This wolf is immortal! It will never age or die. It cannot be bred or used in roles, or retired into. This wolf has not rolled over today and will not be able to be traded or gifted until its next rollover.
Extra Domain ruled
Oh you wanna know about the Goddess of the moon? She is the God of the night and the lunar cycle. She, along with her sister Bellatrix, work together to help the packs tell time. She also sheds light across the lands during the night time, but she had more she rules over. She's the one that calls the cold when it is time. The one who blankets the land in a layer of white. When times are getting to heated wolves pray to her to cool it down. With out her the lands would be over run with bugs. When the hot seasons are getting unbearable look to her to help keep the pack cool. When it's to dark to see. As the sisters for guidance and let them light the way.
Telescopium Myth-
Telescopium is not associated with any myths. The constellation was introduced by the French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille, who mapped the southern skies from the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa in 1751-1752. It represents an aerial telescope, a type of refractor that was used by J.D. Cassini at Paris Observatory.
As defined by Lacaille, the constellation originally extended to the north between Sagittarius and Scorpius, but what used to represent the top of the telescope's tube and mounting was cut off later. The official boundaries of the constellation were set by the Belgian astronomer Eugène Delporte in 1930.
Today, Telescopium takes up a region of the sky south of the constellations Sagittarius and Corona Australis.
The star that was placed in the pulley at the top of the mast by Lacaille and designated Beta Telescopii became Eta Sagittarii and the star that used to be Gamma Telescopii and was positioned in the upper part of the telescope's tube, became G Scorpii in Scorpius constellation. The former Theta Telescopii, which used to mark the objective lens on the refractor, was moved to Ophiuchus as designated 45 Ophiuchi.
The constellation was also sometimes known as Tubus Astronomicus, but this name is long obsolete.
About the Star
HR 6819, also known as HD 167128 or QV Telescopii (abbreviated QV Tel), is a double star system in the southern constellation of Telescopium. It is in the south-western corner of the constellation, near Pavo to the south and Ara to the west. The system appears as a variable star that is dimly visible to the naked eye with an apparent magnitude that ranges from 5.32 down to 5.39, which is comparable to the maximum brightness of the planet Uranus. It is about 1,120 light years from the Sun, and is drifting farther away at a rate of 9.4 km/s. Due to its location in the sky, it is visible only to observers south of 33°N latitude.