782 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
782 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
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THE PSILOCYBIN PRODUCERS GUIDE
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How to produce 5000 doses of organic psilocybin
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in a small room every week
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by
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Adam Gottlieb
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1976
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INTRODUCTION
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If a person knows what he is doing, It's not difficult to cultivate
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the mycelium of any of the psychoactive psilocybin bearing mushrooms.
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The mycelium is the fibrous underground network of the mushroom. The
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familiar stem and cap portions of the mushrooms are called carpophores.
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The mycelium can be readily grown in ordinary Mason jars in a low
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cost medium in 10 to 12 days and the active materials (psilocybin
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and psilocin) can be easily extracted. This Guide shows how to carry
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out all of these steps on a small or a large scale. Complete instruc-
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tions are given for locating the mushrooms, developing stock cultures
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for inoculation, cultivating, harvesting, and drying the mycelium,
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extracting the active alkaloids, and using the existing cultures to
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seed new cultures to keep an ongoing psilocybin farm yielding a
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regular crop of the hallucinogenic mycelium. We also give directions
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for setting up in a small workroom a large scale psilocybin factory
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which can produce at least 5,000 doses of the drug every week.
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PSILOCYBIN AND THE LAW
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The present drug laws are a pathetic mess. The old adage that ignorance
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of the law is no excuse becomes a ludicrous statement when the laws
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themselves are rooted in ignorance. One classical example of this is
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the classification of the stimulant Cocaine as a narcotic. One is
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reminded of the King in Alice in Wonderland who made up his own language
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as he went along with total disregard for the accepted definitions of
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words. I will not even go into the question of whether any law enforcement
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agency has the moral or Constitutional right to dictate what substances
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we may or may not take into our own adult bodies. Any modern individual
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whose mind is not immersed in the slavish dung pit of Dark Age unreasoning
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knows that reliable education - not criminal penalization - is the answer
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to whatever drug problems exist. Nevertheless, we must contend
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realistically with the powers that unfortunately be at this time. They are
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the ones with the badges, guns, gavels and goons.
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Because of the afore mentioned ignorance of our lawmakers it is difficult
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to determine how the use of certain hallucinogenic substances would be
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treated in the courts. Possession of psilocybin and psilocin (misspelled
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in the U.S. Code as psilocyn) is a felony under Title 21, Section I, (C)
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of the United States Code (1970 Edition). Psilocybe Mexicana is also
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illegal. There was sufficient ignorance on the part of the lawmakers
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not to include the many other mushroom species containing psilocybin
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and psilocin. Theoretically the possession of any psilocybin bearing
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mushroom would be the same as possessing the alkoloid itself. But
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when it comes to prosecution it does not necessarily work like that.
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Lysergic acid amides, which occur in morning glory seeds, stems, and
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leaves are also illegal, but there is no way to prevent gardeners from
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raising this ornamental flower. It is also illegal for anyone in the
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USA to possess mescaline. Peyote, which contains mescaline, is legal
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for bonafide members of the Native American Church when used ritual-
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istically, but no member may possess extracts of the cactus or the drug
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mescaline. Peyote is illegal for non-members, but San Pedro and several
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other species of Trichocereus cacti also contain mescaline and are
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available from many legitimate cactus dealers. It would be clearly
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illegal for anyone to extract the active principles from any of the above
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mentioned plants. And it would be illegal for anyone to extract
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psilocybin and psilocin from mushrooms or mycellium as described in this
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guide. Anyone found operating a large scale mycelium farm could very
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easily be prosecuted for intent to manufacture psilocybin and psilocin.
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There are also many different state laws which must be considered before
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doing anything psilocybin bearing mushrooms. There are, however many
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Nations which have no laws regarding these substances. We are not judges
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or attorneys and are not trying to offer clear interpretations of the
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law. Rather we have mentioned these points to give some indication
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of the legal pitfalls which surround the application of the activities
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described in this guide. Furthermore, laws may have changed for better
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or for worse. We, the author and publisher, are not recommending or
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endorsing the application of the information in this guide especially
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in places where there are laws proscribing these substances. We offer
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this information for the sake of pure knowledge because it is our
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Constitutional right to do so. We do not encourage the violation
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of any existing laws.
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FINDING THE MUSHROOM
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All it takes is one mushroom or a few spores and from this one can
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quickly develop a culture that will continue to produce as much
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psilocybin as one desires for years to come. Because the common
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San Ysidro mushroom, psilocybe cubensis ..Singer (Formerly
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stropharia cubensis ..Earl) is the most easily obtainable, the most
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readily cultivated, most disease resistant, and psychoactively
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strongest species we have geared our instructions to it's use. There
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are, however, numerous other species which contain psilocybin. In
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case one of these is all that is available, we give for several of these
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pertinent information such a relative potency, where and when to find
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specimens, what growing conditions (medium, temperature, lighting, etc.)
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it favors and how resistant it is to contamination. The states, provinces,
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and regions named are by no means the only places where the species is to
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found. They are places in which there have been numerous reports of
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findings. They are given here to give a general idea of the type of
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terrain and climate the species favors. In cases where ideal cultivation
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temperatures and growing conditions are not given much can be surmised by
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considering the environment in which that species thrives.
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Psilocybe cubensis can be found in many parts of the United States,
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Mexico, Colombia, Australia, and even Southeastern Asia. It is usualy
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found growing on or near cow dung in pastures during warm rainy periods
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from February to November. There are several species of mushroom which
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occur on cow dung, but fortunately none of these bear much resemblance
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to the San Ysidro.
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There are numerous toxic mushrooms growing around us. Some of these could
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be mistaken for some of the other psilocybin fungi mentioned in this
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guide. It is essential that the mushroom hunter learn to use an
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identification key. A key is a listing of the various features which
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will positively identify a given species. If a specimen does not confirm
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in every respect to the key, it must not be used. There are several
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excellent keys to be found on most library shelves. One that we
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recommend is "Keys to Genera of Higher Fungi" by R. Shaffer, 2nd ed.
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(1968) Published by the University of Michigan Biological Station at
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Ann Arbor. We also recommend a thorough reading of the most helpfull
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book "Poisonous and Hallucinogenic Mushrooms" by Richard and Karen
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Haard, available for $3.95 from Nature Study Institute, PO Box 2321,
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Bellingham, Washington 98225. It is further suggested that after
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identifying the specimen it should be brought to an expert mycologist
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to be absolutely certain of it's identity.
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Many books on hallucinogenic mushrooms suggest a simple test for
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psilocybian species which involves breaking the flesh of the specimen
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and waiting about 30 minutes for a blueing reaction to take place. The
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blueing is due to the oxidization of indole based substances in the
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fungus. Although it is true that most of the psilocybin-bearing
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mushrooms will respond positively to this test, other species may do
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the same. The poisonous Eastwood Boletus blues upon exposure of the
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inner tissues to oxygen as well as does any psilocybin mushroom.
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Another test which is often given in mushroom manuals is treating the
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exposed tissues with Metol, a chemical used in photo developers. It
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hastens the blueing of psilocybin mushrooms, and supposedly one can do
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a blueing test with it in a few minutes that would otherwise take 30
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minutes or more. Any mushroom, however, which contains indolic
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substances of any sort will respond positively to this test. Since
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indole-based amino acids such as tryptophan are found in most living
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organisms this test is rather useless.
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There is actually no field test for psilocybin mushrooms. There is
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however, a relatively simple test for the presence of psilocin and
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psilocybin that can be carried out at home by anyone who has some
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familiarity with paper chromatography. The mushroom sample is dried,
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pulverized, and extracted into a small amount of unheated methanol by
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shaking for half an hour. After the debris in the methanol has
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settled the paper is spotted with the top fluid in a zone about 2mm.
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After treating the the spotting zone with water saturated butanol for
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about two hours, the solvent front 7-8 cm from the spotting zone would
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contain the psilocin and psilocybin if they were present in the specimen.
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After drying the paper with a hair dryer on warm, this outer zone is
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sprayed lightly with a saturated solution of p-dimethyl-aminobenzaldehyde
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in alcohol and then again with 1 N hydrochloric acid. The paper is then
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dried again as before. Where psilocybin is present a reddish color will
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develop. The presence of psilocin will be indicated by a blue-violet
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zone.
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DATA ON VARIOUS PSIOCYBIAN SPECIES
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CONOCYBE CYANOPES:
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Found from May through September usualy in dense shade scattered among
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mosses, and in wet soil around bogs, swamps, and ditches in the
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northwestern USA and as far east as Michigan. Carpophores grow well
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in sphagnum moss having a range of pH 7-8.
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COPELANDIA CYANESCENS:
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Found in early summer through late autumn scattered, grouped, or clustered
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on cow dung, or rich soil in Florida and other southern states. Spores
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germinate easily easily on all agar media. Optimum growth occurs on
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MEA at 80 degrees F. Carpophores can be produced on uncased compost
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or on rye.
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PANAEOLUS FOENISECII:
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(Also known as PANEAOLINA FOENISECII or PSILOCYBE FOENISECII, and commonly
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known as haymower's mushroom or harvest mushroom)
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Found in late spring and early summer, or in July, August, and September
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during cool, wet seasons scattered or grouped in large numbers on lawns,
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pastures, and other grassy places throughout the USA and in Quebec. Tests
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on specimens found in Washington revealed no psilocybin, but eastern
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specimens were potent.
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PANAEOLUS SPHINCTRINUS:
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Found in summer and autumn in small groups in forests, pastures, fields,
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and roadsides almost always on cow dung in many temperate parts of
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the world.
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PANAEOLUS SUBALTEATUS:
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Found from spring to autumn grouped or clustered often in rings up to
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two feet in diameter on open ground, freshly manured lawns, straw piles,
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all types of compost, dung piles, and roadsides in Ontario and throughout
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the USA (especially in Massachusetts, Maryland, New York, Ohio, Michigan,
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Washington, and Oregon). Optimum growth on MEA is at 86 degrees F.
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It occasionally occurs as a weed mushroom in commercial mushroom houses.
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PHOLIOTINA CYANOPODA:
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Found in August through September solitary to clustered on lawns in such
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diverse parts of the USA as New York, Washington, and Colorado.
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PSILOCYBE BAEOCYSTIS:
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Found in autumn and winter, solitary, grouped, or clustered on earth,
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lawns, mulch, and decomposing forest wood near scattered trees especially
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conifers - in western Oregon and Washington. It does well on Agar media
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at 77 degrees F. This is a potent species containing Psilocybin, psilocin,
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baeocystin, and nor-baeocystin. Perhaps it is because of the latter two
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alkaloids that it is the most visually hallucinogenic of the psilocybin
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mushrooms. There is a report that in 1960 a six-year old boy died after
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eating a large number of these mushrooms. There has never been any other
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indication that these alkaloids are dangerous. Until there is further
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clarification of this question, we advise that anyone using this species
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proceed with caution by starting with small doses and progressing gradually
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to larger ones. This is especially important when using the extracted
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crude alkaloids which may contain large concentrations of the baeocystin
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alkaloids.
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PSILOCYBE CAERULESCENS:
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Found in the summer during rainy season, grouped or clustered but
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rarely solitary, mostly in shady places on soil, sugar cane mulch,
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recently turned earth or stream banks - in Alabama, northern Florida
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and Mexico. The Mexican variety P. CAERULESCENS var. MAZATECORUM is
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known locally as "Durrumbe", which means "landslides." There it is
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often found among landslides, or near corn or coffee plantations.
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The mycelium does best on MEA at 81 degrees F. Thermal death occurs
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at 95 degrees F. It is almost impossible to produce carpophores
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on sterilized rye medium. They can be grown on vegetable compost in dim
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light, but the incubation period is long (55-85 days). Although this
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species is resistant to white mold it's long incubation period leaves it
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prone to other diseases. It is not one of the more potent species.
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PSILOCYBE CAERULIPES:
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Found in summer and occasionally autumn solitary or clustered on
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decomposing logs and debris of hardwood trees (especially birch and
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maple) in New York, New England states, Ohio, Michigan, North Carolina,
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Tennessee and Ontario.
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PSILOCYBE CUBENSIS var. CYANESCENS ..SINGER (formerly STROPHARIA CUBENSIS
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..EARL):
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Found from February to November in compact groups in clearings outside
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forest areas, on cow dung, or horse dung, in rich pasture soil, on straw,
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or on sawdust/dung mixture in Mexico, Cuba, Florida and other southern
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states. It grows well on MEA at 86 degrees F. Carpophores appear in
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4-8 weeks. Thermal death occurs at 104 degrees F. Carpophores larger
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than wild specimens can be produced by inoculating vegetable compost in
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clay pots with agar grown mycelium, casing with silica sand/limestone
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mix, and incubating 4-6 weeks in daylight at 68 degrees F. It does
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poorly in darkness. It is a potent mushroom and very resistant to
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contaminants.
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PSILOCYBE CYANESCENS:
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Found in autumn scattered, grouped, or clustered in woods, on earth,
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among leaves and twigs, and occasionally on decomposing wood - in
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northwestern USA.
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PSILOCYBE MEXICANA:
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Found from May to October isolated or sparsely at altitudes from 4500 to
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5500 feet, especially in limestone regions, among mosses and herbs, along
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roadsides, in humid meadows, in cornfields, and near pine forests in
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Mexico.
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PSILOCYBE PELLICULOSA:
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Found September to December scattered, grouped, or clustered on humus and
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debris, in or near conifier forests in northwestern USA and as far south
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as Marin County, California. This is a small but potent species.
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PSILOCYBE QUEBECENCIS:
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Found from summer to late October scattered in shady areas at forest
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edges, on sandy soil containing vegetable debris regularly inundated
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by river flooding, and on decomposing wood and debris (especially birch,
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alder, fir, and spruce) in the Quebec area. It thrives at lower
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temperatures than other psilocybe species and produces carpophores at
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air temperatures of 43 to 59 degrees F.
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PSILOCYBE SEMILANCEATA:
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Found August through September often in large groups on soil, among
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grasses, in clearings, pastures, meadows, forest edges, open conifier
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woodlands, and on roadsides - but never on dung - in New York, northern
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USA, British Columbia, and Europe. Generally regarded as one of the less
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potent species, but is sometimes quite potent.
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PSILOCYBE STRICTIPES:
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Found in October rather clustered on soil or on decomposing wood and
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debris, on conifiers and some other trees in northwestern USA (especially
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in Oregon). It closely resembles P. Baeocystis, but has a longer stem.
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It tends to be as visually hallucinogenic as that species and probably
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contains the same or similar baeocystin alkaloids.
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PSILOCYBE SYLVATICA:
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Found in September and October in small compact but unlustered groups
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in woods on leaf mold, debris (especially beech wood), around stumps
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and logs, but not usually on them - from New York to Michigan and as
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far north as Quebec and Ontario. This mushroom is small and is often
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mistaken for P. Pelliculosa.
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The species discussed above are only some of the more commonly known ones
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with hallucinogenic properties. There are recognized among the psilocybin
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bearing mushrooms 40 species of Conocybe usually ocuring in forests,
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pastures, gardens, dung areas, sandy soil, ant hills, decayed wood, and
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charcoal and having a cosmopolitan range; 20 species of Panaeolus found on
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soil and dung and having a cosmopolitian range; 40 species of Psilocybe
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found on soil, moss clumps and organic substrata such as dung, rotting
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wood, bagasse, and peat ranging from the artic to the tropics; and 9
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species of Stropharia found on soil, dung and sometimes on leaf mulch
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and rotting wood and having a fairly cosmopolitian range.
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PURE CULTURE TECHNIQUE
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The most difficult part of psilocybin mushroom cultivation is the
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observance of the rules of pure culture technique. These are the
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sanitary code of mushroom cultivation. There are usually many varieties
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of bacteria and fungal spores in our environment; floating in the air,
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clinging to our hands and clothing, issuing from our mouths with every
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exhalation. Extreme measures must therefore be taken to keep these out
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of our mycelial cultures, which they would rapidly overrun. The following
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points should be diligently observed. Work in a clean, uncluttered, dust
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free room. Immediately before work wash the work table and spray the room
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with disinfectants. Scrub arms, hands, and nails with disinfectant soap.
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Wear simple clothing. A freshly cleaned short-sleeve T-shirt is ideal.
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Gargle with antiseptic mouthwash and cover the mouth and nose with a clean
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cloth or disposable surgery mask. Cover the hair with a surgical cap or
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shower cap. Allow no drafts in the room. close all doors and stuff all
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door jambs. Let no flies, animals, or unnecessary people in the room. Let
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only sterilized equipment touch the medium or inoculum. Don't lean over
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your work. Avoid all swift movements that may cause a draft. If possible
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have a hood constructed around the work table or a screen or curtain
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surrounding it. Be neat and keep all materials within reach. Keep all
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equipment about three feet away from the work. Do not permit anyone to
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enter the room while work is in progress.
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STERILIZATION
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All utensils used in the cultivation of mycelia must be sterilized by
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heat before use. Glassware must be boiled in water for 30 minutes.
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Metalware used repeatedly must be held in a flame until glowing and
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then allowed a moment to cool before making contact with any cultures
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or specimens. When the inoculation loop has been used to transfer a
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fragment of mycelium it must be flame sterilized again before touching
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the next fragment. All medium containers must be sterilized after the
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medium has been poured. This process is known as autoclaving. Containers
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no more than half full with medium are placed in a canning type pressure
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cooker. The lids of these must be loose enough to allow escape of
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internal pressures. Otherwise the containers may crack. Seal the lid of
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the pressure cooker. Keep the stopcock valve open. Using high heat bring
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the cooker to boiling so that thick steam comes through the vent. Close
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the stopcock and let the pressure rise to 15-20 pounds. (250 Degrees F.)
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for 30 minutes. This should be enough to destroy any foreign spores or
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lifeforms. Any higher temperature or longer period would cause the
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dextrose or maltose sugars to carmelize. This would inhibit growth and
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psilocybin production of the mycelium. When the autoclave period is up
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turn off the heat and let the cooker cool to room temperature. Do not
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release the stopcock until everything has thoroughly cooled or the
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sudden change in pressure will cause the containers to boil over. Discard
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any containers that have cracked during sterilization. Keep all containers
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of medium at room temperature for three days to see if any foreign
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molds develop. If they do occur discard the medium in the contanminated
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jars and thoroughly clean and sterilize such jars before using again.
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MAKING A SPORE PRINT
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A spore print is a collection of spores on a flat surface. It can serve
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several purposes. It can be used to assist identification of the
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specimen by observing its color or if made on a glass slide, by
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studying the shapes of the spores under a microscope. Mycological
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identification keys include descriptions of spore prints and microscopic
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spore features for different species. Spore prints are also the standard
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method of collecting spores for later germination on agar media. A print
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from a single mushroom cap contains millions of spores. Many mushroom
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lovers are now making spore prints on paper from species available in
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their locales and mailing them to cultivators in other areas where such
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species are not found. Secret spore exchange correspondence clubs are
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becoming quite the vogue and will probably be more common in the very
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near future. A word of caution regarding this practice should be given,
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however. Do not assume that spores received in this manner are from the
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species the sender claims they are. If the sender has misidentified the
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specimen and the recipient cultivates and ingests mycelia or extractions
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therefrom, the result may be disasterous. Furthemore, I would not put it
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past some anti-drug fanatic to purposefully disseminate spore prints of
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dangerous mushrooms to amateur cultivators. This could result in sickness
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and death for thousands of persons.
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To make a spore print take a mushroom with it's cap fully opened and gills
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exposed. With a sharp sterilized blade cut off the stem as close to the
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gills a possible. Place the cap gills-down on a clean, white sheet of
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paper, or on a sheet of glass that has just been swabbed with alcohol, or
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on two or four sterilized microscopic glass slides. Cover the cap with a
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clean, inverted bowl or bell jar to prevent drying of the cap and intrusion
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of foreign organisms. Let this stand as such for 24 hours. If a good spore
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print has not been formed after this time, tap the cap lightly with the
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flat side of a knife or spatula. This should shake loose many spores. If
|
|
the print is made on glass, cover it with another glass sheet immediately
|
|
after removing the cap to prevent contamination. If microscopic slides
|
|
are used, place two face to face and seal the edges with tape. If paper
|
|
is used. fold it several times so that the print is well inside.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PREPARATION OF MEDIA
|
|
|
|
|
|
PDA (Potato Dextrose Yeast Agar): Wash 250 grams of unpeeled potatoes
|
|
and slice them 1/8 inch thick. Wash these several times in cool tap
|
|
water until the water is clear. Drain the slices in a collander and rinse
|
|
once with distilled water. Cook the potato slices in distilled water until
|
|
tender. Strain the cooking liquids through a flannel cloth or several layers
|
|
of cheesecloth and collect the liquid in a flask. Rinse the boiled potatoes
|
|
several times with distilled water, add these rinse waters to the liquid in
|
|
the flask, and discard the potatoes. Add enough distilled water to the flask
|
|
to make one liter. Bring the liquid to a boil and add 15 grams of agar, 10
|
|
grams of dextrose, and 1.5 grams of yeast extract. The agar must be added
|
|
slowly and carefully to prevent boiling over. While the liquid is hot, pour
|
|
it into petri dishes or other culture containers. Each should be filled half
|
|
way.
|
|
|
|
PDY (Potato Dextrose Yeast broth): PDY broth is made in exactly the same
|
|
manner except the agar is omitted. Mason jars are filled half way with the
|
|
hot or cool liquid.
|
|
|
|
MEA (Malt Extract Agar): To one liter of gently boiling water (distilled)
|
|
add 20 grams of malt extract, 20 grams of agar (slowly, carefully to prevent
|
|
boiling over), 100 mg of potassium phosphate dibasic (K2HPO4), and 100 mg
|
|
of calcium carbonate. While still hot pour the liquid into the culture
|
|
dishes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EQUIPMENT
|
|
|
|
|
|
Most of the equipment described in this guide is readily available at
|
|
reasonable prices. One quart size mason jars can be purchased from many
|
|
stores including Sears for about $2.98 a dozen. If a large scale Psilo-
|
|
cybin farm is being set up, a greater number of jars could be obtained
|
|
from a Wholesale outlet or bought at a discount from the retailer.
|
|
Pipettes, inoculating loops, petri dishes, agar, and other materials
|
|
(including pre-mixed media) are found at many scientific supply houses or
|
|
can be ordered from Difco Laboratories, Inc., Detroit, Michigan 48201.
|
|
|
|
If Petri dishes are not on hand, there are several other containers that
|
|
can substitute. Baby food jars 1/4 filled with agar media are excellent.
|
|
Test tubes can be filled 1/3 with hot agar medium, stopped with cotton,
|
|
autoclaved and allowed to cool while standing at a 17 degree angle. These
|
|
are known as slants and permit a maximum surface area. A wooden rack can
|
|
be easily constructed to hold slants at this angle. Baby bottles with a
|
|
steam sterilizer can be bought almost anywhere. These come in sets of nine
|
|
or ten bottles. The tip of the rubber nipple should be cut off and a wad
|
|
of clean cotton pulled through from the inside leaving about 1/2 inch
|
|
sticking out. The bottles are filled 1/3 with agar medium. After sterili-
|
|
zing the bottles should be kept at a 17 degree angle. A large pressure
|
|
cooker - the type used for canning and jarring - can be used for autoclaving
|
|
mason jars of broth medium.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
STARTING THE CULTURE
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Upon obtaining one or more specimens of a psilocybin bearing mushroom one
|
|
can begin to cultivate as much of the hallucinogen as is desired. Any part
|
|
of the fungus can be used for inoculation. If the spores are used, consider-
|
|
ation must be given to the natural life cycle of the mushroom. A single cap
|
|
contains millions of spores, and any one of these will germinate in the
|
|
medium to form a mycelium. But this mycelium will consist of what is known
|
|
as monokaryotic tissue. Such a mycelial organism will grow for a while,
|
|
but unless it mates with another compatible monokaryotic mycelium and forms
|
|
a dikaryotic structure it will eventually perish. To develop a culture from
|
|
spores proceed as follows: Scrape the spores from the print into about 10
|
|
ml of sterilized water. Shake well. Add 90 ml of sterilized water and shake
|
|
again. There will be millions of spores in this solution. Have ready several
|
|
petri dishes or other suitable containers as described previously containing
|
|
sterilized agar medium. Lift the lid slightly on each container and with a
|
|
sterilized pipette or syringe place a drop of this spore water on three or
|
|
four different parts of the agar surface, then cover the container immediat-
|
|
ely. Let the dish stand at room temperature for 3-5 days. Radial growths
|
|
of monokaryotic mycelium will occur at each inoculation point. When any two
|
|
mycelia have grown to the point of making contact with each other mating
|
|
(somatogamy) has taken place and within a few days these united mycelia will
|
|
have become dikaryotic organisms. Any portion of this mycelial tissue can
|
|
now be used to seed new cultures as described later.
|
|
|
|
If a portion of one of the carpaphores gathered in the field is used to
|
|
inoculate the agar, mating is not required. The tissue of mature fungus is,
|
|
of course, already dikaryotic. To avoid contamination only inner tissue is
|
|
used. Place the mushroom cap gills-down on a clean work area at least three
|
|
feet away from any equipment. Wipe all dirt an slime from the cap with a
|
|
Q-tip and swab it's whole surface with a seven percent iodine solution.
|
|
Pin the cap to the Table top by inserting three disecting needles at
|
|
equilateral points. Sterilize an X-acto blade in a flame, let it cool for
|
|
a moment, then carve the outer skin of the mushroom. Cut out tiny pieces of
|
|
the inner mushroom flesh each the size of a match head. Spear each piece
|
|
with the blade point, raise the lid of the petrie dish slightly, press the
|
|
tissue firmly into the agar surface, and close the lid immediately. Place
|
|
all dishes so inoculated on the incubation shelf at room temperature. The
|
|
mycelium must breath as it grows, so do not cap the lids too tightly.
|
|
When the radial growth of the mycelia appear on the agar surface (3-5 days)
|
|
these stock cultures are ready for transferring to the broth jars. If any
|
|
stock cultures are not going to be used immediately, tighten their lids and
|
|
place them under refrigeration. They can be kept this way for about a year.
|
|
|
|
|
|
RAISING CROP CULTURES OF MYCELIA
|
|
|
|
|
|
The task now is to select the most vigorous appearing mycelia in the dishes.
|
|
This means the largest and fastest growing specimens and, of course, those
|
|
not contaminated by foreign molds. Contaminants are not difficult to detect
|
|
because their appearance differs greatly from that of the mycelia. Mycelia
|
|
are pure white fibrous mats sometimes having a light bluish tinge.
|
|
|
|
Contaminants may appear as rapid-growing, tiny, white circular spots with
|
|
blue-green centers, or as surface scums or fuzzy clusters of either gray,
|
|
black, yellow, green, or blue color. If any contamients appear in any of
|
|
the culture dishes, discard those cultures. When the dishes containing
|
|
the choicest mycelia have been selected the mycelia can be transferred from
|
|
the agar-based stock cultures to the liquid broth cultivation jars. These
|
|
jars should have been prepared and sterilized three days before transferring
|
|
and allowed to stand at room temperature during this time to test the effec-
|
|
tivness of sterilization by observing if contaminates appear. Discard all
|
|
broths which contain growths. The uncontaminated jars are now ready for
|
|
inoculation. Spray the room and clean the work area as described under
|
|
pure culture techniques. Also spray the outside parts of the stock dishes
|
|
and culture jars. Lift the lid of a stock dish just enough and pick up a
|
|
fragment of mycelium with an inoculation loop that has been flame sterili-
|
|
zed and allowed a moment to cool. Lift the cover of the jar, place the
|
|
mycelium fragment in the broth and cover the jar immediately. Repeat this
|
|
until all jars have been inoculated. Refrigerate all unused stock cultures.
|
|
Tighten the jar covers and shake well to disperse the inoculum throughout
|
|
the broth. This also aerates the medium; the mycelium needs oxygen for life
|
|
support and growth. Loosen the lids again and place the jars on the growing
|
|
shelf for 10-12 days at 70-75 degrees F. If other species than Psilocybe
|
|
cubensis are used, adjust the temperature accordingly. Every 2-3 days tighten
|
|
the jar covers, shake to aerate and disperse mycelium, reloosen the covers,
|
|
and return the jars to the shelf.
|
|
|
|
The process of growth can be followed with a saccharimeter. The maximum
|
|
growth and highest percentage of psilocybin occurs about four days after all
|
|
of the broth's sugar content has been used up. The mycelium should be
|
|
harvested at this time. Any jars that cannot be harvested on that day should
|
|
be refrigerated until this can be done.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
HARVESTING AND DRYING
|
|
|
|
|
|
Filter the medium of each jar through a clean flannel cloth, collect the
|
|
mycelial material from the cloth, and place it in a pyrex baking dish. Do
|
|
the same with each jar of mycelium until each baking dish is about 1/3 full
|
|
with mycelia. Dry these in an oven at no higher temperature than 200 deg F.
|
|
Use an oven thermometer. Do not rely upon the temperature indications on
|
|
the oven knob as these may vary from accuracy. Check the baking dishes
|
|
periodically. When the material first appears to have dried shut off the
|
|
heat and let the dishes stay in the oven until it has cooled. This ensures
|
|
the evaporation of residual moisture. Each cultivation jar should yield
|
|
50-100 grams of wet mycelium. Fresh mycelium contains about 90 percent
|
|
water, so this much would dry down to 5 to 10 grams of crumbly material.
|
|
Each baking dish would contain a dozen or more mycelia.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EXTRACTION
|
|
|
|
|
|
Crumble and pulverize the dried mycelial material and combine each 100 mg
|
|
of this material with 10 ml of methanol. Place the flask in a hot water
|
|
bath for four hours. Filter the liquids with suction through a filter paper
|
|
in a buchner funnel with Celite to prevent clogging. Collect and save the
|
|
filtrate liquids. Heat the slurry (the mush in the filter paper) two more
|
|
times in methanol as before, filter, and accumulate the liquids of the three
|
|
extractions. To be certain that all of the alkaloids have been extracted do
|
|
a small extraction with a portion of the used slurry and test with Keller's
|
|
reagent (glacial acetic acid, ferrous chloride, and concentrated sulfuric
|
|
acid). If there is a violet indication, alkaloids are still present and
|
|
further extraction is in order.
|
|
|
|
In an open beaker evaporate the liquids to total dryness with a hot water
|
|
bath or by applying a hair dryer. Be certain that all traces of methanol
|
|
have been removed. The remaining residue should contain 25-50 percent
|
|
psilocybin/psilocin mixture. Greater purification can be achieved, but would
|
|
require other solvents and chromatography equipment and is hardly necessary.
|
|
|
|
Each 100 grams of dried mycelium should yield about 2 grams of extracted
|
|
material. This should contain at least 500 mg of psilocybin/psilocin mixed
|
|
or about fifty 10 mg doses. Theoretically psilocin should have the same
|
|
effect upon the user as psilocybin. The only difference between the two is
|
|
that the later has a phosphate bond which disappears immediately after
|
|
assimilation in the body. In other words, in the body psilocybin turns into
|
|
psilocin. Psilocybin is a fairly stable compound, but psilocin is very
|
|
susceptible to oxidization. It is best to keep the extracted material in a
|
|
dry air tight container under refrigeration. A sack of silica-gel can be
|
|
placed in the container to capture any moisture that may enter.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
DOSAGE
|
|
|
|
|
|
The standard dose of psilocybin or psilocin for a 150 lb person is a
|
|
6-20 mg dose. We will figure the average dose as 10 mg. The crude alkaloid
|
|
extraction process given here yields a brownish crystalline powder that is
|
|
at least 25 percent pure. Each mason jar should contain at least 50 grams
|
|
of wet mycelium. After drying this would be about 5 grams of material. The
|
|
crude material extracted from this should contain 25-30 mg of psilocybin/
|
|
psilocin or roughly 2-3 hits. This yield may very to some extent depending
|
|
upon several factors. Many of these species contain less of these alkaloids
|
|
than dose Psilocybe cubensis and the alkaloidal content of this species may
|
|
very in different strains. Cultivation conditions have alot to do with yield
|
|
too. Higher temperatures (75 degrees F.) cause more rapid growth but lesser
|
|
psilocybin content than do lower temperatures (70 degrees F.) One must test
|
|
each new batch of extracted material to determine the proper distribution
|
|
of dosages. Depending on the potency of the mycelia and how well the
|
|
extraction was conducted the dose may range between 25 and 100 mg. Also
|
|
bear in mind that the dose varies for different individuals.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
LARGE SCALE PRODUCTION
|
|
|
|
|
|
The techniques and procedures described in this guide can be employed to
|
|
cultivate modest supplies of psilocybin for personal use, or they can be
|
|
expanded to apply to the large scale production of many thousand doses per
|
|
week. A small 10 x 15 foot room with standard 8 foot ceilings can be set
|
|
up to produce an unending yield of at least 5000 doses per week. The stock
|
|
culture shelves here are 1 foot deep and 5 feet long. Each could hold
|
|
twenty 15 cm petri dishes. If shelving is spaced six inches apart, there
|
|
can be as many as 16 shelves stacked in this space. This would allow for
|
|
up to 300 stock culture dishes going at one time. The crop culture shelves
|
|
can be stacked ten inches apart, accommodating one quart size mason jars and
|
|
giving ten levels. With the dimensions of the room as mentioned this much
|
|
shelving could hold about 2800 jars (3 deep and 3 per running foot). The
|
|
entire room - walls, ceiling, and shelving - should be painted with a white,
|
|
glossy kitchen enamel. This is not only an important sanitary measure, but
|
|
also improves the efficiency and even distribution of light in the room.
|
|
|
|
Lighting should be provide by a few banks of wide spectrum fluorescent tubes
|
|
fairly evenly distributed across the ceiling and turned on for 10-12 hours
|
|
regularly each day. These are great dust catchers, however, and must be
|
|
wiped clean periodically. The work table should also be painted with a hard
|
|
smooth, white finish. If the table is metal, a small, clean cutting board
|
|
must be provided on which to pin down mushroom caps when disecting them.
|
|
Shelf boards on the wall next to the table may be extended above the table
|
|
to provide space for storage of work equipment and ready containers. A hood
|
|
should be constructed around the table to protect it from dust, etc. A fume
|
|
hood with a flu vent and spark-free exhaust fan should be constructed over
|
|
the extraction area to remove toxic and combustible methanol vapors.
|
|
|
|
Extraction is preferably conducted in another room. If the cultivation room
|
|
is used for extraction while the cultures are growing, care must be taken
|
|
that the heat from the extraction process does not alter the room temper-
|
|
ature. The fume hood will help by carrying off most of the heat. A vinyl
|
|
shower curtain should be hung around the work table to shield the area of
|
|
breezes when anyone enters or exits the room. Another vinyl curtain can be
|
|
hung just inside the entrance to serve as a dust trap. A person entering
|
|
the room would close the door behind him before pulling the curtain aside
|
|
- and vice versa on exiting. The floor should be white vinyl or asphalt
|
|
tile or painted white and coated with verathane or polyurethane. There
|
|
should be no cloth or carpeting in the room except for a supply of clean
|
|
worl clothing and surgical masks. The only other items in the room would
|
|
be a stool at the work table, a three step ladder for reaching the upper
|
|
shelves, and a small table on rollers on which to place jars and dishes
|
|
when making the rounds of the shelves.
|
|
|
|
Unless one has a large staff of assistants it would be impossible to
|
|
inoculate 2800 jars in one work session. After getting used to the work
|
|
one could do about 100 jars an hour. The best procedure is to set up a
|
|
continuous rotation of inoculations. Working about three hours a day about
|
|
235 jars could be inoculated each session. All 2800 jars could be inoculated
|
|
in 12 days. Sections of shelving would be divided into groups of 235 jars,
|
|
and these sections would be labled with the date and approximate time of
|
|
inoculation. The work schedule for cultivation would be as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
|
DAY INOCULATE SHAKE HARVEST REINOCULATE
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Mon Group A
|
|
Tues B
|
|
Wed C Group A
|
|
Thurs D B
|
|
Fri E A and C
|
|
Sat F B and D
|
|
Sun G A, C, and E
|
|
Mon H B, D, and F
|
|
Tues I A, C, E, and G
|
|
Wed J B, D, F, and H
|
|
Thurs K A, C, E, G, and I
|
|
Fri L B, D, F, H, and J
|
|
Sat Commence
|
|
Reinoculation
|
|
See Col. 5 C, E, G, I, and K Group A Group A-2
|
|
Sun D, F, H, J, and L B B-2
|
|
Mon E, G, I, K, and A-2 C C-2
|
|
Tues F, H, J, L, and B-2 D D-2
|
|
etc. etc. etc. etc.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This would represent the first 2 weeks of the continuous cultivation cycle.
|
|
The continuation of this schedule is obvious: shaking every other day,
|
|
harvesting approximately every 12 days, and resterilizing, refilling with
|
|
fresh medium, autoclaving, and reinoculating the jars liberated by the days
|
|
harvest. If the total number of jars is 2800, each group would consist of
|
|
235 jars. The same schedule could, of course, be adapted to any number of
|
|
jars. Drying of the mycelia should be done within a few hours after harvest-
|
|
ing. Otherwise enzymes in the material will begin to destroy the active
|
|
alkaloids. Once dried the material can be stored in cool, dark, dry place
|
|
until enough daily harvests have been accumulated to do an extraction. If
|
|
the mycelia can not be dried right away it can be kept in a refrigerator for
|
|
a day or two, or longer times in a freezer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MAINTAINING A PERPETUAL PSILOCYBIN FARM
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fresh inoculum can come from stock culture dishes kept under refrigeration.
|
|
If these should become depleted, healthy strains of mycelium from the crop
|
|
cultures can be used to inoculate sterilized agar media in dishes. To do so
|
|
shake the crop culture jar violently to break up the mycelium. Then transfer
|
|
drops of the liquid into autoclaved petri dishes of unused agar medium with
|
|
a sterilized pipette and let it grow as before. If this reinoculation of
|
|
stock cultures from existing crops is continued over a long period of time,
|
|
the strain will eventually weaken due to what is known as the senescence
|
|
factor. To avoid this alternate the media used in the stock dishes. That is:
|
|
if PDA is used the first time, use MEA the second time and PDA again the
|
|
next time, etc.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
RECOMMENDED READING
|
|
|
|
|
|
If you cannot find these books in a bookstore, they can be ordered by mail
|
|
from their publishers:
|
|
|
|
HOMEGROWN HIGHS
|
|
M.J. Superweed, 1972. High potency cultivation techniques for several
|
|
psychoactive plants including peyote, San Pedro, coleus, and morning glory;
|
|
plus a special medium formula and practical method for maximum mcycelial
|
|
growth and extra-high psilocybin yield. The formula can be used in
|
|
combination with the large-scale production methods in our guide.
|
|
Send $1.50 plus .50 handling to: Flash Mail Order Post Express, 9926
|
|
Haldeman Ave, Suite 3B, Philadelphia, Pa. 19115
|
|
|
|
PSILOCYBIN - MAGIC MUSHROOM GROWERS GUIDE. O.T. Oss and O.N. Oeric, 1976.
|
|
Excellent guide for those who wish to cultivate carpophores of Stropharia
|
|
Cubensis. Nicely illustrated with black and white and color photographs.
|
|
Send $4.95 plus .50 handling to: Flash Mail Order Post Express, 9926
|
|
Haldeman Ave, Suite 3B, Philadelphia, Pa. 19115.
|
|
|
|
Two other highly recommended books - Keys to Genera of Higher Fungi and
|
|
Poisonous and Hallucinogenic Mushrooms are discussed earlier in this
|
|
guide.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|