Voshak

Voshak

The Voshak is a low-slung, barrel-bodied quadruped standing 100 to 130 cm at the shoulder, compact but extremely powerful, with thick clawed feet built for digging and rooting. Two distinct regional forms exist: northern and temperate Voshaks bear toughened bare skin with faint scales, while southern cold-adapted populations carry dense insulating pillow feather billowing like short capes of dusted charcoal or russet under frost-winds. Populating nearly every region of Elshore, the Voshak is the primary meat and leather animal across the known world.

Key traits

  • Regional divergence produces either a scaled form suited to warm grasslands or a heavily feathered form that survives deep snows, icy rivers, and misty rock-scrub.
  • Powerful jaws and foreclaws allow the Voshak to extract buried food sources and small ground-dwelling prey with equal ease.
  • Domestic Voshaks are easily trained to recognise food cues and simple fence boundaries, though they require firm handling to prevent rooting damage.
  • Butchered for food, bones, and hide, the Voshak is also used for earthwork in rural regions, where trained animals plough soft fields and assist in root harvesting.
  • In cold southern settlements, Voshak hides are valued for winter cloaks and tent-walls; in the south, slaughter festivals at frost-season's end are community-wide events of feasting and song.
  • Among Bars and Annils, folk wisdom compares a difficult child to a 'Voshak in harvest season,' a mark of respect for the animal's legendary stubbornness.
Elshore - a work in progress. Inferred, not told