Spanish Fly D9, a female aphrodisiac Supplement for women
Spanish Fly Female Arousal Pill, Concentrated
Authentic from Germany, highly stimulating.
New formula imported from Germany. Mix 5-10 drops into any drink.
Spanish Fly Female Arousal Pill, Spanish Fly D9
A number of love and aphrodisiacs using this name have been on the market for decades. A few drops of Spanish Fly are supposed to get women in the mood for love and men aroused enough to make porn stars blush.
In reality, most products marketed as Spanish Fly contain little more than water, sugar, and empty promises. The ingredients Spanish Fly is named for are actually quite potent.
What is Spanish Fly?
Spanish Fly is a sought-after aphrodisiac or female aphrodisiac. Spanish Fly Arousal Pill, a liquid female aphrodisiac, is taken orally to stimulate sexual arousal and sexual desire. It stimulates urinary tract itching and increases blood flow to the female genitals.
Where does it come from?
Spanish Fly is made from a blister beetle, specifically a substance produced by the beetle called cantharidin. The insect's name isn't for nothing: contact with the skin causes blisters caused by cantharidin.
Its use is long-standing, and its fans include:
Roman empresses who used cantharidin to promote sexual behavior worthy of their families.
Roman gladiators who used it for parties.
Queens who used it with their kings, and those kings with their mistresses to enhance the flavor of the spice.
The dried beetles were crushed and mixed with drinks or sweets, not always to the recipient's knowledge. They were consumed to produce a warm sensation throughout the body and swollen genitals. However, these warm, fluffy feathers are caused by inflammation, not attraction.
To read more about Spanish fly, click here.
How to use Spanish fly: Open a bottle and add 3-5 drops of Spanish fly oil to 220 ml of a drink, or even beer (if mixed with alcohol, the effect will take no more than 15 minutes).
Used to increase female libido, this drop is effective at improving female libido, boosting overall sexual desire, and helping achieve peak pleasure.
You may have heard of the so-called Spanish fly, a name commonly used for aphrodisiacs. Over the past few decades, various versions of the drug have been marketed by shady suppliers in the back pages of men's magazines. Advertisements often promise that the drops will stimulate sexual desire in you and your partner.
But Spanish fly has also resurfaced in popular culture time and time again, usually to signify that the item has been secretly handled. The Beastie Boys referenced this in the song "Brass Monkey" from their 1987 album Licensed to Ill.