in #hive-1417537 months ago

I hope you don't mind my asking you on this post, but do you think these are sylphs? sorry about the fuzzy phone shot.

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We have been being heavily sprayed here for three days now, and I keep thinking (hoping) I see sylphs too.

Here are how the skies looked just a bit to the east of those sylphs

chemtrails.jpg

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Same story here for the last few weeks. Heavy spraying most days and no big surprise, all that rain we were expecting didn't come. Though i am wondering now if the goal doesn't in fact relate to bees, which i am told by a local bee producer are no longer producing honey in this region. He thinks it is because of lack of rain but am wondering now if it doesn't relate directly to the chemtrails. Without the bees this fruit producing region effectively becomes useless and it all plays perfectly into the hands of the WEF and their goals for food production post 2030. We will have robot bees!

To answer your question those do look a lot like sylphs. Great to see :)

Feels like ours are inactive at the moment. Perhaps they took a holiday in America?

Same scenario here. We were supposed to get two days of rain this weekend, severe thunderstorms for Sunday. Preceded by three days of chemtrails, we got only one light sprinkle.

I just started seeing sylphs here. They make me so happy to see!

I think you know about my love of dandelions. My tiny back yard is covered with them, and I had more bees this year than before. This is only my third summer here though. I have many more birds, too.

Around here, beekeepers are attributing their awful lack of honey to loss of land to windmills and solar farms. No one pays any attention to the chemtrails. Except me. I point them out whenever I can. Problem is, an hour after clear blue skies are covered with a grid of chemtrails, the skies are overcast and folks don't believe me. I've started taking pictures to show them that "an hour ago, the skies looked like this."