BigEmpty the Whalerarium

14 of 212
BigEmpty
100% Happy
Stolen
30 Jun 2020
Hatched
14 Nov 2023
1,572 +1
Views
426 +1
Clicks
336
Feeds
Recent Feeders
Driving faster in my car
Falling farther from just what we are
Smoke a cigarette and lie some more
These conversations kill
Falling faster in my car
Time to take her home
Her dizzy head is conscience laden
Time to take a ride, it leaves today
No conversation
Time to take her home
Her dizzy head is conscience laden
Time to wait too long, to wait too long
To wait too long
Too much walking, shoes worn thin
Too much trippin' and my soul's worn thin
Time to catch a ride, it leaves today
Her name is what it means
Too much walking, shoes worn thin
Time to take her home
Her dizzy head is conscience laden
Time to take a ride, it leaves today
No conversation
Time to take her home
Her dizzy head is conscience laden
Time to wait too long, to wait too long
To wait too long
Conversations kill
Conversations kill
Conversations kill
Time to take her home
Her dizzy head is conscience laden
Time to take a ride, it leaves today
No conversation
Time to take her home
Her dizzy head is conscience laden
Time to wait too long, to wait too long
To wait too long
Conversations kill
Conversations kill
Conversations kill

About Whalerarium Eggs

This egg is cradled by cresting, frozen water. A cold wind must've been involved in its freezing.

About the Whalerarium Creature

With some of the largest appendages in the world, Whalerariums are the largest terrarium-like creatures on Ark. It is estimated that the inside of a Whalerarium can be home to up to 10,000 different creatures. The Whalerarium has no digestive process, so these creatures aren't eventually absorbed into the Whalerarium. They continue to live abundantly. Rather, the Whalerarium generates its energy through massive amounts of photosynthesis that occurs invisibly in its glass.

The Science and Research Center in Ark City estimates that there are only 100 Whalerariums left in the wild. All attempts to raise them in a nursury—for the purposes of conservation—have been unsuccessful. Scientists have not been able to hatch a Whalerarium egg and crack the code of how to get the egg to hatch.