Feep-cutie the Feep

47 of 175
Feep-cutie
100% Happy
Owner
byfelisa
Stolen
6 Apr 2014
19,100 +2
Views
6,227 +2
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4,035
Feeds
Recent Feeders
DIY - Bird Feeder


Prep Time: 5 mins.
Serves: 3

Ingredients:

1 slice bread
1/4-1/2 cup natural-style peanut butter
1/2-3/4 cup bird seed

Directions:

Take your slice of bread (if it is fresh, lightly toast it so it dries out or use stale / day old bread) & cut into 3 equal sized pieces.

Spread each side of bread with the peanut butter & drench in the bird seed.

Press the seed firmly onto the bread.

Poke a small hole through one end of each feeder & hang with string in a sheltered place.

About Feep Eggs

This egg was only available in Egg Cave's Cash Shop Park for April 2014.

Along with the shell being generously coated in a substance not quite unlike that of refined sugar, Feep eggs have a spongy consistency like that of marshmallows.

Unfertilized eggs produced by farm-raised Feeps are an immensely popular food item during the springtime months.

About the Feep Creature

A very unique species of bird, Feeps are recognizable for their gelatinous and pastel-colored appearance. Incapable of flight, this species will make their nest in burrows abandoned by other creatures. Feeps are frugivores (fruit eaters) and prefer consuming fruits that are richer in sugar content such as berries.

Feeps have an incredibly sweet and docile disposition. Unfortunately, the gentle behavior of Feeps (combined with their inability to properly defend themselves or even escape quickly enough) make them a remarkably easy target for wild predators. The Feep's resemblance in both looks and taste to that of a confectionery is also unhelpful.

Acting in the manner of a biological factory, Feeps on average can churn out five eggs per clutch. An individual Feep can lay at least two dozen egg clutches throughout its lifetime. The extremely successful reproduction rate of Feeps is one of the few explanations that the scientific community can provide for why this species is not yet extinct.