He could skin anything they found today - Raiha wouldn’t mind at all. She just wanted the meat for the birds, dogs, and cats for Sanctuary. She knew they were perfectly edible, and they didn’t taste too badly... but she would let the others eat it. She’d eaten them on Konti Isle when she was avoiding Mura itself. She wasn’t much of a hand at fishing, but whatever the birds could get, they shared. Except for rats, mice, voles, and snakes. Raiha did not like eating snakes. The birds could keep those.
“And you’d be able to skin it better than me,” she grinned, removing a rather ragged looking piece of furry moleskin from her pouch, that had not only been ripped by talons, but very inexpertly skinned. “My last attempt. I use it for a lure. My birds see it and they come for it - because they know that the moment they return for it, then will be rewarded... and a good hawk will always nail it, even if it’s just out of gr---” Raiha was cut off as Uzima came down with a whoosh, latching onto the gauntlet and grabbing at the lure, “--eed,” she finished, and rewarded the hawk with meat. She looked amused with that, but smiled at the bird, tucking the lure away and sending Uzima skyborn once more.
“The wanderlust?” Raiha nodded a little. She was understanding. For some, that really was the way of it. Travel was what they needed to do, it was how they made their life. To be cooped up all the time must be hard. She wondered if Kavala felt that way, felt the need to get up and go, to ride, to travel. She, herself, was such a homebody. Raiha could happily settle down and set up roots and stay in one place when she was comfortable, even if to grow you had to continue to put yourself in uncomfortable situations. Maybe one day, some day.
She was vaguely amused, though, when he called her beautiful, and didn’t completely know how to take that. It took her a moment to figure out just how to reply to it. Raiha had very little experience in flirting. Despite being the Akontak equivalent of a teenager, such things did not really hold her interest. She didn’t plan on worrying about any such things for another twenty years or so, if at all. “I like your horse,” she changed the subject at that. “Will you look at mine? Diallo,” she called her dog off of the hunt as Uzima nailed yet another mole, and the fat, shiny creature went the way of the first. “I’d be interested to know what you thought of her.” She let the bird sit on her gauntlet, motioning for Sama’el to follow. She climbed and straddled a wooden fence with her long legs, having a relatively easy time of it, sitting down on the wood, despite the bird on her arm and her occupied other hand - clearly, this was a practiced motion for her.
“I’ll do my best about a Kestrel chick. Kefi’s a little old, but with some luck, a male, and Eywaat’s blessings...” she turned back to the other pasture. “Yakiniiii!” the girl called, raising her hand upon which Uzima was perched to shield her eyes as she sorted through the tangle of the equine Auras in the next paddock. Eventually, a rather tall Firemane mare poked her nose out of the herd, and approached the fence. Raiha smiled at her, and used her elbow to rub along the horse’s long nose before closing her eyes again, and opening them to the normal world. That was better. As much as she loved Auristics, she was cautious about when it was quite sunny. “What do you think?” she turned back to Sama’el. “You’re the horse expert.” She had never heard tell of a Drykas who wasn't a horse expert. The mare was fat and spoiled, clearly. Probably too spoiled. "Yakini, this is Sama'el. Sama'el, Yakini."
“And you’d be able to skin it better than me,” she grinned, removing a rather ragged looking piece of furry moleskin from her pouch, that had not only been ripped by talons, but very inexpertly skinned. “My last attempt. I use it for a lure. My birds see it and they come for it - because they know that the moment they return for it, then will be rewarded... and a good hawk will always nail it, even if it’s just out of gr---” Raiha was cut off as Uzima came down with a whoosh, latching onto the gauntlet and grabbing at the lure, “--eed,” she finished, and rewarded the hawk with meat. She looked amused with that, but smiled at the bird, tucking the lure away and sending Uzima skyborn once more.
“The wanderlust?” Raiha nodded a little. She was understanding. For some, that really was the way of it. Travel was what they needed to do, it was how they made their life. To be cooped up all the time must be hard. She wondered if Kavala felt that way, felt the need to get up and go, to ride, to travel. She, herself, was such a homebody. Raiha could happily settle down and set up roots and stay in one place when she was comfortable, even if to grow you had to continue to put yourself in uncomfortable situations. Maybe one day, some day.
She was vaguely amused, though, when he called her beautiful, and didn’t completely know how to take that. It took her a moment to figure out just how to reply to it. Raiha had very little experience in flirting. Despite being the Akontak equivalent of a teenager, such things did not really hold her interest. She didn’t plan on worrying about any such things for another twenty years or so, if at all. “I like your horse,” she changed the subject at that. “Will you look at mine? Diallo,” she called her dog off of the hunt as Uzima nailed yet another mole, and the fat, shiny creature went the way of the first. “I’d be interested to know what you thought of her.” She let the bird sit on her gauntlet, motioning for Sama’el to follow. She climbed and straddled a wooden fence with her long legs, having a relatively easy time of it, sitting down on the wood, despite the bird on her arm and her occupied other hand - clearly, this was a practiced motion for her.
“I’ll do my best about a Kestrel chick. Kefi’s a little old, but with some luck, a male, and Eywaat’s blessings...” she turned back to the other pasture. “Yakiniiii!” the girl called, raising her hand upon which Uzima was perched to shield her eyes as she sorted through the tangle of the equine Auras in the next paddock. Eventually, a rather tall Firemane mare poked her nose out of the herd, and approached the fence. Raiha smiled at her, and used her elbow to rub along the horse’s long nose before closing her eyes again, and opening them to the normal world. That was better. As much as she loved Auristics, she was cautious about when it was quite sunny. “What do you think?” she turned back to Sama’el. “You’re the horse expert.” She had never heard tell of a Drykas who wasn't a horse expert. The mare was fat and spoiled, clearly. Probably too spoiled. "Yakini, this is Sama'el. Sama'el, Yakini."