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@maestro-eros
Selfies are hard.
Peach.
How do you like the view?
🔥: @muse-of-maestro.
Follow her new blog, @musesmischief.
Selfies are hard.
Today, I got to rest!!
I wanted to use buzz buzz so I asked daddy and he told me I needed to take cute photos for him, so I did cuz I want buzzbuzz and also I’m a good girl 👧
Wiggle
Kisses from the sun 🌞
She give me toothaches just from kissing me…
⚱️ Onlyfans || Instagram ⚱️
Whore-ticulture: A series of nudes with my plants.
Clematis var. Doctor Ruppel (pink) and ???? (purple) - Clematis, leather flower
Clematis is a genus of about 380 species within the buttercup family, Ranunculaceae, and are mainly of Chinese and Japanese origin. The genus name Clematis is from Ancient Greek κληματίς : clēmatís, ("a climbing plant") from κλήμα : klḗma – 'twig, sprout, tendril'.
Perennially popular among gardeners since Clematis 'Jackmanii' was introduced to societies in the west in 1862; more cultivars are being produced constantly. Typically found throughout the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, they grow best in cool, moist, well-drained soil in full sun. In hotter climates (like mine), they prefer a break from the afternoon sun and their roots like to stay shaded and cool all day, so a layer of rocks or other plants to shade the soil is ideal. I adore them for their big, showy flowers that are the second to appear in my garden after the magnolia each spring. These are technically the very first plants that I bought when I was told we’d be moving by June of 2021… we moved the last week of August 2022 which meant they had to live/suffer in their nursery pots for over a year.
We all miraculously survived and are now happily planted and thriving.
Whore-ticulture: A series of nudes with my plants.
Ficus elastica 'Tineke' - variegated rubber tree plant
Rubber tree plants are native to Southeast Asia and India and are popular indoor plants. Rubber trees have a long history of human use in the production of latex, as such people with latex allergies should avoid contact with the plant’s milky sap. The plants are mildly toxic to cats and other pets and consumption should be avoided as well. Preferring shade or partial sun they are lovely, if slow growing, house plants. They grow 3-6 feet tall indoors, are good air purifiers, and prefer to dry out decently between waterings making them fantastic for the forgetful waterers out there. The ‘Tineke’ variety is loved for its green, white, and pink variegation.
This plant was a random present from @maestro-eros on New Year’s Day 2022. The small curled leaf closest to my arm in the fourth photo was the first leaf that opened when I brought it home from the plant store. You can tell by how the leaves have improved in that year and half how happy it’s been in my care. One of these days I’m going to have to try and encourage it to split so it’s not one tall stem, but I’m not quite ready to cut it yet. It’s always so scary messing with a plant that is clearly happy.
Whore-ticulture: A series of nudes with my plants.
Phalenopsis sp. - Moth orchid, moon orchid, phalenopsis orchid
Phalaenopsis, also known as moth orchids, is a genus of about seventy species of plants in the family Orchidaceae. Orchids in this genus are monopodial epiphytes or lithophytes with long, coarse roots, short, leafy stems and long-lasting, flat flowers arranged in a flowering stem that often branches near the end. Orchids in this genus are native to India, Taiwan, China, Southeast Asia, New Guinea and Australia with the majority in Indonesia and the Philippines. In their native habitats you can find them growing on the sides of trees where their roots will grow between the grooves of the bark and absorb moisture as it drips down the tree.
To mimic this at home give them bright, indirect light, a misting here and there if humidity is low, and water then regularly allowing them to drain completely. They rot terribly if left in standing water, and shrivel up if you don’t water them enough. I’ve killed more than a few phalenopsis in my time but after years of practice I’m finally learning my rhythm with them.
This one was kind enough to bloom again after a year of being dormant in my bedroom. Patience really pays off with these. When we bought it the growers had fed it with orange dyed water and the veins in the white part of the flower were orange. If you’ve ever seen dark blue phalenopsis flowers and wondered how they did that, now you know (the vibrant technicolor daisies are done the same way)!
Whore-ticulture: A series of nudes with my plants.
Lilium - Asiatic hybrids - Asian lily, Asiatic hybrid lily, Asiatic lily
Asiatic lilies are hybrids originating from six Lillium species native to Asia. They used to be quite difficult to grow but hybridization added significant advances in disease resistance making them now among the easiest to grow in flower beds and containers. Hardy to -20°F (-29°C) and able to withstand hot summer temperatures make it ideal for just about anywhere you have some decent well-draining soil. Blooming early, flowers last about a month and they make excellent cut flowers; unlike their Oriental lily counterparts they have no scent. Weird factoid, half the petals of the lily aren’t petals at all but sepals (the part that wraps around the flower buds) and collectively they are called tepals.
They are toxic to cats and even small amounts of their pollen can lead to renal failure, so keep an eye on your feline friends.
Removing the anthers (the brown sausage looking things covered in pollen) is highly recommended as the pollen WILL stain -anything- it touches, or possibly kill it if it’s a cat.
These lilies were a Mother’s Day gift to me from my kids back in 2019. I threw the pot outside after the lilies died back, lo and behold, they kept coming back. Asian and Oriental lilies have been my favorites for as long as I can remember as they remind me of my paternal grandmother who I loved dearly. It’s only fitting that my very first tattoo was the lily on my back as an ode to her.
~Contribute to my plant/coffee coffer~
Whore-ticulture: A series of nudes with my plants.
Chlorophytum comosum - spider plant, spider ivy, ribbon plant.
Spider plants are a species of evergreen perennial flowering plant of the family Asparagaceae. It is native to tropical and Southern Africa but has become naturalized in other parts of the world, including Western Australia and Bangladesh. Chlorophytum comosum is easy to grow as a houseplant because of its resilience, but it can be sensitive to the fluoride in tap water, which commonly gives it "burnt tips". Variegated forms are the most popular, often they are popular hanging plants. They put out plantlets that hang from long stems sometimes called spiderettes or pups. They prefer bright, indirect light, are edible, and are a hallucinogen to cats (which is why mine live on top of the fridge where my cats can’t reach them).
For being easy to care for I managed to kill the first couple spider plants I tried to bring into the house (or maybe it was the cats fault). The larger spider plant with lots of pups was a prop from my mother’s plant and the little baby spider plant was a gift @petitedeviant gave me during a brief visit. Both could use a transplant soon which means I’ll have to find somewhere else to keep them away from the cats, but that’s a problem for another day.
i made a discord server!!!! come chat!!! PM for the invite link 😘
I'm reeeeally fluffy
Lovingly squeezing muse’s bruises is an important part of aftercare. ❤️
For me, dominance is about trust and control.
Watch how fast @maestro-eros adjusts once he realizes “that hit was too much for her”. See how he reads my body language and the flogger crumbles mid-swing just before the next impact? Not only that he pulls the flogger to the side getting it as far from me as possible, ready to begin aftercare. That hit wasn’t harder than any others I’ve taken, I just wasn’t in the headspace to take a lot of pain that day. He’s not a mind-reader, but he knows how to read me. I didn’t use my safeword. I didn’t say anything. I didn’t have to.
Being a dominant isn’t so much about controlling someone else as it is about having the utmost control of yourself. I can give him anything because I trust him to read me when I cannot speak for myself. I trust him to stop when I say or show when.
I know he has unwavering control of himself, and as such I can let myself be wildly out of control with him.