
Welcome to Dragon Cave! Dragon Cave is an online adoptables game. Collect eggs, raise them to adulthood, and then breed them to create interesting lineages. New dragons are added regularly!
Viewing Dragon: Magnolia Scrollbearer

- Stolen on:Jul 18, 2012
- Hatched on:Jul 21, 2012
- Grew up on:Jul 24, 2012
- Overall views: 2,897
- Unique views: 751
- Clicks:5
- Owner:Kittyclaw62
- Gender:Female
- Location:Coast
Flamingo Wyverns are so named for their resemblance to the tropical birds with whom they often share territory. Their most striking feature is the bony black crest over their faces and snouts, smaller in females, aiding both in digging up food and protection from attack. Females are noticeably brighter than males due to their habit of not straying far from particularly algae-rich feeding grounds.
Dragons are highly-intelligent reptilian creatures that—from a human perspective, at least—appear to live forever. Many different varieties of dragon exist, each with their own unique qualities, habitats, and behavior. Adolescence in dragons is usually marked by the growth of a hatchling’s wings, although not all breeds of dragons grow wings and some breeds have other traits that indicate the beginning of maturation. In Galsreim, dragons and humans coexist peacefully.
User Description
When it comes to her kind, Magnolia is the trifecta: brilliantly beautiful, frighteningly fierce, and incredibly intelligent. And she knows it. She avoids the roughhousing her makeshift brood revels in, preferring to perch high above her home where she can preen in peace. Her brilliant pink coloring is her pride and joy, and she takes great care to keep it as bright as possible. Her horns and bony black crest are an equal source of adornment, kept as sharp and clean as her long talons. Yet, despite her practiced battle skills and her aloof nature, Magnolia isn't one to start a fight (she claims to avoid unneeded mess, but her loving brood mates know otherwise) and with the right bit of goading Magnolia can be convinced to share some of her vast knowledge. In fact, there's little she loves more than a hearty history debate and, on nights that are cold and rainy, when the hatchlings are forced inside to play, they might just hear her telling a fanciful dragons history tale.
