Eat the Princess With Your Hairy Tongue
Dracaena trifasciata facts, tales, and spells
Welcome to Honeygloom’s Summer Vacation! In an effort to avoid burn out in the summer heat, I’ll be sharing some previously paywalled Witch stories and spells throughout the next few months while I finish some projects I’ve been dying to write.
I hope you enjoy!
Dracaena trifasciata
Dracaena trifasciata have long been popular plants for beginners. They can handle low light, barely need any water, and look good no matter how you treat them. But these sword-like leaves are so much more than just hardy house plants. Dracaena comes from the Greek for “female dragon” and
Hair of the Tongue
Spring comes late in the mountains. In March we’re still covered in snow. Which is fine, with no gardening and little foraging, I get a lot of reading done. I have time to test out new spells, doom scroll, and then come up with more new spells. It’s never slow on the business end up here, though. People come plodd…
Dracaena trifasciata
True, the legendary Saint George captured the greedy dragon and freed the fair maiden from its jaws, but he also wouldn’t kill the dragon and free the town it held captive until they all converted to Christianity... at least in some versions. The old carrot and the stick approach that He loves so much. Does make one wonder about the nature of protection…




