In most versions, the Tulevieja is described as a short woman of heavy build who wears a drooping hat (an old, wrinkled
tule), is poorly dressed and has tangled hair. She generally appears with her chest bare, showing two enormous breasts so full of
breast milk that it overflows, which is why it is common to see large numbers of
ants of many kinds following the trail of milk behind the creature. She is also commonly described as a
hybrid of woman and bird (similar to a
harpy): she has powerful wings, sometimes those of a
bird and sometimes those of a
bat (depending on the version), but her most characteristic features are her legs and claws of an
eagle or
hawk instead of human legs, which leave reversed footprints so that she cannot be followed. She is said to feed on charcoal and ashes, which is why it is common to find her tracks around recently extinguished campfires. Further removed from her incarnation as a
restless spirit, she is also depicted as a female
vengeful spirit who punishes
lustful men—the figure of the irresponsible father of her child—who, attracted by her large breasts, invite her to dance only to meet death, torn apart by the monster's claws. The only way to save oneself once encountering her is to recite the prayer
"Alabado sea el Santísimo" ("Praised be the Most Holy Sacrament"), which causes her to take flight and disappear toward the sun. In the Indigenous legend, however, the only way to defend oneself from the creature was through the use of
vines made of blessed
tule by the god
Sibú, which had the power to bind the Tulevieja. == Legend ==