Spanking And Caning Pepper Hart
Can you even have a kinky lesbian hookup without a proper spanking and caning session? I suppose that theoretically you can, but I’m glad that in this case, Mona Wales and Pepper Hart did not:
Photos are from Whipped Ass, a Kink Unlimited channel.
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Wow. That was hot, Spankboss. Thanks for sharing. (Yes, there are still people around, but I must say, we don’t comment as much as we used to, do we?)
Cheers.
You’re welcome!
Re: the comments, it’s not you, it’s the way the world has gone. Blogs are archaic, the stand-alone web is getting pretty creaky, and all the “social” has gone to social media So, yeah, not as many people read blogs, and even when they do, they don’t comment much. It is what it is.
It’s very much the case that I’m rapidly becoming eccentric for even maintaining this place. But I think there’s value in it, even with a declining and pretty quiet readership. “The web” may be dead in the era of social media, but kinky/sexy stuff isn’t very welcome on social media, except maybe on Twitter, and even there, the shadowbans and search invisibility is getting worse fast. Hashtag: #pornocalypse. Maybe I’m just stubborn, but I feel like I’m the place that will always be here, even when the most recent flashy social media porn hangout (*cough* Tumblr *cough* *cough*) has evicted all the cool kinky people.
Trust me, you’ve got your fans! I read your blog regularly and have for 15 years or so, though I rarely comment. Actually, it just so happens that your blog is my primary source for sexual pleasure online and not far from being the only one. :D So, greetings from a 38-year-old spanko lady from Finland. Still here. Thank you for “being eccentric”.
K, you are welcome!
Sometimes I think that it’s rest of the world that’s gone eccentric, not me. Expectations are outsized in the era of the internet and the tech IPO. Everybody wants to run a huge media property with flashy advertising deals and millions of daily impressions and sub-editors and stock options. But once upon a time, a small-press magazine with five or ten thousand monthly subscribers was considered socially useful, and a small town newspaper in a town of 2,000 people was a perfectly respectable small business. You didn’t need to be growing at the rate of 1.2 million “users” per quarter to be considered a worthwhile publication.
By the modern way of thinking, a site like this where a few thousand people stop by every day is a nothingburger. But the way I see it, a few thousand people is a lot! You wouldn’t flake on an audience like that if they were all sitting on chairs waiting for you to go on stage on open mike night, right?