961 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
961 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
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AUSTRALIAN SUPPLEMENT FOR THE NATURAL HIGHS FAQ
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Author: Michael from Melbourne (Hex)
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with thanks to J.
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John morgan_j@summer.chem.su.oz.au and
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Petrus ppennane@cc.helsinki.fi for assistance.
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INTRODUCTION
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Hi there, I decided to do an Australian Supplement for the Natural Highs
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FAQ. Information was taken without permission from my Ethnobotany lecture
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notes, from The Genus Psilocybe by Gaston Guzman, 1983 (a very detailed
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study on Psilocybes), from Mushrooms and Toadstools of Australia, by
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C.I. Shepherd and C.J. Totterfell, 1988 (good book on Australian genera),
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from The Magical and Ritual use of Herbs by Richard Alan Miller, 1983 (a
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very useful book with an occasional mistake, a lot of the plants in this
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list are from here), and from Wild Medicine in Australia by A.B. &
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J.W. Cribb, 1981. Also of great use was Plants of the Gods by R.E. Schultes
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and A. Hoffmann, 1979 (the classic hallucinogen ethnobotany work!). Other
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useful books are The Strangest Plants in the World by S., D. & J. Talalaj,
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1991, (a easy book for the general public but it is not as technical or as
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accurate as the other references), and Poisonous and Hallucinogenic
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Mushrooms, by R. & K. Haard, 1980. For general Australian vegetation I used
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Flora of Australia (the 49 volume series) and Flora of N.S.W.
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As a note for anthropologists and ethnobotanists, the Australian Aborigine
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did not take any of the plant species that produced hallucinations apart
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from the rare use of Corkwood which might be a delusinogen. They used
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nicotine (from native tobacco and Pituri) and alcohol (from natural
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fermentation of Eucalyptus gunii sugar rich sap or from honey ants and the
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flowers of Lysiphyllum carronii mixed together), so who knows how many
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native species are hallucinogenic (some authors claim that Pituri is a
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hallucinogen and it is possible that it might be a deliriant in large
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amounts due to the anti-cholinergics, then again it might not be).
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Natives from PNG to the north used hallucinogens but the ethnobotanical
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literature on plants used for entertainment purposes in PNG (such as New
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Guinea Vegetation by K. Paijmams (Ed), 1976) are not as well compiled as
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books on Aboriginal plant usage (Wild Medicine in Australia). The CSIRO
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in the post war years did a phytochemical survey examining many of
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Australia's plants for alkaloid content and this has been compiled in a
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book Plants for Medicines by D.J. Collins, C.C.J. Culvenor, J.A. Lamberton,
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J.W. Loder and J.R. Price, CSIRO, 1990.
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If you know of any plants not on this list please post on alt.drugs and we
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will expand the list.
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DISCLAIMER
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The information presented herein is for ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY and can
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be found in ethnobotanical literature. Most (if not all) of the substances
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listed in this faq are illegal to ingest and/or possess. The authors and
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editors assume no responsibility should the information presented here be
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used, misused, misunderstood, inaccurate or even read. Reading this faq
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constitutes an agreement to these terms. If you are afraid you might be
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tempted to use any of the substances mentioned here in illegal ways when
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presented with the knowledge to do so, STOP READING NOW.
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Many of the botanicals listed here are highly toxic and deadly. Always
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keep them away from children.
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This faq may be reproduced verbatim, in whole or in part, by any means, and
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distributed freely by whatever means available, provided no charge is made
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for the copy and this disclaimer is included.
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============================================================================
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HALLUCINOGENIC MUSHROOMS I
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Family: Amanitaceae
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Genus: Amanita
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Species: muscaria (Fly Agaric)
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The famous white warted red capped toadstool. The cap can be from 3 cm to
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30 cm across. A veil is present in young specimens which later on becomes
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a white collar. Fruits late autumn and winter. Habitat is in introduced
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pine, birch and beech forests in the ACT, southern NSW, SA, Tasmania and
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Victoria. Internationally it is found from Europe north of Spain across
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northern India to Japan and eastern Siberia. In North America it is found
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from Alaska across Canada and the US to the eastern seaboard. It is occurs
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in the highland areas of southern Mexico and Guatemala.
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Usage: Fresh mushroom should be sliced vertically in 1 cm segments and
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heated in an oven at 75 - 80 Celsius (165 - 175F) until dried. Start by
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having 1/4 to 1/2 of a 10cm diameter sized mushroom until you know your
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tolerances.
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Also in ancient societies which used the mushroom such as the Koryaks,
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the poorer people used to catch and drink the urine of the rich who ate
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the fly agarics. As the muscimol and muscazone are not metabolized by
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the body, this allowed the poor to enjoy the hallucinations.
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Effects: Both Visual & Auditory hallucinations, OOBE's and being
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transformed into an animal are some of the interesting hallucinations.
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Atropine exacerbates the toxic effects of muscimol and ibotenic acid and
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should not be administered (it is used in cases of muscarine poisoning
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which is the poison in other Amanita species).
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History: About 3500 years ago, the Aryans invaded the Indus Valley of India
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from the north, bringing with them the worship of soma. The Aryans composed
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1028 hymns, the collection is known as the Rig Veda. About 120 of these
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hymns are dedicated to drinking soma and drinking urine enriched in soma.
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R. Gordon Wasson and Wendy O'Flaherty were able to interpret the references
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in the hymns to indicate that soma was A.muscaria.
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Fly Agaric has been used for centuries from northern Europe across to
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Siberia as a shamanistic inebriant by both the Ostyak and Vogul (western
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Siberian Finno-Ugrian peoples), the Chukchi, Koryak and Kamchadal of
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northeastern Siberia. It is also possible that the berserkers of Scandinavia
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used Fly Agaric as an intoxicant to produce the berserker state of mind.
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In North America it has been used by the Dogrib Athabascan who live in the
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Mackenzie Mountains of nw Canada and it is also used by Ojibway Indians who
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live around Lake Superior in Michigan as a hallucinogen.
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Active Constituents: These mushrooms contain muscimol and muscazone (in
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smaller amounts and less active than muscimol) both are CNS hallucinogens.
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Ibotenic acid which is the principle agent of toggle-switch intoxication
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(which cause muscle spasms, flushing of the skin and drowsiness), and
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muscarine, a highly toxic alkaloid (muscarine content is extremely low,
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0.0002% in fresh tissue - too low for phyisiological activity). The low
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heat in cooking the mushroom decarboxylates and dehydrates the ibotenic
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acid into muscimol and muscazone.
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===========================================================================
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AUSTRALIAN IBOGAINE SHRUB
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Family: Apocynaceae
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Genus: Ervatamia
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Species: orientalis
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A shrub that grows from 2 to 6 meters tall with smooth leaves occuring
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opposite to each other on the stem. The leaves are 10 to 22 cm long and
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from 4 to 7 cm wide. The flowers are white with twisted petals and it
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flowers from October to May. The fruits occur in pairs, are smooth, curved
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3 sided banana like with an orange colour, with fruiting from February to
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August. Its habitat is in coastal monsoon vine thickets, at the edge of
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tropical rainforests, or on stabilised dunes in monsoon regions. It is
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found across the top end from northern W.A. through to Cape York in
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Queensland. It is also found in various parts of South East Asia.
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Effects: Ibogaine is a hallucinogen. It is also used to treat heroin
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and morphine addiction as it eliminates withdrawal symptons and in most
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users it also eliminates further craving for heroin or morphine (High
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Times, March 1992).
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History: E. orientalis was originally described as Tabernanthe orientalis,
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even after its reclassification it is still closely related to T. iboga,
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a shrub native to Africa. There is no history of usage by the Australian
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Aborigine but the related T. iboga plant in Africa is used as a
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hallucinogen and is used to meet the plant god Bwiti and to communicate
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with their ancestors. T. iboga also has stimulant properties and is used
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to keep hunters awake.
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Active Constituents: The leaves contain ibogaine and the related alkaloids
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iboxygaine, voacristine, vobasine, dregamine, ervatamine and
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19-dehydroervatamine.
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Knox, J.R. and Slobbe, J., 1975. Indole Alkaloides from Ervatamia
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orientalis I-III. Aust. J. Chem., 28, 1813-1856.
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============================================================================
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CALAMUS
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Family: Araceae
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Genus: Acorus (Sweet Flag)
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Species: calamus
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A perennial herb that has a horizontal rootstock up to 1.5 meters long. The
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leaves grow from 1/2 to 2 meters tall, are sword like and have a crimped
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edge. The flowers are minute greenish-yellow on a cylindrical spike. The
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herb grows in marshes and along the borders of creeks. It was originally
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from India and South East Asia but has been introduced to Europe, North
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America and also Australia.
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Usage: Either eat the raw root when dry which is like ginger in both
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texture and taste. Or it can also be made into a drink by boiling 1 ounce
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of calamus root in 600 ml of water.
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Effects: It acts as a stimulant when a 4 cm segment of root is eaten and it
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alleviates fatigue. When more than a 24 cm root segment is eaten it is a
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hallucinogen.
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History: The Moso sorcerers of Yunnan, China have used calamus as a healing
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herb for asthma and fevers. It is used in Papua New Guinea in various
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rituals as a stimulant and it is extremely important in ritual medicine. It
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is also used in PNG for initiation rituals to make young men grow tall and
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strong. The Cree Indians over 40 years old use small amounts of it as an
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anti fatigue herb while larger amounts are used as a mind altering
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sacrament for the initiating of boys to become warriors.
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Active Constituents: Asarone and B-asarone are in the essential oil of
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calamus. These are the non-amine precursors to TMA-2.
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FROM THE NET
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From Shava Nerad Averett
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Subject: Calamus
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I was taught long ago in Vermont by a lady who was into herbs there, that
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Sweet Flag (calamus) was chewed by local folks on long walking trips. It
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was useful for three reasons (all of which I can attest to subjectively):
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(1) It staves off fatigue
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I suspect some of this has to do with:
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(2) It staves off boredom
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I've found it to be a mild euphoric. Does this have to
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do with it being a stimulant? Maybe. Hallucinogen? Well,
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I've never hallucinated on it. But it is a euphoric. It
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makes an entertaining tea in combination with passion
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flower and damiana.
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(3) It keeps your mouth stimulated and moist
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The fresh root, or fresh-dried, has a tingly effect on
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the mouth that lingers, staves off thirst, and is pleasant
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only with habit, from what I understand. I've always liked
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it but some folks really despise it.
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A piece of root the size of a medium kidney bean will last you quite a while
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walking. I wait until the tingle in the mouth has completely disappeared
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before I take another bite. I used to walk 23-25 miles at 4-5 miles/hr in
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a summer evening sometimes (with or without the calamus). I suspect with
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the calamus, I might have been able to cover twice that distance with no
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strain at all with the calamus in the course of a day. Given sufficient
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need, I would be willing to believe that I could make 70-75 miles, but I'd
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hate to think what shape I'd be in the next day.
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Calamus was associated with spirit-walking, I remember hearing, when people
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would cover completely improbable distances in the course of very short
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times. However, I remember hearing this as "indian traditional stuff" which
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in Vermont could mean Algonquin, Iraquoi, or someone reading it in a book..;)
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I also couldn't swear that that wasn't a simple reference to shamanic
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journeying which might or might not refer to physical distances...
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Shava Nerad Averett
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/* all materials (c)1992, Shava Nerad Averett, and have nothing significant
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to do with the University of North Carolina, a mostly owned subsidiary
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of the NC Legislature, a mostly owned subsidiary of the DOT. */
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============================================================================
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HALLUCINOGENIC MUSHROOMS II
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Family: Coprinaceae
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Genus: Copelandia
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Species: cyanescens (Blue Meanies)
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A whitish grey to pale brown 4 cm diameter cap with a dark centre on a
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slender, hollow, up to 11 cm tall stem. Bruising causes the cap and stem to
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stain blue. Grows on dung and in rich pastures in NT, Queensland and NSW.
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History: It is cultivated in Bali for use in native festivals and for
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selling to tourists.
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Active Constituents: Contains both psilocybin and psilocin. A speciman was
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analysed in France and was found to contain 1.2% psilocin and 0.6%
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psilocybin.
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Family: Coprinaceae
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Genus: Panaeolina
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Species: foenisecii (Haymakers toadstool)
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A cap that is dark brown when wet to a clay colour when dry and is up to
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2 cm in diameter but usually smaller. The stem is slender, hollow and up to
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5 cm tall. It grows singly or in groups in grassy places in the ACT, NSW,
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SA, Victoria and WA.
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Mentioned in Mushrooms and Toadstools of Australia as being poisonous and
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hallucinogenic.
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Active Constituents: Both psilocybin and psilocin.
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Family: Coprinaceae
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Genus: Panaeolus
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Species: campanulatus
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A reddish brown to sooty brown 4 cm diameter cap that is smooth to slightly
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sticky when wet. Stem is up to 14 cm, slender and concolorous with the cap.
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Grows on dung and in rich pastures in the ACT, NSW and Victoria.
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Effects: From Victorian Toadstools and Mushrooms by J. Willis, 1950,
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"rumour has it that they will cause an intoxication, under which the victim
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suffers a strange sensation of growing taller and taller and over-topping
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the objects round about him."
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Active Constituents: Both psilocybin and psilocin.
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OTHER MUSHROOMS
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Conocybe and Gymnopilus do occur in Australia but there is no record of
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them being hallucinogenic.
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Boletus luridus and B. erythropus of the Family Boletaceae, are some of the
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porous fungi that are poorly studied. They stain blue when bruised. They
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are regarded as poisonous and contain muscarine. This toadstool is possibly
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hallucinogenic but as I don't know, anybody who has tested it please put
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your results up on alt.drugs so we can confirm or deny this.
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============================================================================
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AUSTRALIAN COCAINE SHRUB
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Family: Erythroxylaceae
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Genus: Erythroxylum
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Species: australe
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A shrub that grows up to 4.5 meters tall with leaves from 1 cm to 3.5 cm
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long. The ripe fruit is up to 1 cm long, red and contains one seed. The
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flowers are solitary or paired with white petals. Its habitat ranges from
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stony/rocky hillside slopes to open sclerophyll forest, from NT through
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Queensland to northern NSW.
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History: E.australe doesn't have much history of usage but E.coca is used
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in Peru. It is used to combat fatigue and cocaine is made from the leaves.
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All Erythroxylaceae species are declared prohibited plants in NSW.
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Active Constituents: The leaves contain 0.8% meteloidine, a cocaine-like
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alkaloid.
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Johns, S.R., and Lamberton, J.A., 1967. Meteloidine from Erythroxylum
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australe. Aust. J. Chem., 20, 1301.
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============================================================================
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AGARA
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Family: Himantandraceae
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Genus: Galbulimima
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Species: belgraveana
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A large rainforest tree that grows up to 35 meters tall with leaves which
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are glossy, metallic green above and brown beneath. The bark is scaly,
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highly aromatic and is 1 cm in thichness. Flowers have two calyx lobes, no
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petals and a large number of flattened stamens. It has red fleshy fruit
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with a resinous scent. Found in Queensland and New Guinea, it is most
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commonly found growing from 1200 to 2700 meters but can be found as low as
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5 meters above sea level. It is only used by New Guineans who use it as a
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pre battle hallucinogen, it was not used by the Australian Aborigine at all.
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Usage: The bark was chewed and rubbed on the legs of tribal warriors.
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Effects: Intoxication and hallucinations followed by extreme drowsiness.
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Active Constituents: Twelve different alkaloids including himandrine,
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himbacine, himgravine, himbosine and himbadine have been reported.
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|
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============================================================================
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ACACIA
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Family: Leguminosae
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Genus: Acacia
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Species: maidenii (Maiden's Wattle)
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phlebophylla (Buffalo Sallow Wattle)
|
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A.maidenii grows up to 15 meters tall. Its phyllodes (acacias don't have
|
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leaves they have phyllodes instead) grow to 20 cm long and 1 to 3 cm wide.
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The seed pod is long and narrow, almost cylindrical and usually very coiled
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and twisted. Its habitat is on the border of rain forests and in wet
|
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sclerophyll forests. It is found in Queensland south of Proserpine, along
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the NSW coastal regions especially in the Heathcote National Park and in
|
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the Illawarra coast region south of Sydney to Ulladulla. It is also found
|
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in Victoria at Newmerrella and at Lake Coringle near Orbost.
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A.phlebophylla grows up to 4 meters tall. Its phyllodes are broad, short
|
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and range from 6 to 14 cm long and 3 to 9 cm wide. The seed pods are broad,
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straight, thick walled, leathery and not constricted between the seeds. It
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is found only in a narrow range of altitude in the granitic declivities on
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Mt. Buffalo in Victoria. For a list of non Australian acacias that contain
|
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DMT check the Tryptamines FAQ.
|
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|
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Usage: Smoking the phyllodes of A.phlebophyll or the bark of A.maidenii
|
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gives a mild hallucinogenic effect. The DMT can be extracted in methanol.
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DMT is only active when smoked or as a snuff. To be active orally harmine,
|
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a monoamineoxidase inhibitor needs to be ingested as well as the DMT.
|
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|
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Effects: Visual and tactile hallucinations. (see below for more details).
|
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Active Constituents: The bark of A.maidenii contains 0.36% DMT. The
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phyllodes (leaf like) of A.phlebophylla contain 0.3% DMT. The 0.24%
|
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N-methyl tryptamine in the bark of A.maidenii is probably not active at
|
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the these doses.
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|
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Fitzgerald, J.S. & Sioumis, A.A., 1965. Alkaloids of Australian
|
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Leguminosae V, The Occurence of Methylated Tyrptamines in Acacia
|
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maidenii. Aust. J. Chem. 18, 433.
|
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Rovelli, B. & Vaughan, G.N., 1967. Alkaloids of Acacia I.
|
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Dimethyltryptamines in Acacia phlebophylla. Aust. J. Chem. 20, 1299.
|
||
|
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|
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FROM THE NET
|
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|
||
From J. Ukn Mar 9 17:07:04 1993Subject: Obtaining DMT fr
|
||
the drug itself :-)I discovered that a local plant, Acacia maidenii, was repo
|
||
was Dimethyl Tryptamine (DMT). Some research of old botany books suggested a
|
||
trees, trying to cause as little as possible permanent damage. The bark was
|
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thick, red, fibrous and resinous.Smoking the bark directly gave a mild halluc
|
||
Monday night until Friday afternoon. The methanol quickly took up colour
|
||
from the bark and turned a deep red colour. As much as possible of the
|
||
methanol was removed by filtering. I evaporated off the methanol using a
|
||
fractionating column, a condenser, and a saucepan of boiling water as
|
||
heating, for some hours, and recovered much of the methanol. I placed this
|
||
methanol back with the bark and reextracted for some hours while
|
||
evaporating the rest, then filtered the bark again and combined the
|
||
extracts, and stripped as much as possible of the methanol, to leave a
|
||
thick resinous brown liquid. A portion of the extract was evaporated using
|
||
a hair-drier to give a thick brown resin. Attempts at smoking this using
|
||
pipe and hot knife proved unpleasant and gave minimal effect.It was decided t
|
||
was extracted twice into CH2Cl2, and the solvent evaporated as before. The
|
||
last stage of evaporation was accomplished with a hair drier, to leave about
|
||
a gram or so of pale yellow liquid. On standing 24 hours, this liquid
|
||
crystallised as circular arrangements of needles.On a second occasion, I took
|
||
moderately low pH (dilute HCl), and then that the addition of strong
|
||
hydroxide will leave the amphoteric resins in solution, but make the alkaloids
|
||
economical way to smoke DMT. Because there is little combustion, the smoke doe
|
||
successively lower resolutions, until I could see merely individual elementsof
|
||
My references tell me that N-methyl tryptamine is most likely inactive at thes
|
||
|
||
WATER LILY
|
||
|
||
Family: Nymphaeaceae
|
||
Genus: Nymphaea
|
||
Species: ampla
|
||
|
||
The water lily has thick dentate leaves, purple on the underside and from
|
||
14 to 25 cm across. The showy flowers are white and are up to 12 cm across,
|
||
with a yellow centre from the many yellow stamens.
|
||
|
||
Effects: Nymphaea may have been used as a narcotic and possibly as a
|
||
hallucinogen in both the Old and the New Worlds. N.ampla is reported to be
|
||
used in Mexico as a recreational drug with powerfull hallucinatory effects.
|
||
|
||
History: The water lily has had a prominent place in Egyptian, Minoan,
|
||
Indian and Chinese mythology.
|
||
|
||
Active Constituents: The rhizome contains apomorphine, nuciferine and
|
||
nornuciferine.
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
BETEL NUT
|
||
|
||
Family: Palmaceau
|
||
Genus: Aveca
|
||
Species: catechu
|
||
|
||
A slender tree up to 25 meters high that grows in hot but shady habitats.
|
||
The leaf blades grow to 1 meter across with many pinnae. Betel palms produce
|
||
250 nuts per year and they grow from India across to the South Pacific.
|
||
|
||
Usage: Mix 1/2 gm of burnt lime (hydrated calcium oxide) with one Betel Nut,
|
||
preferably in a semi powdered form. It is then placed in the side of the
|
||
mouth for a two hour period, and the saliva is spat out occasionally. It is
|
||
also brewed like coffee, made into cigarettes, or it can be mixed with
|
||
acacia gum, some burnt lime and a dash of nutmeg and used as a sweet as
|
||
done in Malaysia.
|
||
The leaf is also used as a paper for rolling tobacco and herbs.
|
||
|
||
Effects: Arecoline is a mild CNS stimulant. It increases respiration and
|
||
decreases the workload of the heart. It allows a journey to become more
|
||
vivid by allowing time to be perceived differently.
|
||
|
||
History: By 1930 there were about 20 million Betel nut chewers in India.
|
||
Regular usage does stain the mouth, gums and teeth a deep red. Excessive
|
||
use can cause innebriation and dizziness. Long term users cause damage to
|
||
the teeth and soft tissue of the mouth
|
||
|
||
Active Constituents: Arecoline is a volatile oil released from the nut by
|
||
saliva and lime. Other constituents in the nut include arecaidin, arecaine
|
||
ans choline. Betel leaf contains chavicol, allylpyrocathechol, chavibetol
|
||
and cadinene.
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
SCREW PINE
|
||
|
||
Family: Pandanaceae
|
||
Genus: Pandanus
|
||
Species: pedunculatus?
|
||
|
||
A tall tree growing up to ? meters with buttress or stilt-like roots.
|
||
|
||
History: The nuts of P.? are used by the natives of Papua New Guinea as a
|
||
hallucinogen.
|
||
|
||
Active Constituents: DMT has been found in P.? nuts.
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
SYRIAN RUE
|
||
|
||
Family: Peganaceae
|
||
Genus: Peganum
|
||
Species: harmala
|
||
|
||
This is a perennial herb that grows up to 80 cm tall and has a woody
|
||
rootstock. The leaves are alternate and are divided several times into
|
||
narrow, linear segments. It flowers in summer and autumn with creamy white
|
||
solitary flowers up to 1.5 cm long. The globose, deeply lobed fruit
|
||
contains many flat, angled, brown seeds with a bitter taste. It grows from
|
||
the Middle East across to east Asia. It has been introduced to Australia
|
||
and is found from SA across Victoria to NSW. In Australian botany books
|
||
P.harmala is known as African Rue while in international references such
|
||
as Plants of the Gods and The Tryptamine FAQ it is known as Syrian Rue.
|
||
|
||
Usage: Eating 1 gram of seeds inhibits MAO enough to make DMT orally
|
||
active. It is also possible to experiance hallucinations from the seeds.
|
||
|
||
Effects: Harmine and harmaline produce strong visual hallucinations
|
||
starting from about 300 mg (about 10 grams of seeds).
|
||
|
||
History: The seeds yield the dye 'Turkish Red' and are also used as a
|
||
spice. The seeds have been used as a hallucinogen in magic and in native
|
||
religions in some of its original range.
|
||
|
||
Active Constituents: The seeds contain about 3% by weight of the
|
||
Mono-Amine-Oxidase Inhibitors harmine and harmaline. The seeds also contain
|
||
minor amounts of other beta-carboline alkaloids such as tetrahydroharmine.
|
||
See the section on MAO Inhibitors in the Tyrptamine FAQ or the Natural
|
||
Highs FAQ as to what foods and drinks should be avoided while using a MAO
|
||
Inhibitor (unless you like a hypertensive crisis).
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
KAVA KAVA
|
||
|
||
Family: Piperceae
|
||
Genus: Piper
|
||
Species: methysticum
|
||
|
||
A shrub up to 4 meters tall with heart shaped leaves up to 16 cm long and
|
||
short spikes rising from the base of the leaf stem. The spikes are densely
|
||
covered with flowers. The plant grows in cool, moist highlands or wet
|
||
forests up to 300 meters above sea level. It grows best where summer
|
||
temperatures are between 26 - 32 Celsius. Its range is across the South
|
||
Pacific.
|
||
|
||
Usage: The upper rhyzome is used, traditionally in a tea (yaqona). For
|
||
maximum effects mix 1 ounce Kava with 10 ounces of water (preferably
|
||
coconut milk), two tablespoons coconut oil or olive oil, and 1 tablespoon
|
||
lecithin. Blend until the liquid takes on a milky appearance. Serves 1 - 2
|
||
people.
|
||
The resins can also be extracted with isopropyl alcohol in a heat bath.
|
||
The solvent is removed by evaporation. Redissolve in just enough warmed
|
||
brandy, rum, vodka, or honey. Also the resins can be extracted by repeated
|
||
soaking in cold acetone and boiling off the solvent. The upper rhyzome is
|
||
starchy with a faint pleasant odor and a pungent bitter taste.
|
||
|
||
Effects: Small amounts produce euphoria, large amounts produce extreme
|
||
relaxation, lethargy and eventually sleep. Often visual and auditory
|
||
hallucinatory like effects lasting 2 - 3 hours (Kava kava is not classed as
|
||
a hallucinogen but rather as a hypnotic narcotic). Effects are not noticed
|
||
when used for the first few times (like marijuana). It also produces
|
||
numbing of the mouth.
|
||
Continual chewing eventually destroys the tooth enamel. Also constant and
|
||
excessive use with alcohol can become habit forming and after several
|
||
months cause yellowing of the skin, bloodshot and weak eyes, as well as
|
||
other side effects. The symptoms disappear within two weeks after the
|
||
drinking has stopped.
|
||
|
||
|
||
History: Kava is used by the Samoans as part of their religious ceremonies
|
||
and by the Fijians for guests as part of their ceremonies welcoming special
|
||
guests and friends. Five varieties are cultivated in Fiji, three white and
|
||
two black. The faster maturing black varieties are preferred for the
|
||
commercial crop while the slightly slower growing white varieties are
|
||
considered the best for personal use. The white varieties are Kasa Leka
|
||
(white), Kasa Balavu (white) and Qolobi. The faster growing black varieties
|
||
are Kasa Leka (black), and Kasa Balavu (black).
|
||
|
||
Active Constituents: Kava has six resinous alpha pyrones; kawain,
|
||
dihydrokawain, methystician, dihydromethystician, yangonin and
|
||
dihydroyangonin. None of these are water soluble except when emulsified.
|
||
They are soluble in alcohol, oil and gastric juices.
|
||
|
||
|
||
FROM THE NET
|
||
|
||
From: J.
|
||
Subject: Kava extraction
|
||
|
||
Account of the effects of a Kava extract
|
||
|
||
Kava (Piper methysicum) is a traditional Fijian intoxicant, which is legal
|
||
in many countries. The roots contain various active substances, e.g.
|
||
methysticin, tetrahydromethysticin, any of which require quite large
|
||
amounts (>1g) for narcotic activity. It has become popular in Australia,
|
||
particularly among the Aborigines of the Nothern Territory, and is sold in
|
||
Fijian shops, and some corner stores in Sydney.
|
||
|
||
I bought 450g of powdered "Lewana" grade Kava for A$13 (around US$10).
|
||
"Waka" grade may be more effective, and the whole root better still,
|
||
although the preparation is more difficult. The whole powder was soaked in
|
||
aprx. 800 ml freshly distilled acetone for a few hours with occasional
|
||
stirring. The excess yellow acetone extract (around 300 ml) was decanted
|
||
and filtered, and the solvent distilled off, to leave a golden brown oil
|
||
which solidified somewhat on standing. This process was repeated with fresh
|
||
acetone (around 300 ml) aprx. six times, with the slurry being heated to
|
||
boiling on the final time, and all of the residues were combined, to give a
|
||
layer of oil aprx. 3mm thick on a standard petri dish. This amount was
|
||
divided between three people.
|
||
|
||
At 6:30 pm, we ate a teaspoon of the oil, washing it down with plenty of
|
||
water. There was a momentary mild queasiness as it hit the stomach, which
|
||
passed quickly. Seven minutes later, the first effects began, with a mild
|
||
wave through the body of relaxation, and mild euphoria. Further teaspoon
|
||
doses were taken at 6:45 and 7:00. The pleasant effects continued to
|
||
increase in intensity, and were not unlike a large dose of codeine,
|
||
although with some numbness and tingling in the extremities. There were
|
||
some mild visual effects, with the world taking on a kind of sheen or glow.
|
||
|
||
By about 7:30 pm, a change began to take place. The initial lightness
|
||
started to give way to a more heavy intoxication, with some heaviness in
|
||
the limbs. It was decided to smoke a moderately large quantity of marijuana
|
||
(heads, leaf and a little hash). At this point, the effects intensified
|
||
significantly. The combination was similar in some ways to a modest dose of
|
||
LSD, although with a strong stoning effect as well. It could perhaps be
|
||
compared with a mixture of LSD and a lot of alcohol. The audio
|
||
hallucinations were most pronounced, and stronger than those of LSD, with
|
||
changes in the perception of distance and direction of sounds, as well as a
|
||
kind of phased/flanged effect.
|
||
|
||
In summary, an acetone extract of Kava seems to be a most effective way of
|
||
concentrating the active ingredients and making ingestion easy. The effect
|
||
is initially one of a pleasant euphoric narcosis, followed by a heavier and
|
||
less pleasant drunken feeling, particularly in the body. There is little
|
||
desire at the end to repeat the experiment immediately, despite its having
|
||
been enjoyable. It enhances the hallucinogenic characteristics of
|
||
marijuana, particularly with regard to audio hallucinations.
|
||
|
||
J.
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
ANGEL'S TRUMPET
|
||
|
||
Family: Solanaceae
|
||
Genus: Brugmansia
|
||
Species: aurea
|
||
|
||
The Angel's Trumpet is shrub up to 9 meters tall. The leaves are oblong to
|
||
elliptic, from 10 to 40 cm long and 5 to 15 cm wide. The flowers are either
|
||
white or yellow, usually from 15 to 23 cm long and the trumpet shaped
|
||
corolla flares broadly at the mouth. The fruits are green, smooth, have a
|
||
elongate-ovoid shape and they are fleshy. The seeds are angular, blackish
|
||
or brownish and measure about 12 by 9 mm. This species is relativly comman
|
||
in the gardens of Melbourne but its native habitat is in Andes of South
|
||
America. Brugmansia is closely related to Datura and to Methysticodendron
|
||
and has a similar chemistry to them.
|
||
|
||
Usage: The South American Indians added powdered seeds to fermented drinks
|
||
or they made a tea of the leaves.
|
||
|
||
Effects: Delusional effects similar to Datura. Brugmansia intoxication is
|
||
produces convulsions often so violent that physical restraint can necessary
|
||
before the onset of a deep stupor, during which visions are experienced.
|
||
|
||
History: Used extensivly in the Andes and in the western Amazon. The
|
||
Indians of Sibundoy use Brugmansia for magico-medicinal purposes. Indians
|
||
in Peru use a species of Brugmansia to communicate with ancestors and to
|
||
reveal treasures in graves. The Chibcha of Colombia used to give a
|
||
fermented drink with seeds from Brugmansia to wives and slaves of dead
|
||
cheiftans to induce a stupor before they were buried alive with the dead
|
||
cheiftan.
|
||
|
||
Active Constituents: Contains tropane alkaloids with hyoscine (scopolamine)
|
||
being the main component.
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
PITURI
|
||
|
||
Family: Solanaceae
|
||
Genus: Duboisia
|
||
Species: hopwoodii
|
||
|
||
A small tree or shrub about 3 meters high with narrow linear leaves up to
|
||
15 cm long. Its flowers have a broad bell shaped white corolla with a
|
||
purple striped tube and five lobes. The fruit is a black 6 mm long berry
|
||
that contains two seeds in a dark pulp. It grows in the arid regions of
|
||
central Australia from WA, across NT and SA to Qld and NSW. According to
|
||
Aborigines the best leaves came from a region around sw Queensland to the
|
||
nw of SA.
|
||
|
||
Usage: The dried and powdered leaves and twigs, often mixed with the ash of
|
||
Acacia species, was then placed in the side of the mouth like a plug of
|
||
tobacco and chewed. After Europeans introduced smoking it was also
|
||
sometimes smoked by both Aboriginies and Europeans.
|
||
|
||
Effects: It is both a stimulant and a narcotic. It is possibly also a
|
||
deliriant (due to the anti-cholinergics) in large quantities.
|
||
|
||
History: Used and prized by the Aborigines and traded across Australia.
|
||
When the first white men tried it they described it as having the kick of
|
||
a slug of gin. The sole survivor of the Burke and Wills expedition, King
|
||
chewed pituri to survive while the others died of starvation, refusing
|
||
aboriginal hospitality.
|
||
|
||
Active Constituents: Nicotine and nor-nicotine, minor amounts of hyoscine.
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
CORKWOOD
|
||
|
||
Family: Solanaceae
|
||
Genus: Dubosia
|
||
Species: leichhardtii
|
||
myoporoides
|
||
|
||
Corkwood trees are moderatly tall with D.leichhardtii growing up to 12
|
||
meters and D.myoporides growing up to 24 meters. They have thich corky bark
|
||
with the leaves from 4 to 15 cm long and 1 to 4 cm wide. D.leichhardtii is
|
||
found in the softwood scrubs of south-eastern and south-central Queensland.
|
||
D.myoporoides habitat is in high rainfall areas on the margins of
|
||
rainforests up to an altitude of 1000m. It is found from the NT across
|
||
Queensland and into northern NSW, possibly as far south as Sydney.
|
||
|
||
Usage: The Aboriginies who lived near the corkwood tree would make a hole
|
||
in the trunk, water would be poured into the hole and the hole plugged. A
|
||
strong liquor would be ready the next day for drinking from the hole.
|
||
|
||
Effects: Drinking the liquid from the hole would produce a 'stupor' in
|
||
the natives. The alkaloids in the tree are delusinogens.
|
||
|
||
History: The usage of drinking corkwood liquor seemed to stop fairly
|
||
quickly after the introduction of spirits to Aboriginies. The leaves of a
|
||
hybrid of the two species are harvested and exported to Europe for
|
||
medicinal purposes.
|
||
|
||
Active Constituents: The leaves contain about 7% dry weight of tropane
|
||
alkaloids with hyoscine (scopolamine) and hyoscyamine being nearly all of
|
||
that. Also minor amounts of the alkaloid tigloidine is present.
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
HALLUCINOGENIC MUSHROOMS III
|
||
|
||
Family: Strophariaceae
|
||
Genus: Psilocybe (Gold Tops)
|
||
Species: group 1
|
||
cubensis
|
||
subcubensis
|
||
|
||
group 2
|
||
australiana
|
||
eucalypta
|
||
semilanceata
|
||
subaeruginosa
|
||
tasmaniana
|
||
|
||
The group 1 Psilocybes have a cap from 2 to 7 cm in diameter, viscid in
|
||
wet weather but shiny when dry. Colour of the caps range from whitish with
|
||
a pale yellow centre at first, becoming entirely honey browm to redish
|
||
brown. Often stains blue-green when old or injured. The stem is grows up to
|
||
11 cm tall, it is hollow, slender and slightly thickened downwards, smooth.
|
||
The group 2 Psilocybes have caps ranging from 1 to 5 cm in diameter with
|
||
the colour ranging from pale brown to tawny orange, redish brown, brownish
|
||
yellow or dark brown when older. Brusing causes blue-green staining. The
|
||
stems vary from 4 to 12 cm tall, slender and a silky fibrous texture.
|
||
P.semilanceata has a hollow stem with its texture being smooth or slightly
|
||
fibrous. The stem of P.subaeruginosa may become hollow.
|
||
|
||
In the psilocbyes the group 1 species fruit in the late spring and summer
|
||
while the group 2 species fruit in the late autumn and winter. Group 1
|
||
species habitat is in dung and rich pastures, they are found as far south
|
||
as Sydney (Windsor) to at least mid costal Queensland and possibly further
|
||
north. The group 2 species habitat is in native and occasionally in
|
||
introduced forests, they are found in southern NSW to as far north as Sydney
|
||
(Mt. Wilson), Canberra (Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve), Victoria (Eltham,
|
||
Ballarat, Mt Dandenong, Daylesford), South Australia (Mt. Lofty) and
|
||
Tasmania (Hobart, Mt. Field Nat. Park). P. semilanceata also grows in dung
|
||
rich pastures as well as in forests.
|
||
Read the Natural Highs FAQ for additional information on mushrooms.
|
||
|
||
Usage: Most people take from 6 to 12 mushrooms, but start off with a small
|
||
amount (like about 3 mushrooms) until you know your limits. For mushrooms
|
||
from an unknown source, 0.5 grams of dried mushroom is probably a
|
||
reasonable place to start. Other ways of taking mushrooms include drinking
|
||
a tea made by boiling dried mushroom fragments in water. Also there is a
|
||
recipe around for the making of Blue Mead using P.cubensis spores.
|
||
|
||
Effects: Visual and auditory hallucinations, kaleidoscopic variations in
|
||
the depth of vision, muscular relaxation, distortion of tactile sensations,
|
||
lack of concentration ability, perception of time and space alters and mood
|
||
alters as well, usually elevated but depression can occur.
|
||
|
||
Active Constituents: Contains both psilocybin (anywhere from 0.2% to 0.5%)
|
||
and psilocin (small amounts only).
|
||
|
||
===========================================================================
|
||
|
||
GALANGAL
|
||
|
||
Family: Zingiberaceae
|
||
Genus: Kaempferia
|
||
Species: galanga
|
||
|
||
A smooth stemless or short stemmed herb that grows to about 1.5 meters, its
|
||
round leaves grow to about 12 cm long and up to 12 cm wide. The leaves are
|
||
flat spreading. The flowers form a terminal spike and are white with deep
|
||
red veining. It grows in open grassy areas and is found from tropical
|
||
Africa through India to northern Queensland. The rhizome is rich in
|
||
essential oils and is highly aromatic.
|
||
|
||
Usage: Eat approx. 6 cm of the raw rhizome. Or take a tablespoon of
|
||
rhizome, cut small and add to a cup of boiling water. Then drink cold.
|
||
It is also used in Thai recipies such as Green Curry and Tom Yum.
|
||
|
||
Effects: Pleasant dreams and mild hallucinations.
|
||
|
||
History: Used by the natives of New Guinea in the Morobe & Fore regions as a
|
||
hallucinogen, as described in the movie The Valley, obscured by clouds (the
|
||
one with the Pink Floyd soundtrack). Used in the Philippines as a folk
|
||
medicine. Also used by Aleister Crowley as an incense in the Liber Samekh, a
|
||
ritual for 'communicating' with your 'holy guardian angel'.
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
CHEMICAL ALTERATION
|
||
|
||
This section deals with how to chemically alter readily avalable natural
|
||
recources into more chemically unusuall compounds.
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
EUCALYPTUS
|
||
|
||
Family: Myrtaceae
|
||
Genus: Eucalyptus
|
||
Species: diversicolour (Karri)
|
||
obliqua (Messmate Stringybark)
|
||
regnans (Mountain Ash)
|
||
|
||
Mountain Ash is the tallest tree in Australia and grows up to 100m. It is
|
||
found in Tasmania in the Huon Valley and in Victoria in the Otways,
|
||
Dandenongs and Gippsland. E.obliqua grows up to 90m and is found across
|
||
southern Australia. Karri grows up to 90m and is found in the sw of WA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
FROM THE NET
|
||
|
||
From: malcolm@lingua.cltr.uq.OZ.AU (Malcolm Gillies)
|
||
Subject: Mescaline from Gum Trees
|
||
Please address all inquiries to: morgan_j@summer.chem.su.oz.au
|
||
Hi folks,
|
||
|
||
Whilst browsing chem abstracts yesterday I came across an intriguing
|
||
reference, especially for ozlanders. The Australian Dept of Defence
|
||
developed a technique for producing mescaline from eucalypt sawdust in
|
||
fairly high yield back in '64.
|
||
Here it is:
|
||
CA 61,8515
|
||
The preparation of mescaline from eucalypt lignin.
|
||
D. Amos, Dept. Supply, Defence Std Lab, Melbourne.
|
||
Australasian J. Pharm., 45, 529 (1964)
|
||
|
||
Dried Eucalyptus Regnans sawdust oxidised with nitrobenzene and alkali @
|
||
150C yielded 4% of syringaldehyde. Methylation @ 0-5C for 1hr with Me2SO4,
|
||
then heated at 70C for 1 hr gave 56% 3,4,5, trimethoxybenzaldehyde.
|
||
Converted to the cyanohydrin (ie +KCN+weak acid - jm) then reduced with
|
||
Pd black to mescaline. Overall yield 1% from dried sawdust. E. obliqua and
|
||
E. diversicolour both gave 0.7% yields.
|
||
|
||
|
||
So there you have it. Our army, or maybe ASIO, wanted a way to make vast
|
||
quantities of mescaline (we have lots and lots of E. regnans, and 1kg
|
||
sawdust ~20 doses), very cheaply (all the ingredients are chemicals of
|
||
commerce, except Pd black, which is a recyclable catalyst), from local
|
||
precursors. Which is funny, since there would have been no difficulty
|
||
importing precursors or mescaline itself in experimental quantities. Maybe
|
||
they didn't want to be reliant on foreign suppliers, or maybe they didn't
|
||
want another country to be aware they were importing mescaline by the kilo.
|
||
It sounds like we might have had our very own MK-Ultra project running at
|
||
the height of the Cold War. It would be very interesting to follow this up.
|
||
Anyone out there know if we had some monkey business going on?
|
||
|
||
Maybe they were even extracting DMT from wattles and turning it into
|
||
psilocin, eh, J?
|
||
|
||
John Morgan
|
||
Physical Chemistry
|
||
University of Sydney
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
CANE TOAD
|
||
|
||
Family: Bufonidae
|
||
Genus: Bufo
|
||
Species: marinus
|
||
|
||
Introduced from Hawaii to Queensland in 1935 this toad has spread across
|
||
Queensland westwards into N.T. and southwards into northern N.S.W. It is
|
||
up to 20 cm long, has very warty skin and has a grey to brown, olive brown
|
||
or reddish brown colour. The underside is a whitish to yellowish colour.
|
||
The cane toad has a pair of large, highly visable poison glands located at
|
||
the back of the head. It eats anything smaller than itself and is poisonous
|
||
to anything larger that might eat it.
|
||
The bufotenin in the poison, while classed as a hallucinogen is not
|
||
particularlly healthy or a nice thing to do to your body. So below is
|
||
J's recipe for the conversion of bufotenin into something more
|
||
interesting.
|
||
|
||
A close relative of the Cane Toad is the Sonoran Desert or Colorado River
|
||
Toad (B.alvarius) which contains 6 to 16% 5-MeO-DMT (50-160 mg 5-MeO-DMT),
|
||
a more useful and safer hallucinogen than bufotenin. For more information
|
||
on the Sonoran Desert Toad checkout the Tryptamines FAQ.
|
||
|
||
Here is J's recipe for Cane Toads
|
||
(see also Psychedelic Chemistry, p.45)
|
||
|
||
Mix blended toad secretion with excess methanol and allow to stand a few
|
||
days. Filter. Evaporate methanol. Extract residue with dilute HCl.
|
||
|
||
Basify with NaOH or NH3.
|
||
Extract into organic solvent (eg dichloromethane).
|
||
Evaporate to leave crude bufotenine.
|
||
|
||
Dissolve 4.1g bufotenin in 20 ml 1M NaOH and evaporate to dryness under N2.
|
||
Dry in vacuum at 90C and dissolve in 50 ml dimethoxyethane. Add to 1.9 g
|
||
acetyl-Cl in 50 ml in 50 ml dimethoxyethane and stir four hours at room
|
||
temperature. Add to dilute NaHCO3 and CHCl3; shake and dry, evaporate in
|
||
vacuum the CHCl3 layer to get 5-Acetoxy-dimethyltryptamine. This should be
|
||
active at maybe 15 mg smoked, possibly orally as well. I can't remember
|
||
off hand.
|
||
|
||
Hope someone tries this one day.
|
||
|
||
J's quote on smoking bufotenin, "I'ld rather smoke paint stripper".
|
||
|
||
============================================================================
|
||
|
||
Other plants growing in Australia include Morning Glory, Wild Lettice,
|
||
Datura, Mescaline bearing Cacti and Nutmeg. These are covered in the
|
||
Natural High FAQ. Other plants growing in the wild include Cannabis sativa
|
||
(Indian hemp) and Papaver somniferum (Opium poppy).
|
||
|
||
There are also plants used in PNG for entertainment purposes such as the
|
||
leaves of Pueraria phaseoloides (Fabaceae) used in New Britian and the
|
||
seeds of Lactuca indica (Asteraceae) by the Kukukuku. As neither species
|
||
grows in Australia, there is little information on them and I have not
|
||
included them in the FAQ. Also growing in PNG are several species of
|
||
Psilocybe such as P.brunneocystidiata, P.inconspicua, P.papuana and
|
||
P.kumaenorum.
|
||
|
||
|
||
_l _l _l_l_l _l _l
|
||
_l _l _l _l _l
|
||
_l_l_l _l_l_l _l_l
|
||
_l _l _l _l _l
|
||
_l _l _l_l_l _l _l
|
||
|
||
|