abchanito

While we made this one up expressly for this adventure,
I have to give fair credit to the Bunnicula series
by James and Deborah Howe.
Thank you, Mr. Howe!
This poor bunny is not having a good week.
 
This poor bunny used to have an okay life as a farm animal in the Oatman Canyon area.
 
Oh, sure, it was destined for the stewpot.
But in the meantime, it got all the yummy bits of garden plants that the farm hands did not eat. It got plenty of young weeds, freshly pulled from a field the day before. It had a clean, covered shelter. It had space to hop around within an enclosure that protected it from snakes and scorpions.
 
Then one day the nearest leafy green vegetables uprooted themselves, grew teeny tiny fangs, and bashed the rabbit hutch open!
If it managed to escape the nightmare celery stalks, someone scooped it up into a burlap sack.
The next time poor bunny could see anything, it was in a different hutch, with some weird-tasting cabbage leaves.
 
Bunny's belly still wants grass, twigs, and cactus flesh.
 
But the rest of the abchanito wants
... something

ELSE

Basic Information

Anatomy

An abchanito is a large, dusty rabbit with adorable little ball-shaped tails, long ears, and powerful hind legs that allow them to leap great distances compared to their size. It also has sharp, knife-like dual fangs which are not hollow but do have blood grooves in the rear to help funnel fluids from the target into the abchanito's mouth.
Genetic Ancestor(s)
Average Weight
up to 12 lbs
Average Length
Large adults can measure more than 2 feet long
Geographic Distribution
Related Materials


Cover image: by CB Ash

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