[Handle Animal] Rear an Animal

Evil DM

First Post
Hi folks,

I just wonder how long it takes to rear an animal? In the description is written how long it takes to train an animal but not how long to domesticate it?

In the epic description is also written that it takes less time than normal are finally there are some durations given. But what is normal?

Cheers, Evil DM.
 

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In the chart at the top right in the SRD

http://www.d20srd.org/srd/skills/handleAnimal.htm


15+HD of wild animal to raise.

Looks like it takes about a year to rear a wild animal (based solely on the magical animal entry in the ELH)

Also:
"For tasks with specific time frames noted above, you must spend half this time (at the rate of 3 hours per day per animal being handled) working toward completion of the task before you attempt the Handle Animal check. If the check fails, your attempt to teach, rear, or train the animal fails and you need not complete the teaching, rearing, or training time."

Looks like it's a 3 hour daily commitment to rear an animal.
 

Evil DM said:
I just wonder how long it takes to rear an animal?
I've been told it varies but I would be forced to report you for animal cruelty if you did;)

The word choice of the authors have other connotations, unfortunately so do any possible substitute. Guess I'll just blame it on the language.
Cheers, Evil DM.
Cheers, Just Plain Evil

SERIOUS: Use the link of the first response, it's got the answer.
 

The OP seems to be asking "How long does it take an animal to grow up?"

Years of downtime.

To rear an animal means to raise a wild creature from infancy so that it becomes domesticated. A handler can rear as many as three creatures of the same kind at once.

A successfully domesticated animal can be taught tricks at the same time it’s being raised, or it can be taught as a domesticated animal later.
Here is the wiki on horses since combat mounts might be a primary concern...
Horses, particularly colts, may sometimes be physically capable of reproduction at approximately 18 months but in practice are rarely allowed to breed until a minimum age of 3 years, especially females.[22] Horses four years old are considered mature, though the skeleton usually finishes developing at the age of six, and the precise time of completion of development also depends on the horse's size (therefore a connection to breed exists), gender, and the quality of care provided by its owner. Also, if the horse is larger, its bones are larger; therefore, not only do the bones take longer to actually form bone tissue (bones are made of cartilage in earlier stages of bone formation), but the epiphyseal plates (plates that fuse a bone into one piece by connecting the bone shaft to the bone ends) are also larger and take longer to convert from cartilage to bone as well. These plates convert after the other parts of the bones do but are crucial to development.[citation needed]

Depending on maturity, breed and the tasks expected, young horses are usually put under saddle and trained to be ridden between the ages of two and four. Although Thoroughbred and American Quarter Horse race horses are put on the track at as young as two years old in some countries (notably the United States), horses specifically bred for sports such as show jumping and dressage are generally not entered into top-level competition until a minimum age of four years old, because their bones and muscles are not solidly developed, nor is their advanced training complete.[citation needed] For endurance riding competition, horses may not compete until they are a full 60 calendar months (5 years) old.[23]
Black Rhino
The gestation period is 15 to 16 months. The single calf weighs about 35–50 kg at birth, and can follow its mother around after just three days. Weaning occurs at around 2 years of age for the offspring. The mother and calf stay together for 2–3 years until the next calf is born; female calves may stay longer, forming small groups. The young are occasionally taken by hyenas and lions. Sexual maturity is reached from 5–7 years old for females, and 7–8 years for males. The life expectancy in natural conditions (without poaching pressure) is from 35 – 50 years.[3]
 
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Uh, sorry folks, maybe I misunderstood the section of rearing an animal.

My thought was that character catches a wild animal and works with it every day to domesticate it. And if this worked out he is able to teach the animal some tricks.

And the epic section talks about 1 year for this process.

But there is nothing written about a non-epic process :uhoh:

So what is it now - or how is it meant?

Does the ranger (in my case) has to wait until a little animal is full grown or is it how I described my interpretation?

Cheers, Evil DM.

P.S.:
@ HeavenShallBurn
Sorry but my english is not that good to understand the word-play... :\
 

Evil DM said:
My thought was that character catches a wild animal and works with it every day to domesticate it. And if this worked out he is able to teach the animal some tricks....So what is it now - or how is it meant?.....Does the ranger (in my case) has to wait until a little animal is full grown or is it how I described my interpretation?

Okay I see what you meant now. Rear an animal in the SRD is for raising the animal from a pup. They left out domesticating an already grown animal. Assuming PCs would either raise the animal or get it already domesticated then train it.

We're in house rule territory now. I'd say use the Rear an Animal DC since it's essentially the same thing. But if the animal is already grown put time at either 1 week or 1 month per HD. 1 month per would be more "realistic" but PCs are heroes & probably can't stick around for that long so 1 week per HD would be a good compromise.

Sorry but my english is not that good to understand the word-play... :\
No problem it was a sick joke anyway.
 

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