![]() To build low hangers, you have to stretch the scrotum to make room for them, and you need to stretch the plumbing as well- but the most difficult part is to stretch those "suspenders", the strong tissues that adjust the travel range of the testicles. It is the seminal vesicle that spasms and ejaculates not the testicles. It is the seminal vesicle that produces semen, the fluid part of the ejaculate, while the testicles produce sperm, or the "active ingredient". There's also the plumbing blood vessels and the passages that carry sperm to the seminal vesicle, located by the prostrate. The scrotal sac itself also reacts to temperature. This is a unique tissue that acts a little like a ligament- but it's more flexible and extends or contracts in reaction to temperature. They are supported by what I'll call "suspenders" from the inner side of the pubic bone. The testicles are pretty much free inside the scrotal sac, but they aren't held up by the scrotum. So you want to build one of those gorgeous sets of low-hanging, heavy balls? We can help, read on!įirst, you need to understand the anatomy of what you are working with.
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