if i was a frog and you were a frog would you let me be a guest on your lily pad yes or no
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
I'd rather be in outer space πΈ
Not today Justin

Product Placement
RMH

pixel skylines
cherry valley forever
Jules of Nature
$LAYYYTER
styofa doing anything
art blog(derogatory)
ojovivo

blake kathryn

@theartofmadeline
Xuebing Du

β£ Chile in a Photography β£
Acquired Stardust
Game of Thrones Daily
occasionally subtle
seen from Germany

seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Norway
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Norway

seen from Germany

seen from Netherlands

seen from Germany
seen from Poland

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
@frogworshipper
if i was a frog and you were a frog would you let me be a guest on your lily pad yes or no

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch β’ No registration required β’ HD streaming
its true!!
Is using honey bad? It would be hard for me to give that up because I love it so much.
16 ozΒ of honey requires 1152 bees to travel 112,000 miles and visit 4.5 million flowers.
Most of the honey we get at supermarkets and stores donβt come from natural hives.Β
Honey is an animal product, produced when bees digest nectar they have collected and then regurgitate it. It is an animal product, just like an egg or milk. Yes, a bee is an insect and not technically considered an animal by many people, but a beeβs body changes the composition of what it ingests, just like other animals.However, there is another reason vegans wonβt eat honey, and that is because it isΒ harmful to another living creature. According to Daniel Hammer, bees do experience pain and suffering while they are being exploited for theirΒ productsΒ (not just honey but also beeswax, royal jelly, and more). There is simply no way beekeepers, humane or otherwise, can avoid harming or killing bees while they are extracting the beesβ products. ManyΒ vegansΒ choose their lifestyle because they wish to avoid harming any other creature, and so they choose not to eat honey.
Check out this couple of articles that are pretty complete about everything around this topic :)Β
Why Honey is Not Vegan?
3 Reasons Not to Eat HoneyΒ > This one explain about the environmental damage and how we are killing the bees.
As a beekeeper, let me say the following.Β
As a vegan, you depend upon beekeeping. It doesnβt matter if you never use beeswax or eat honey. You still depend on beekeeping. It is absolutely impossible not to.Β
Because hereβs the secret; you know all those delicious fruits and vegetables you eat? You wouldnβt have them if it wasnβt for bees, and hereβs another secret; those bees were probably either kept by the farmer who grew them for the purpose of pollinating his/her crops, or moved to the farm during pollination season by a beekeeper.Β
If youβve ever eaten a cherry, almond, blueberry, tomato, melon, squash, raspberry, strawberryβ¦hell, most fruits or veggiesβ¦youβve benefited from beekeeping. There is simply no way to avoid it. If you leave it up to whatever pollinators happen to stop in from the surrounding area, your yields will suffer dramatically, which means less produce and less money for the farmer. Therefore, the easy and universally preferred method is to plop a few hives on the property. The girls will make sure that just about every last almond/cherry/blueberry flower is pollinated (Theyβre VERY good at what they do) and you can happily harvest a bumper crop. This is a universally used practice among food producers.Β
And do you know the best way to help make sure the bees survive?
Keep them. Organically, without using any chemicals. And hereβs a secret about beekeeping; you inspect the hives whether or not you take honey, to make sure the bees are healthy and doing well. (There are mites and diseases that can severely harm bees, and even as an organic beekeeper who doesnβt use chemicals on her girls there are methods I use to prevent/treat things like varroa mite infestation that can kill an otherwise healthy hive).
And yes, when you open a hive to inspect it, you might crush one or two bees. But tell me, honestly, that youβve never killed an insect. Bees themselves will kill sick/non productive members of the hive to ensure the health of the hive as a whole; I donβt see how my accidentally squishing one to ensure the health of the other 50,000 is any different.Β
And this is what all beekeepers do. And if you, as before mentioned, ever eat anything that isnβt grain-based, this is what took place to put that food on your plate.Β
I would also like to point out that bees will store as much honey as they possibly canβ¦which usually ends up being waaaaay more than they actually can use. To survive a log Iowa winter, my bees need about 100 lbs of honey per hive. Well, last year one hive had TWICE that. (I took 50 pounds, leaving them MORE than enough to get through the winter. I just checked on them today; theyβre alive and healthy).Β
You are NOT hurting them by taking a little honey for yourself, no more than you already are by looking in on them every two or three weeks to make sure theyβre healthy.Β
And again, if you ever eat any fruits or veggies, SOMEONE IS ALREADY KEEPING BEES TO POLLINATE THEM AND INSPECTING THEM TO MAKE SURE THEYβRE HAPPY AND HEALTHY.Β
KEEPING BEES IS NOT WHAT IS KILLING BEES IT IS WHAT IS SAVING BEES.Β
WITHOUT BEES YOUR VEGAN DIET IS IMPOSSIBLE.
WITHOUT THAT βEVILβ EXPLOITATION OF BEES YOUR VEGAN DIET IS IMPOSSIBLE.Β
AGAIN, BEEKEEPING IS WHAT IS SAVING BEES NOT KILLING THEM.Β
SO IF YOU EAT A LITTLE HONEY IT IS HONESTLY NO WORSE THAN EATING SOME ALMONDS AND FRUIT SALAD.Β
βDrops micβ
Why canβt bees be protected without taking the honey they produce? Iβm all for their protection and I didnβt born yesterday, I know that without bees we all gonna die, but why is it mandatory to steal their honey?
Yeah, that made no sense⦠You can keep bees without stealing from them. You can keep horses without riding them. You can keep dogs without abusing them. Do people really not get this?
Again, you donβt seem to be getting this.Β
Yes. You can keep bees without taking honey from them. But, as I said before, youβre ALREADY in the hive checking for diseases and pests. That, if anything, is what causes bees stress, not you taking a frame or two of honey (each frame of honey can hold 15 pounds!).Β
Also, thereβs a REASON you take honey from bees, not just because you want to eat it.Β
See, like I said before, bees will store as much honey as they can. Itβs instinctive. However, thereβs only so much room in a hive to put stuff, and honey isnβt the only thing in a hive. They also need room to raise brood, store pollen, ect. Now, if they run out of room, theyβll start feeling overcrowded, which will trigger swarming activity. You can, of course, add more supers (boxes) to the hive, but thereβs a limit on how many workers one queen can produce, and you donβt want more supers than they can police, even if all of them are stuffed full of honey. That way lies pests and raiding. So, what we want to do is make sure that they donβt feel overcrowded, while making sure that they donβt have more room than they can take care of.Β
When bees feel overcrowded, they swarm. When they swarm, they raise a new queen. The old queen and half the bees will then leave to try and find someplace to start a new hive. 90% of swarms die. As a beekeeper, you donβt want this.Β
You can, of course, purposefully let them start raising a new queen and then split a new hive off of the old one if you want to. Iβve done this myself. But this is not always desirable, for many reasons (no more room for more hives, canβt take care of more, donβt have a spare hive body on hand, ect.) Thereβs also the fact that a recently swarmed hive is susceptible to raiding by wasps/skunks (skunks LOVE to raid hives, the little bastards) or mice, as half the bees that would have defended it before are now gone. You donβt want this either; raiding can kill a hive as quick as disease or pests. (This is why I keep a VERY close eye on any hives that Iβve recently split, and have taken potshots at skunks in the backyard with a slingshot before. Not to kill them, just to scare them off.)
If you donβt want them to swarm, the easiest way to keep them from feeling cramped and give them a little new breathing room is to pull a few surplus honey frames theyβve filled up and replace them with empty frames. The girls will then happily go back to work filling the new empty frames with honey or brood or whatever they decide needs to go in all that new space. They donβt feel crowded any longer, the hive doesnβt swarm and stays strong, everyoneβs happy.Β
And what, then, am I supposed to do with these three frames of honey I pulled? Throw them away? Hell no. Thatβs 30-40 pounds of delicious, right there.Β
Humans and bees have whatβs called a symbiotic relationship. We both benefit from the arrangement. Donβt diss things if you donβt understand how they work.Β
And, one more timeβ¦keeping bees is necessary for your vegan diet to remain viable. A beekeeper is going to inspect all of those hives anyway, which is the most stressful part of beekeeping for the bees. You are, with your eating habits, (and by that I mean βreally just eatingβ, because thereβs NO diet that doesnβt rely on beekeeping) reliant on this practice. Taking a frame or two of honey is the LEAST stressful part of inspecting a hive for the bees.Β
Source; have kept bees organically for 10 years, help other hobbyists in the area who want to start keeping bees. Garden organically. Generally Actually Know Where My Food Comes From And What It Takes To Get It On My Plate.Β
I understand some people want to be kind and compassionate. But thereβs such a thing as being ignorantly compassionate, to the point where you forget how to do research, apparently.
I live for these defences of honey tbh
and the comments that give insight into beekeeping just make it better <3
Save The Bees
Friendly reminder that eating honey actually helps honeybees
A common misconception is that beekeepers abuse and βoverworkβ the bees to get a steady supply of honey and other βhive productsβ, but this is not true.
There is almost no evidence to suggest that human harvesting of honey, beewax, etc. is contributing to the decline of the bee population.
Supporting your local beekeepers actual helps bee populations, because if they canβt turn a profit on their goods they wonβt be able to get the supplies necessary to keep their hives healthy.
Also, keep in mind that beekeepers do not starve their bees by taking honey off the comb. They take the excess that will go to waste if not harvested.
(here is a pic of a bee, for your viewing pleasure)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch β’ No registration required β’ HD streaming
good morning! β‘ i decided to make vegan maple cinnamon bars for some people i love, and they turned out to be such a wonderful pre-autumn endeavor! π
ππ
if they end up having to physically drag trump out of the white house, I want that shit livestreamed.Β
We need to thank the Navajo a nation! They all got out and voted with no cars and few polling places- their population was enough to swing BOTH Arizona and New Mexico

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch β’ No registration required β’ HD streaming
god you know when one of your mutuals has a popular post on here and youβre just likeΒ βhey i know that guy :)β
Not to be over dramatic or anything but the decline in popularity of hand written letters is one of the disappointing decisions weβve made as a modern society .
Grimoire ideas
About you:
How you got started in the craft
Your spiritual journey
Things you connect to (animals, elements, plants, ect)
Types of magic you do
Your natal chart
Your deities (if you have any)
Correspondences:
Remember, you don't need to write down correspondences you will never need! So instead, write about...
Crystals you have/want
Plants you can grow yourself/already have around you. Check your spice cabinet
And list things to use those for! So that would be herb bundles to burn, salves, recipes, and so on.
Other things you can use in magic that you already have
This would be things like sea shells, snail shells, grass, dirt, candles. Get creative!
Other witchcraft stuff:
Your sigils
Planets
The sun/moon +moon phases
Zodiac signs
The elements
Symbolism (animals, shapes, and whatever else you wish to add)
Spells:
What makes a spell that works!!! This should help with making your own spells
What NOT to do
Different types of spells
Spells you will actually use
Divination:
A section on tarot cards and their meanings
How to use a pendulum
Meanings of oracle cards
Rune meanings and how to cast them
Lesser known forms of divination!!!
Mental health:
Grounding and centering
Burn out care and being energy efficient
A list of what motivates you to do your craft
Small spells for self care
Astral work:
Your astral space (a map, a description, drawings of important locations)
Your astral body, if it's any different than your physical one
A list of spirits and important information about them
Protection, sheilding, banishing, and safety
Manners when interacting with spirits and what NOT to do
Methods of projection/travel that work for you
Post-astral grounding methods
General spirit work:
How to interact with spirits and how NOT to interact with spirits
Protection, banishing, shielding, and other safety things
How to give offerings (there's more than one way!)
Methods of communicating with spirits
Signs of spirits
Ways spirits can send signs and messages (animals, dreams, and so on)
A list of different kinds of spirits you work with/have encountered
A section for research, especially if you're doing deity work.
Grounding, if it helps you afterwards
A log of interaction with spirits. This can be like a divination journal but with spirits, if that's what you do.
I'm building the path
To the endless summer
Out of green glass
And petals of flowers

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch β’ No registration required β’ HD streaming
In a forest will be forever one of my favourite places to be