Clefairy was an evasive bit of information to get ahold of. We could have just found one or two here and there, and made our reports based off of that, but the legend of finding them under the light of the moon was too tempting to pass up recording. So, our researchers waited until the next full moon to begin their expedition. Hours upon hours of hiking through the wooded mountainside, only lit by the bright moon above, the group was tired by the time they finally found what they were looking for. A group of Clefairy, easily in the dozens, dancing, playing, and once they made themselves known, surprisingly inviting our researchers to join. It was fun for a little while, wholesome and pleasant, but soon the child friendly nature of this popular creature gives way to instinct. After all, this is their only real time to meet large amounts of each other for an entire month, and naturally, some amount of breeding has to be done to continue the species... With a majority female population, as well as considerably more Clefairy than humans, it wasn't difficult for our group to be involved. The individual reports are a blurred haze of harems, gang bangs, enough fluids to drown an individual, each researcher having their own experience with helping male Clefairy breed as many female as possible. It wasn't uncommon for a female researcher to help get a male Clefairy worked up, only to tease him into breeding a female of his own species, or a male human using their size advantage to keep a female Clefairy excited while the male breeds them. When all was said and done, our researchers woke up the next day, all but coated in fluids, laying on the forest floor with no Clefairy in sight. All we can hope is that we've done something to help an effectively endangered species reproduce, and that the other data recorded helps those aiming to breed them.