Philozoofur's Corner

Deeply in Love With Horse Ass

  • Zoo Links Deep Search

    Some (small) additional links, found with a custom search engine. Javascript-heavy sites are currently unfindable. I can crawl from a given start point, if there are zoos who know additional sites.

    These were found from a crawl using the resources listed at https://zoopride.net/#resources – A good site for things that are still around.


  • Readbeast.blog

    Apparently they host a surprisingly large collection of bestiality stories.

    (Found while searching for "zoophile tech blog" – We’ve made the second page on Dogpile!)


  • Mmmm, plugins…

    Recently, I’ve been leaning more towards Markdown editing; the Gutenberg editor is… fine, but not really ideal on tablet, which is where I do most of my writing. To that end I installed the "Markup Markdown" editing plugin to be able to edit my posts in this simpler form, unfortunately I’ve discovered that this creates two conflicting formats. I can’t just turn it off if I need to edit a Gutenberg post – It needs to stay running to power the newer posts, or they simply appear as raw Markdown text. I had a critical site error caused by one of my old (Gutenberg) posts, and I think it was due to the interaction. Ahh, this may be exciting.

    Markdown is still better though, fuck visual editors. I’ve never once seen one that worked properly.


  • Growing the Zoo Community

    (This is a letter I wrote to the zooey.pub crew about our community – I’m posting it here to have some of my thoughts recorded.)

    This is a response to Tarro’s March article, "The Slow Death of the Universe", despairing of ever growing the zoo community. I don’t think it’s because of a lack of interest or effort. Instead I think it is a symptom of a larger problem: The internet itself is dying, in favor of centralization and lockdown.

    Seemingly everyone is relying on a handful of central services, all of whom are cracking down more and more all the time. It’s hard to get traction when we’re actively policed off of every major website. ZooTT is technically on Bluesky and Twitter, but half the staff has gotten banned one time or another, and you can’t have honest zooey discourse without catching one too.I want to listen to more zooey music, but putting "zoophile" in your band’s description gets you banned from Bandcamp, I have no way to find it. Heck, I’ve lost track of the number of websies that don’t even let you search for “zoophile“. We want community, but the services we depend on for it have spent an enormous amount of effort to shut us out.

    The key is the old internet, and the Fediverse. We need more self-hosting zoos! We need zoos with Wordpress blogs and personal pages, Mastodon servers and XMPP chatrooms. I also want to grow the community, to make more webpages. I run a zooey blog that’s just… my personal blog. (philozoofur.com) Right now, I’d love to have engagement, but I don’t know that my hosting provider will not take it down if it becomes well known. I don’t know who provides zoo-friendly hosting, and serving from a personal computer requires additional steps and a DMZ host to get a public IP address anyway. It’s not clear to me how the large zoo resouces are even run.

    Still, at the end of the day, there is cause for optimism. There are far more zoos online now than there were in the early days of the internet, this should be possible. If we can find a way to empower individual zoos to create, we can absolutely grow the community further. With increased ability comes increased creation, and with enough of us, no one will be able to take us down. If you do know of hosting you are comfortable pointing towards, I’d be happy to write up some kind of tutorial for getting a blog set up! I too want there to be more zooey spaces in the universe, and I would be thrilled if I could help contribute to the larger community in any way.

    ~Philozoofur

    PS. Wordpress has an ActivityPub plugin, by the way! You can connect to Mastodon with a Wordpress blog. It’s jank, but you can do it. So far it’s the most… utilitarian? Way we’ve found to connect. No dependencies on needing zoo-friendly server owners, and no need to run a dedicated Mastodon server. Mastodon zoos can follow me at @[email protected] – It’s the social media of the future! 😉


  • The Holy Zeta

    A pride zeta we made a while back

    IMG_5335

  • Updated Pride Flag

    The State of Fausty

    Felt wrong not to make this version too.

    RIP, Fausty. You were a real one.


  • New Slogan

    Going from “The Wannabe Zoophile Intelligentsia“ to “Deeply in Love With Horse Ass“.

    Why? Because horse ass is great, and more people need to know it.


  • Discoverability

    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.


  • Spam

    Holy crap, Wordpress blogs get a lot of spam. I’ve not gotten a single comment (expected, this blog is niche as heck), but I’ve gotten a few dozen spam comments from some weird social graph\crypto scam websites.

    I just want a nice place to post about zoo culture, and occasonally get very horny about horses. I’m not here to scam my readers. Maybe someday we’ll have a thriving comment section, but until then, I’m not filling it with crypto links!


  • Florida Man Eaten by Alligator

    I.

    Donald Trump awoke from a night of unsettling dreams.

    He had dreamt he had been eaten by an alligator. He had insisted he be allowed to wade into the swamp, a beautiful calling he did not understand. He did not swim so much as shuffle water away, parting the moss and algae to creep forward slowly into the mangroves. Raw power was waiting for him in the water. He dreamt the water rose above him, and he dreamt that he was eaten.

    And then he was himself again.

    II.

    He was in bed, either waking up or going to sleep. What was he going to do? Something.

    Golf.

    It was golf. He had a golf game tomorrow. Mar-A-Lago?

    He looked around.

    Yes, he thought to himself. This is the Mar-A-Lago bedroom. I am playing golf tomorrow.

    He was in his Mar-A-Lago bedroom, and he had a game of golf tomorrow.

    III.

    He dreamt he was a conqueror, in a golden chariot with Nobel laurels. He was the ruler of a great empire, the commander of the largest army in the world. He…he could… he could invade Venezuela!

    He shouted it out, and assumed someone would bring it up later.

    He could… invade Greenland!

    He could… invade…

    Invade…

    IV.

    He snapped out of his thoughts during a meeting, some war thing, and looked around.

    He was at a table, with a dozen or so unimportant people. The other people were acting like he was in charge. Good, he thought to himself. He demanded to invade someone. The other people in the room looked confused. He became impatient.

    “You!” he said, pointing at someone at random. “I’m going to invade you!” He chased them around the room, stripping his pants and lunging towards them. He would show everyone in the room who was in charge.

    He woke up.

    V.

    Later in the meeting he was reminded of another topic. The meeting people were leaving, and he was tired, but he still wanted to talk and so he pointed to someone at random and said, “I had a dream about you.”

    And then they couldn’t leave, and he liked that about them.

    But the random person turned around and asked, “Oh? Our golf game?” And then he remembered who the person was, and suddenly he was all smiles. Of course, they played golf together. They were golfers. So he looked for a new topic. “I actually had another dream too. About an alligator. A big one. The biggest.” He looked the appropriate amount of smug. “That’s what you wanna be,” he said. “An alligator.” He knew everything about alligators.

    VI.

    It was sunny, and there was an alligator on the course. In the distance.

    He looked at the alligator.

    The alligator did not notice him.

    He stopped playing golf for a moment, and stared at it more. It still did not notice him. That was absolutely unacceptable, everyone should know who he was.

    He had arrived on course with his entourage. He had already heard the news for today, and it said he was doing great, so they were clearly useless. He screamed “who let this thing in my backyard?” and they scrambled to make a phone call.

    He looked back at the alligator.

    The gator had opened their eyes.

    He was surprised. Somehow, he hadn’t expected the gator to have responded at all. Even though he knew it would, shouting always worked, it still felt unnatural to command its attention. The simple act of being acknowledged created a power difference he couldn’t articulate, some kind of existential pushback he couldn’t shout away. No… not pushback. A pull.

    He became exquisitely aware of his body. Every bone, every muscle, every deposit of his fat. He became aware of the taut animal muscle of the alligator. It was beautiful, somehow. A predator, and he respected that.

    The alligator returned to the swamp.

    The rest of the day was a blur. For him.

    VII.

    The next day he was thinking about alligators. He said, “people wrestle alligators, you know.” A random person was standing beside him. “I bet I could wrestle an alligator, ” he said. “They look strong, but ya just gotta hold their mouth shut. That’s all there is. Anyone could do it. Not anyone, it’s actually hard for most people, but I could do it.”

    He stayed on topic for a while. Eventually, someone suggested watching videos on the internet. He was promised they would find the best videos for him. He spent his day transfixed, watching men grapple lizards on repeat.

    VIII.

    It was progress, of a kind, for him. He had found a new focus, and he always seemed more alive when he had something new to think about. It was unusual for him, because it was not his enemy. It was one of his kind. His screaming fits would devolve into loops of “They’re not alligators. They’ll never win. They’re not alligators.”

    And eventually he would stop, look a random person square in the eye, and say: “I am an alligator.”

    Everything else dropped from his mind. The only thing that remained was his mantra. I am an alligator. I am an alligator. I am an alligator.

    IX.
    In the oval office he turned on a television. An unattractive woman was reporting. He almost changed the channel, before he heard her say “Florida man, eaten by alligator.”

    Maybe she wasn’t so bad.

    They showed footage of the alligators near the scene. Maybe one of them was the one who did it. He put his hand down his pants.

    “Idiot didn’t know how to wrestle alligators,” he thought. “Exactly,” said someone in the room. “It’s amazing they survived so long as a species.”

    X.

    A handful of logs were floating in the swamp near the green, or at least what appeared to be logs. Useless lizards, he thought.

    No one was paying attention to him today. Not the news, not the flunkies. It was time to show them what he was made of. So he started talking.

    “You know, people think alligators are dangerous. They’re really not, not if you know what you’re doing. Look.”

    He began waddling towards the edge of the green, shouting at the secret service until they let him go. He had to fire two agents, but he could do whatever he wanted.

    “Finally,” he thought. “I’m about to be on TV again looking tough, wrestling an alligator.” He focused in.

    I am the better alligator. I am the best alligator.

    He shuffled into the swamp, the beautiful swamp full of green moss and powerful creatures. As he moved, he became more and more certain this was right, that he belonged with the reptiles. He belonged body against body, writhing and struggling, until he was victorious. He knew how to pin someone down. He shivered, anticipation building.

    There was a brief instant where he understood the dangers of alligators. All it took was 800lbs of muscular lizard, with her jaws shut tight. She had the firmest grip he had ever felt.

    He saw. He came. And he went.