Boi-Vaquim

Tradition / Region: Brazilian mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Cow


The Myth

On the wide southern plains of Brazil, where cowboys rode beneath endless skies, people told of a bull unlike any other. They called it the Boi-Vaquim.

Its horns shone like gold, and its eyes glittered like diamonds. From its body leapt sparks of fire, flashing as it moved across the grasslands. To glimpse it was to feel both awe and dread, for the creature was as beautiful as it was dangerous.

The Boi-Vaquim was said to have wings like a great bird, spreading wide as it crossed the plains, and hooves of gold that left the ground shimmering where they struck. When it charged, the air itself seemed to burn, and even the bravest rider felt his heart falter beneath its gaze.

Some cowhands dreamed of capturing it, imagining the glory of lassoing such a beast and proving their courage before all others. But only a rider of extraordinary strength, mounted on a horse swift and unshakable, could even hope to face it. Many tested their resolve from afar, measuring their nerve against the bull’s blazing presence.

Yet no tale tells of the Boi-Vaquim ever being mastered. It remained free, untamed, and unconquered—a living emblem of the wild southern lands, inspiring fear, respect, and wonder in all who spoke its name.


Gallery


Sources

Contribuidores da Wikipédia. (2022, May 10). Boi Vaquim. https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boi_Vaquim


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Boitáta

Tradition / Region: Brazilian mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Cow


The Myth

In Santa Catarina, people speak of a Boitáta unlike the ancient serpent of older tales. Here it appears as a bull—vast, unnatural, and terrifying to behold.

Its body is as large as a bull’s, but its limbs end not in hooves, but in massive paws like those of a giant. In the center of its forehead burns a single enormous eye, blazing like living fire, cutting through darkness, mist, and night. No one knows where it dwells, nor what sustains it, and those who see it rarely remain long enough to learn more.

This Boitáta is not bound to the earth. At times it charges into the sea, skimming across the waves like a monstrous seahorse. At other times it rises into the air, flying above forests as if born of flame and shadow. Land, water, and sky offer no refuge from its passage.

Some say its shape was born from confusion and fear, when the fiery serpent of old stories was mistaken for something else and slowly took on horns, bulk, and the form of cattle. Over time, this bull-shape became fixed in the imagination of the people.

In visions and whispered stories, the Boitáta appears with a bovine head, sometimes horned, sometimes winged, sometimes standing upright like a man. Yet one thing never changes: the burning eye that watches without blinking.

To see it is an omen of terror. To follow it is to vanish. And to mistake it for an ordinary bull is to invite destruction, for this Boitáta is not a creature of pasture, but fire given flesh.


Gallery


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Boitatá. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boitat%C3%A1


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Boi Laranja

Tradition / Region: Brazilian mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Cow


The Myth

They say the Boi Laranja was once an ordinary bull that lived among other cattle in a pasture, alongside beasts such as the Boi Jardim. Yet even in life, it was never truly one of the herd. It kept to itself, standing apart as if it wished no company from animals or people alike.

At night, the land where it stayed became a place of dread. Those who passed nearby felt an unexplainable fear settle over them. Some claimed that a single look from the bull was enough to make their legs tremble and their hearts race, as though its gaze carried a weight no living creature should possess.

When the Boi Laranja finally died, the fear did not fade.

Travelers began to report sightings near the same pasture. In the darkness, a massive shape would appear where the bull once stood. Others felt watched as they crossed the land, certain that something unseen was still there, guarding the ground it had claimed in life.

Even now, people warn against passing too close to that place. They say the Boi Laranja did not depart with its death, and that its presence still lingers in the pasture, silent, watchful, and unwilling to let go of the land it once called its own.


Gallery


Sources

História Jardim contributors. (2022). História e Lenda do Boi Laranja. In HistoriaJardim.blogspot.com, from https://historiajardim.blogspot.com/2022/05/historia-e-lenda-do-boi-laranja-para.html


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Boi de Conchas

Tradition / Region: Brazilian mythology
Alternate Names: Ratambufe; Shell Ox
Category: Cow


The Myth

Along the shores where rivers meet the sea, the people tell of a wondrous ox born not only of land, but of water and promise. This creature is known as Boi de Conchas, the Shell Ox.

It was said that a calf was born on Saint Peter’s Day, the feast of the fisherman saint. Because of this sacred timing, its owner promised the young ox that one day it would be taken to see the sea. The promise lingered, carried by time and tide, until it became something more than words.

In later years, people along the coast spoke of a vision rising from the water: an ox entirely white, its body covered in gleaming shells, as if the sea itself had clothed it. This was the Shell Ox, born of devotion and fulfilled promise, emerging where waves touch the land.

Those who saw it said the creature was calm and radiant, neither wild nor fearful. It appeared briefly, a living bridge between earth and ocean, before returning to the waters from which it came.

Thus the Boi de Conchas remains in memory as a gentle marvel—an ox shaped by faith, timing, and the pull of the sea, reminding all who hear the tale that promises, once made, may take on lives of their own.


Gallery


Sources

São Pedro da Barra, A. M. Ficha 10–Boi Laranja.

Santos, L. G. D. (2020, March 30). Ratambufe – A lenda do Boi de Conchas – FundArt. FundArt. https://fundart.com.br/ratambufe-a-lenda-do-boi-de-conchas/


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Boi da Cara Preta

Tradition / Region: Brazilian mythology
Alternate Names: Black-Faced Ox
Category: Cow


The Myth

In Brazil, when night falls and children resist sleep, a familiar name is sometimes whispered: the Black-Faced Ox.

Boi da Cara Preta is imagined as an ox with a darkened face, something both ordinary and unsettling. It is not a beast of fields or farms, but a figure that comes when children refuse to rest or misbehave. Parents sing of it softly, not as a roar or threat, but as a presence that listens from the dark.

In the lullaby, the ox is called upon to come and take the child who will not sleep, especially one who is afraid of silly faces and shadows. The song is gentle, almost playful, yet behind it lingers the idea that something waits just beyond the cradle and the candlelight.

The Black-Faced Ox has no long tale of origins or deeds. It does not rampage or destroy. It exists in the space between comfort and fear, carried by melody rather than story. To children, it is a warning; to adults, a tool; to memory, a shadow shaped like an ox.

And so Boi da Cara Preta endures—not as a monster that acts, but as one that might, lingering in song, rocking back and forth with the rhythm of sleep.


Gallery


Sources

Guerra, D. (2010). Acalantos afro-brasileiros. Revista África e Africanidades, 8, 1-5.


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