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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
elodieunderglass
scotchjolras

The bees and wasps now recognise me as the person who gives them water. Which sounds cool but it means everytime I go outside they harass me until I fill up the waterer. On the bright side, I no longer have to fear wasps as they just buzz around me non-threateningly now.

theropodtheroblogs

You are their water deity now

thefingerfuckingfemalefury

“THE WATER BRINGER HAS ARRIVED”

“ALL HAIL!

ALL HAIL!”

petermorwood

Makes a change from fishing careless bumblebees out of the millstone water-fountain. They would land for a drink, be safe enough standing on the ridges, but would get swept off if they stepped in the grooves and wind up in the little pool beneath.

Fortunately that stopped the same day, after the pebbles went in - as on this example - but it made for an interesting morning. A wet bumblebee sounds really furious and inclined to vent its fury on the first vent-worthy thing it meets… (Nobody got stung, though we were sworn at in Bee quite a bit.)

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… Good Omens asks viewers not to take it, or the apocalypse, too seriously. But it would be a mistake to take it as just a lark. A humanist raised in the Church of England, Pratchett had a long, irreverent interest in gods and belief systems. Born to a Jewish family that practiced Scientology and educated in Anglican schools, Gaiman conveys in his work an even more intense fascination with religion and mythology.
Source: vulture.com
good omens well THAT explains a lot terry pratchett neil gaiman good omens spoilers