![]() |
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
I actually bought some of this stuff a few years ago (purely for research purposes.) After reading up on it on the internet, however, I opted not to indulge. What I read led me to believe that it was often unpredictable, and sometimes not in a pleasurable way. One site even suggested that you have someone monitor you during usage. I tend to stay away from drugs that require me to have a personal guardian. To the trash it went.
|
Oh please, I've heard that Personal Monitor stuff for so many drugs that didn't require any such thing.
But if it's likely to lead to post-use depression, it's not a hallucenogin ... rather something that acts on seretonin and its ilk, lile ecstacy. Not interested in the bliss drugs ... only in the psychenautic psychoactive enhancers. I'm willing to try anything once. Is this available locally anywhere? (And, if so, will you please monitor my trip, MBC?) ;) |
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
Water's worth its weight in gold these days No more bathrooms like in olden days! You come here and pay a fee For the privilege to pee! |
Quote:
Quote:
|
I'm of the mindset that marijuana should be legallized, but, that's not this story. And, no, I don't smoke it.
|
Salvia Divinorum is the psychoactive species.
I learned this after pulling seeing these (crappy cell phone photo) planted along Fairview blvd. next to a park and pulling over to grab a clipping to identify it. Turns out it's salvia! But it appears to be Salvia leucantha, not divinorum, so no worries if and when I plant this in the back. The flowers are fuzzy! ETA: I don't know if leucantha has been tested for psychoactive effects or not. I did find a study that showed that a 3rd species (splendens, generally with scarlet red flowers) produced "effects" consistent with a placebo. So it seems that divinorum is THE species of interest. I still don't know what availability is. |
Salvia Divinorum is different than the garden variety (literaly) flowering salvia (member of the Sage family) which commonly has either red or purple flowers and is quite popular in those ubiquitous mini landscapes at gas stations or shopping centers. Its also quite different from the Sage used in herb gardening and cooking. There are quite a few different wild varieties of sage as well, but I don't think Salvia Divinorum is native to the US. I've never seen Salvia Divinorum anywhere either growing wild or at a nursery - although it's not a plant I would recognize off the bat (like some other wildflowers I become obsessed about.)
|
All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:47 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.