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Fantastic Beasts Series (1): Eagle-headed horse winged beast appearance Creature Behavior Etiquette For Muggle conservation measures Buckbeak

author:The magical secrets of Harry Potter

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Recently, Universal Studios beijing is about to open, which has a large number of Harry Potter magic elements, you fans please wait and see!

Starting today, we will gradually sort out the magical animals and plants that appear in the Harry Potter series and the Fantastic Beasts series. As an opening chapter, it naturally begins with the most well-known eagle-headed horse winged beast.

A dozen animals trotted toward them, and Harry had never seen anything so strange.

- Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > appearance</h1>

The Eagle-headed Horse Winged Beast is known in English as hippogriff, a word derived from the Greek word "hippos" (meaning "horse") and the legendary creature "griffin" (meaning sphinx-headed beast).

The eagle-headed horse has a winged beast with a horse's body, hind legs and tail, but the front legs, wings and head resemble an eagle's. Its grim sharp beak is steely in color, and its large bright eyes are orange. The eagle-headed horse's winged beast's front paws were half a foot long and looked intimidating.

Although the winged winged body of the eagle head horse looks very strange, once it overcomes the initial fear, it will begin to admire its shiny fur. Gradually transitioning from feathers to fur, each eagle-headed horse has a different color of winged beasts, including stormy gray, bronze, pink spots, sparkling reddish brown and inky black.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > biological behavior</h1>

The eagle-headed winged beast is a dangerous carnivore that can only be tamed by trained wizards. The food of the eagle-headed horse with winged animals includes insects, birds and small mammals such as ferrets. It also sometimes sticks its beak into the ground in search of bugs.

During the breeding season, eagle-headed horses with wings will build their nests on the ground and lay a lone, large, fragile egg inside. Eggs hatch into pups within 24 hours. The newborn eagle-headed pterodactyl was able to try to fly in less than a week, but it would take months before it could travel long distances with its parents.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > etiquette</h1>

Remember, the first thing you need to know about the winged beasts is that they are very proud, and the winged beasts with eagle heads can easily lose their temper. Don't humiliate it, or you'll die. Be sure to wait for the eagle-headed horse with the winged beast to act first, this is polite, understand? You walk toward it, you bow, and if it bows to you too, you can touch it. If it doesn't bow, you hurry away from it, and those claws will hurt.

—Rubeus Hagrid introduces the eagle-headed horse with winged beasts in his first class

When humans approach winged beasts with eagle heads, proper etiquette must be ensured to avoid danger. The eagle-headed horse-winged beast is a very proud creature, so it must first bow to it to show proper respect and wait for its bow in response. During this time, the gaze should be in contact with the winged beast of the eagle-headed horse, and should not blink its eyes, so as not to lose the trust of the winged beast of the eagle-headed horse.

As a courtesy, be sure to let the eagle-headed horse-winged beast act first. If it feels offensive, it can hurt. According to Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, winged beasts with eagle heads can be tamed, but only by trained wizards.

Although the eagle-headed horse is proud of its winged beast, it will also resolutely protect those who are trusted by itself. In 1997, for example, Buckbeak attacked Severus Snape at the end of the Battle of the Astronomy Tower to protect Harry Potter from harm. During the Battle of Hogwarts, Buckbeak also attacked Voldemort's giants at the end of the battle.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > protective measures against Muggles</h1>

Wizards who raise eagle-headed horse-bodied winged beasts need to use phantom spells on eagle-headed horse-winged beasts in accordance with the law to prevent it from being seen by Muggles. Traveling on eagle-headed horses with winged beasts is also a violation of the International Wizarding Union Secrecy Act.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > Buckbeak</h1>

Hogwarts housed a flock of eagle-headed horses with winged bodies. In 1993, Rubeus Hagrid introduced the animal to third-year Gryffindor and Slytherin students in his first class on the conservation of magical animals.

Buckbeak is an eagle-headed horse with winged beasts living in Hogwarts and the one who has seen Harry Potter the most. It lived in the Forbidden Forest with other eagle-headed pterodactyls until it was sentenced to death by the Commission for the Disposal of Dangerous Animals for attacking Draco Malfoy. With the help of the Time-Turner, Harry Potter and Hermione Granger manage to save Bakbeak before the execution, and have him flee the school with Sirius Black. After that, Buckbeak lived with Sirius until Sirius returned to Hagrid after his death. During the Battle of Hogwarts, Buckbeak also attacked Voldemort's giants in battle.

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