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'A Kelpie's Breath' in @TheGreatMargin - featuring a Kelpie or each-uisge, a dangerous water creature and shape-shifter that drags its victims to watery depths...!
https://t.co/cJgREk5xKp
#Celtic #FairyTaleTuesday: The #each-uisge is a water spirit in #Scottish folklore, known as the each-uisce (anglicized as aughisky or ech-ushkya) in #Ireland and cabyll-ushtey on the #IsleOfMan. This supernatural water horse found in the… https://t.co/gMK1ILUkJe
#Celtic #LegendaryWednesday: The #each-uisge is a water spirit in #Scottish folklore, known as the each-uisce (anglicized as aughisky or ech-ushkya) in #Ireland & cabyll-ushtey on the #IsleOfMan. This supernatural water horse found in the #ScottishHighlands is similar to the
1/3 https://t.co/KzmOhL7Ury
the ever-lovely, wonderful, stunning @erebusodora_art agreed to draw mela, my each-uisge bard (primarily he/him, rarely they/them, nb) & one of the pcs most dear to my heart, and he is finished: a thread of details i adore. 1/x
Thinkin' about Each-Uisge, Kelpies, River horses and such.
Art by unita-n, LiigaKlavina, and Alexandrevla on deviantART.
In Scottish Folklore the 'Each-uisge' is a mythological water horse akin to a Kelpie with supernatural powers that inhabits the coastal waters around the Highlands & Islands. #FolkloreThursday @FolkloreThurs @HistoriumU @CrystalPonti @DeeDeeChainey @WillowWinsham @TheSacredIsle
E is for Each-Uisge
@AnimalAlphabets
#eachuisge #eisfor #animalalphabet #mythicalalphabet #mythicalcreatures #seahorse #kelpie #waterhorse #horse
For @AnimalAlphabets here's the each-uisge a supernatural water horse found in the Scottish Highlands. It's often mistaken for the kelpie, which inhabits streams and rivers, whereas the each-uisge lives in the sea, sea lochs & fresh water lochs #AnimalAlphabets #MythicalAlphabet
E is for Each-Uisge for this weeks
@AnimalAlphabets #AnimalAlphabets A water spirit in Scottish folklore that shape-shifts to a horse to lure riders to their doom.
The 'Eachy of Bassenthwaite'. Reports of a large humanoid being of "gruesome and slimy appearance" emerging from the lake. It was first reported in 1873, with sightings in the early 1900s.
Perhaps an 'each-uisge' or 'water horse' from Celtic #folklore.
#storytelling #Cumbria
Each-Uisge: From Scottish folklore & similar to a Kelpie, but more dangerous. They will lure humans to the water using a human or horse form, then eat everything but the liver. In horse form its body becomes adhesive at the sight of water, trapping any humans from escape.