It’s funny. Here I am, writing for an audience, but sometimes I wonder how people would even find this blog in the first place.
I’m sure it has been crawled by search engines, but I don’t know what you would even search for. Ideally we come up when you search for “zoophile blog,“ or similar.
But I don’t want this place to be one-note. There aren’t a lot of zoo blogs, period, and a lot of them spend most of their time explaining the basics of zoosexuality, for obvious reasons. It an be really useful to be able to point to a post and say “here is how I explain this in my own words.“
There’s a lot less about just being a person (who happens to be deeply in love with horse ass).
I was actually considering making some tech posts recently. I’ve mentioned this site is self-hosted, and I have a fondness for setting up weird projects. It would be incredibly funny to be picked up as the google search snippet for setting up wordpress or something. (I’d need to figure out how to set a readable background template, though! The straight green-blue background is deeply satisfying to my zooey butt, but also not the best for code snippets. I think with white background I may shift the rest towards the traditional colors? It is so hard to figure out how to modify default themes, though, if I figure that out I may post a tutorial.)
This would, of course, reduce the search engine’s chance of finding us, because when the hell is the most relevant search result going to be “zoophile tech blog“? It’s anti-content, everything I have read suggests every lever on every major website is tuned to provide a recommendation stream with a single topic.
I’m far too distractable, I guess. If you visit and want to do us a favor, leave a comment! It’s how we know we aren’t speaking into a void, and we appreciate that.

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