #897992Oh gosh! It must be the brown cuttlefish poads!! Thankfully mine hasn’t done THAT yet, but now I’m going to have to guard him carefully to make sure he doesn’t start up those bad habits! We’ll need to keep ours apart to make sure they don’t be useless together ;D
May 28, 2013 at 12:55 am #897993You’re great, LadyFirebird! I wish I had a farting Poad–I would bring her/him to work and put her/him under my boss’s desk, hah hah! 🙂
But on the topic of Poad eggs (sorta) I’ve been wondering. The Young Poads seem more colorful (as a whole) than the adults. So are baby Poads hatched really bright and flamboyant and get duller as they age, or are the Young Poads just going through a sort of dyed-hair/piercings/tattoos rebellious ‘teenage’ stage?
Yes, it seems as if the “young poad” is at the age where their coloring is at its peak of intensity. Maybe they are like balloons; you know how balloons are more intensely colored before they are blown up? The markings do grow and change as the poad matures, like the coat color of a foal. Baby poads have simpler, less developed markings than older ones. The very young ones just have soft pastel colors, like a scoop of rainbow sherbet. Sometimes with a dot or two like a ladybug to indicate where future markings and designs will develop.
Pass the skittles.May 28, 2013 at 7:31 pm #898019You’re great, LadyFirebird! I wish I had a farting Poad–I would bring her/him to work and put her/him under my boss’s desk, hah hah! 🙂
But on the topic of Poad eggs (sorta) I’ve been wondering. The Young Poads seem more colorful (as a whole) than the adults. So are baby Poads hatched really bright and flamboyant and get duller as they age, or are the Young Poads just going through a sort of dyed-hair/piercings/tattoos rebellious ‘teenage’ stage?
Yes, it seems as if the “young poad” is at the age where their coloring is at its peak of intensity. Maybe they are like balloons; you know how balloons are more intensely colored before they are blown up? The markings do grow and change as the poad matures, like the coat color of a foal. Baby poads have simpler, less developed markings than older ones. The very young ones just have soft pastel colors, like a scoop of rainbow sherbet. Sometimes with a dot or two like a ladybug to indicate where future markings and designs will develop.
Pass the skittles.Hehehe! So if you put together a bunch of very young poads it would look like a WHOLE LOTTA SKITTLES!
May 28, 2013 at 7:37 pm #898021Poad eggs?? Don’t you know that poads are born live, and are cared for in community run nurseries where the duties are shared out amoung the whole clan? They cling to their mother’s and/or their father’s back and ride if they have to be moved….
They do lay eggs, which are brooded under, or carried in the pouches of adult members of the clutter, but since they don’t reproduce, there are no daddy poadsâ„¢.If males exist, they would be lazy and pretty useless. When very young, the babies can also be carried in the pouches.
<:and here I thought my brown cuttlefish poad #3 was male XD due to his store description using ‘he’ rather than ‘she’
It could be a male… does he seem useless??
hahahahahahaha……breathe……..hahahahaha……oh, I needed this.
May 28, 2013 at 9:21 pm #898028Poadie clones. :bigsmile:
Nope. Each is unique.
If each poad is “unique”, then how did twindragon1 and twindragon2 end up with identical twin Hot Rod poads? :~
tdm :bigsmile:
tdm
May 28, 2013 at 11:13 pm #898030Poadie clones. :bigsmile:
Nope. Each is unique.
If each poad is “unique”, then how did twindragon1 and twindragon2 end up with identical twin Hot Rod poads? :~
tdm :bigsmile:
Like human identicals, there’s the tiniest differences that make them unique? Or maybe they’re the exception that proves the rule. After all, we always thought there were no male poads; now we know to watch out for the useless-seeming ones. 😉
(….needs…some…skittles…please….!)
May 28, 2013 at 11:21 pm #898031And maybe like with how some animals look identical to us humans, those two poads probably have some good differences, as Joliesdragon said =P
So far the trend seems to be brown cuttlefish, but now we know what behavior to look for, who knows what others we might find?
May 29, 2013 at 12:05 am #898034Poadie clones. :bigsmile:
Nope. Each is unique.
If each poad is “unique”, then how did twindragon1 and twindragon2 end up with identical twin Hot Rod poads? :~
tdm :bigsmile:
I bet you can tell them apart.
May 29, 2013 at 12:47 am #898040Poadie clones. :bigsmile:
Nope. Each is unique.
If each poad is “unique”, then how did twindragon1 and twindragon2 end up with identical twin Hot Rod poads? :~
tdm :bigsmile:
I bet you can tell them apart.
😉 …and passes the skittles on…
tdm :bigsmile:
tdm
May 30, 2013 at 3:41 am #898086(hands out more skittles) Boy, we sure seem to go thru bunches of these! 😉
June 11, 2013 at 8:12 pm #898515*Pokes head around door* Did somebody mention skittles? 😛
June 14, 2013 at 12:26 am #898601Me boyohs were helping g’ma make potato salad the other day and they found a poad egg in the batch, ’cause every time they put it down it rolled away from the ones they were peeling! J)
tdm :bigsmile:
tdm
July 9, 2013 at 5:15 am #899575What is the gestation time needed to hatch a poad egg?
tdm 🙂
tdm
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