New Substack post! Its the transcript from the June Actually Magic call, and the theme was The Starseed Journey β¨
https://open.substack.com/pub/katemagic/p/the-starseed-journey?r=6wfr3&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true
https://open.substack.com/pub/katemagic/p/the-starseed-journey?r=6wfr3&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true
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Solstice blessings from London π
Popped in at London Stone but forget to take a pic.
The grid is activating!
Our power is returning.
Remembrance is accelerating πβ¨
https://substack.com/@katemagic/p-202004269
Popped in at London Stone but forget to take a pic.
The grid is activating!
Our power is returning.
Remembrance is accelerating πβ¨
https://substack.com/@katemagic/p-202004269
Forwarded from EARTHSEEDERS
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The Secrets of the Sea Dragon
Nature's "Rainbow Sea Dragons"βoften referring to the highly camouflaged Leafy Sea Dragon are real, magical-looking marine fish. They live exclusively in the cool, shallow waters and kelp forests along the southern and western coasts of Australia.
They do not use their leaf-like appendages for swimming. Instead, these leafy outgrowths mimic the swaying movement of ocean kelp, rendering them nearly invisible to predators.
It is the male sea dragon who carries the babies. Females deposit vibrant pink or golden eggs onto a specialized patch under the male's tail. He incubates and protects them for roughly four weeks before "giving birth" to miniature sea dragons.
Because of their elusiveness, they historically possessed a near-mythical reputation among early explorers. Their fragile, plant-like structure led many to believe they were fantastical hoaxes or imaginary creatures.
Join @EARTHSEEDERS
Nature's "Rainbow Sea Dragons"βoften referring to the highly camouflaged Leafy Sea Dragon are real, magical-looking marine fish. They live exclusively in the cool, shallow waters and kelp forests along the southern and western coasts of Australia.
They do not use their leaf-like appendages for swimming. Instead, these leafy outgrowths mimic the swaying movement of ocean kelp, rendering them nearly invisible to predators.
It is the male sea dragon who carries the babies. Females deposit vibrant pink or golden eggs onto a specialized patch under the male's tail. He incubates and protects them for roughly four weeks before "giving birth" to miniature sea dragons.
Because of their elusiveness, they historically possessed a near-mythical reputation among early explorers. Their fragile, plant-like structure led many to believe they were fantastical hoaxes or imaginary creatures.
Join @EARTHSEEDERS