feeling too sane? try Thirty Bug Bites! Thirty Bug Bites is a revolutionary new experience sure to make you lose what little grip on reality you have left. now for the low low price of a only a little bit of your blood!

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Indonesia
seen from Russia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from United States
feeling too sane? try Thirty Bug Bites! Thirty Bug Bites is a revolutionary new experience sure to make you lose what little grip on reality you have left. now for the low low price of a only a little bit of your blood!

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 • No registration required • HD streaming
always with you
Question for the Guzma vision you have; are they called snake bites or seviper bites? Ekans bites? I have been debating this with my fellow conspirators and have not found an agreed upon term. Also your art is just amazing!!!
As a person that leans towards a little realism in my non-fiction, I would just say snake bites. Mainly for the reason that, like in real life, we would not say something like ‘garden snake bites’ or ‘copperhead bites,’ although the latter sounds pretty neat. I do think that there might be some sort of regional difference, the same as how some piercers know placements by different names. Perhaps they’re interchangeable.
All that considered, Pokemon characters in general are a little ridiculous, so I’m sure many have a name for them that matches their own taste. *insert a clever jest about ‘bug bites’ for bug type trainers*
Thanks, by the way :}
My body looks like this
So Pípí can look like this

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 • No registration required • HD streaming
yall got any idea which kind of critter has been nibbling on me
i’ve got a lot of mosquite bites as usual but these seem very different. also not in the usual mosquito bite locations
Cool trick I discovered last year while on vacation and was reminded of this week—
You know those hydrocolloid patches for pimples? They also work great on mosquito bites! Which makes sense, since they operate on the same principle of pulling out bad stuff (mosquito saliva) and soothing irritated skin.
Bug Bites #009 - Azolla Weevil (Stenopelmus rufinasus)
Family: True Weevil Family (Curculionidae)
IUCN Conservation Status: Unassessed
Ferns of the genus Azolla (commonly known as Mosquito Ferns or Water Ferns) are aquatic plants that live as free-floating rafts on the surface of slow-moving freshwater habitats, absorbing nutrients directly from the water through their long, frilly roots while a unique species of cyanobacteria living on their leaves provides them with nitrogen. Able to rapidly reproduce as new plants grow from fragments that brake off from their leaves Azolla species tend to dominate the surface of bodies of water in which they occur, and under ideal conditions the rafts of floating foliage they form can become so dense that they prevent other aquatic organisms growing under the water from accessing light. To this end, the Azolla Weevil is an essential-but-easily-overlooked part of many swampy freshwater ecosystems in its native range of North America; a highly specialised herbivore able to walk across the surface of water without breaking the surface tension, adults of this species both feed on Azolla ferns and lay their eggs in cavities chewed into the leaves, providing their larvae with shelter and food as they develop. In parts of Africa, Asia and Europe the popularity of Azolla ferns as ornamental pond plants has allowed them to become established as highly destructive invasive species, but in recent years the introduction of captive-born of Azolla Weevils has proven effective in keeping these invasive populations under control; owing to their own rapid reproduction a small starting population of Azolla Weevils can explode to immense numbers so long as their host is abundant, and as they feed exclusively on Azolla ferns it is unlikely that they'll cause wider ecological damage or persist after Azolla numbers have been depleted.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Image Source: Here