Not all vampires rise with the moon and inhabit murky castles. Some wait in the heat of the Australian wilderness. Like the Yara-ma-yha-who monster from Aboriginal folklore, found under Australian fig trees.
Lurking in the mythical landscapes of Australian Aborigines is a devouring creature from Dreamtime cosmology. Yara-ma-yha-that belongs to no crypt, no ruined castle, no midnight hunt. Instead, it lives on branches bulky with leaves.
According to recorded versions of the legend, especially those preserved by David Unaipon, the Yara-ma-yha-is a vampiric creature from southeastern Aboriginal traditions, distinguished not only by its grotesque appearance, but also by its bizarre, cyclical feeding horrors.
The thing in the tree
Yara-ma-yha-which is often described as a petite, red, frog-like humanoid creature with a huge head, a wide toothless mouth, and suction cup-like appendages on its hands and feet. Its shape is unnatural from the very beginning, evoking something that is both childish, absurd and deeply hazardous.
Its preferred habitat is the fig tree. A tired traveler, escaping the heat under the branches, unknowingly exposes himself to immediate danger. It sucks blood using suction cups on its fingers and toes, attaching itself to the body in a way that is more parasitic than predatory.
However, after partially draining the victim, Yara-ma-yha- does something even stranger. Instead of simply killing it, it swallows the person whole. It then drinks water, falls asleep, and later regurgitates the prey. The victim emerges alive but changed, described as shorter and redder than before. This process is repeated on subsequent encounters until the victim becomes smaller and smaller, eventually transforming into another Yara-ma-yha-who. Some say after the third time.
It is busy during the day, not at night. According to legend, one possible way to survive the encounter is to play dead until sunset, taking advantage of the creature's diurnal habits.
Children's warning and cultural feature
Like many folk creatures, the Yara-ma-yha-who probably served practical and spiritual purposes. Recorded traditions suggest that the story may have been used to warn children against wandering, behaving inappropriately, or resting alone in hazardous places.
Scholars and commentators have proposed various speculative inspirations for Yara-ma-yha-who. Could this have occurred with Malay settlers reporting on tarsier primates from Southeast Asia? Or maybe it's the story of Thylacoleo carnifex, a carnivorous marsupial that swooped down on its prey from the treetops.
And somewhere in the oldest corners of history, where sunlight burns and fig branches sway without wind, there is a possibility that not every red thing in the leaves is fruit.
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Yara-ma-yha-who: Australian day vampire under the fig tree
Not all vampires rise with the moon and inhabit murky castles. Some wait in the heat of the Australian wilderness. Like the Yara-ma-yha-who monster from Aboriginal folklore, found under Australian fig trees.
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A child-eating bloodsucker from Australian Aborigines' nightmares
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