Taiba is recorded as a sudden apparition arriving with wind and blowing sand. It appears from April to July, especially May to June, and travelers were warned on days that shift between sun and cloud. Accounts vary by region regarding the victim horse’s coat and sex: in Mino white horses were targeted, in Enshu chestnut and bay, while old women and mares were said to be spared. Eyewitnesses tell of each mane hair standing on end, a red gleam shining, and when the horse collapses the wind falls still. The Owari and Mino “Giba” is regarded as a personification of Taiba, a small girl who descends from the sky, ensnares a horse, then vanishes with a smile; the chosen horse spins rightward several times and dies. Folk countermeasures include covering the horse’s neck with cloth, fitting deerfly-proof belly guards or bells, and in emergencies letting a little blood from the ear, needling the center of the tailbone, or cutting the air ahead with a sword while reciting the Komyo Mantra. Temples and shrines fostered prayers for quelling horse-plagues, and talismans to horse deities and belly wraps were used as Taiba wards.
Character Profile
This section is our own creative profile for storytelling. It is not historical fact or scholarship.
Yokai Type - Traditional Yokai
Category - Weather & Calamity Spirits
Rarity - Uncommon
Personality - pitiless, indiscriminate
Compatibility - brings misfortune to horses and horse-handlers
Abilities - sudden formation of a dust devil, intimidation with sand haze and red light, inducing acute equine collapse and fall
Weaknesses - neck covers and belly guards, small bloodletting from the ear, needle stimulation to the center of the tailbone, sword-cutting the air with recitation of the Komyo Mantra
Habitat - highways, roads around village outskirts, open fields, Owari, Mino, Hitachi, Omi
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