The First Ushering
Humans call it murder, Dwarves call it a necessity, we call it lifeTo ularrian Naga, childbirth is seen in a unique fashion. Being part reptile, nagas can lay up to fifty eggs per clutch, most females often have 3-5 clutches over their life. Ularr’s traditional naga tribes simply can't feed that many mouths. Because of this, certain precautions must be taken to ensure that only those that can contribute to the tribe enter into naga society. These rituals are often seen as cruel and terrible to other humanoids, but to naga, it is but another hardship of the unjust world the human race forced them into. When a naga is ready to lay her eggs, she travels deep into the tundra. When she finds a perfect spot she will dig a deep borrow below the snow. There she lays her eggs and curls around them, here the ritual begins.
The Great Sleep
Under the snow, the Nagaess enters a near-death state. She does not need to eat or drink water, and some say that the soul exits the body during The Great Sleep. This maternal hibernation ends when the first egg begins to hatch.The Climb
The new hatchlings then must climb out of their nest. The babies are drawn by their mother's scent and slither as fast as they can toward her. If one of the hatchlings can't climb out they might be abandoned depending on the tribe the mother is from.The Emergence
When the first eggs begin to hatch the nagaess will burst out of her borrow, filling the nest with Ularr’s icy winds. If when the naga bursts out of the ground it is above freezing, it is seen as a bad omen, and the clutch is often abandoned.The Journey
After the strongest hatchlings make it to their mother, she then must lead her children through the tundra, back to their village. This journey must be completed without food or shelter, the harsh conditions of the tundra often kill off many of the hatchlings, leaving only 5 or 10 that reach the village.
When the surviving hatchlings reach the rest of the tribe they are greeted by their mother's friends and family and welcomed into the naga tribe with song and dance. Recently, as Yatyanism has spread into naga culture, the mother is gifted a copy of The Hetyemily, the holy text of Yatyan, to teach her children with.
Aw, such a harsh way to enter the world for the hatchlings! But very well thought out, as it makes sense why the naga must do this.