Happy replied to Lox Breeding? Mixed google results. June 10, 2022 @ 9:00:41 am PDT

Originally posted by Complaintdesk:
I breed mine in the wild without enclosures, taming 2-3 lox at a time as 3 is the most common size cabinet of lox one finds in the wild. Preferably I will find a group of 3 lox near a few good sized rocks and some patches of cloudberries. If I am taming the usual 3, I will throw down 3 groups of stacks of 3 cloudberries, barley or flax, around the group equidistant apart. Once tamed it takes little if any work keeping them together in the same location. I will throw down a stack of 2 food near 2 lox that are fairly close together. When both of them come to eat the food, coitus occurs 99.9% of the time. and within a little while 1 or 2 baby lox are born. Like all tamed animals, the offspring tend to wander 30-50 metres away from their parents before maturing. One can either push them back into the herd before maturity, or ride them back after. Before long with very little effort, the area (or preferably island) will be teeming with lox. They tend to mull together in groups therefore there are no enemies that are particularly damaging to them. The worst scenario is when one has a cabinet of lox near a tarpit when there are also deathsquitos in the area, but with a large enough cabinet that can be advantageous in that tar and lox parts is regularly available for gathering.
This is how I started breeding them. Tame a small group, then let them breed back in the wild again, feed them in pairs as the multiply. Plus I didn't want them trampling over my newly planted crops.
5:13 pm, June 10, 2022
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