Dragon Guide

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Names

  • All dragon's names must end in '-th'.

Origins

Pern Dragons were bioengineered by Kitti Ping from Pern's native firelizards (Flits).

Dragon Anatomy

Dragons have six limbs, two front and two hind, plus two wings. Their blood is referred to as ichor and is copper-based and green in color.

Eye Colors

Dragons' eyes whirl in different colors representing their emotional state.

  • Red: Anger, Hunger(Active Appetite), Fear, Mating, Pain, Excitement. HungerRageHostility.png
  • Red/Orange: Mating, Alarm, Eagerness, Arousal. Anger.png
  • Orange: Uncertainty, Suspicion, Anger, Mating, Alarm, Hunger, Agitation, Panic.
  • Yellow: Anxiety, Fear, Worry, Excitement. Worry.png
  • Pale Yellow: Concern.
  • Green: Delight, Tranquility, Placidity.Happy.png
  • Blue: Longing, Interest, Mischief, Excitement. LoveJoy.png
  • Purple: Worry. Lust.png
  • Lavender: Stress.
  • Grey: Great Worry/Stress/Sadness/Pain (Grey tones come to a dragon's hide too). SadIllPain.png
  • White: Terror. Terror.png

Hide Colors

Dragons come in only five different colors:

  • Gold (Ex Large female; fertile)
  • Bronze (Large; male)
  • Brown (fairly large; male)
  • Blue (medium; fast; male)
  • Green (small; very fast; female; infertile)


Sizes

  • Dragonets - Newly hatched dragonets are the size of very large dogs or small ponies. Imagine golds, bronzes, and sometimes brown dragonets as the small ponies, with greens and blues being the size of very large dogs.
  • Gold Dragons are typically between 38-42 feet in length. Ramoth (Dragons Flight), the largest gold ever recorded, was 45 feet in length.
  • Bronze Dragons are typically between 35-38 feet in length.
  • Brown Dragons are typically between 30-35 feet in length.
  • Blue Dragons are typically 25-30 feet in length.
  • Green Dragons are typically 20-25 feet in length.

Wings

Wing-anatomy.gif

  • Dragon wings are delicate and fragile and require special care when injured if the dragon is to maintain sustained flight. Dragons have an arm-like bone, complete with an elbow and finger joint, that supports about half the length of the dragon wing.
  • The shoulder and upper arm provide the power that a dragon uses to lift off the ground by pumping his wings. The arm is slightly flexed allowing for a membrane, called the leading edge, to run from the shoulder to the finger joints.
  • The finger joint includes a vesitigial thumb and the joints for all the four wingbones that divide up the large portion of the membranous wingsail.
  • Between the dragon's body and the inner bone is the primary mainsail, the largest portion of the membranous wingsail.
  • Between the Inner Bone and the Mid-Bone is the Secondary Mainsail.
  • Between the Mid-Bone and the Spar Bone is the Spar Mainsail.
  • The last bone runs parallel with the Spar Bone and ends middway down the sail.
  • The ends of the wingsail is known as the trailing edge.
  • Batten ribs are cartilaginous supports that run through the wingsails and parallel to the wingbones.
  • The Primary mainsail supports the dragon's weight in the air while the secondary and spar mainsails provide agility by the flexing of the wingbones.
[Source Credit]

Dragonhealers

See the Dragonhealing Craft page for detailed information on the dragonhealer craft.