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Showing content with the highest reputation on 19/01/16 in all areas

  1. 5 points
    More scop x red grandi. All grafts have different degrees of varigation and one is doing a little monster pupping... Probably just from being grafted though. This first one is still on its own roots and doing a dicotamas thing.
  2. 4 points
  3. 2 points
    Na mate I haven't yet. Tbh I was more inclined to throw the excess growth I have in a tea pot this afternoon and have it with a few beers! I shall keep a cutting or two when I decide to do this and let u know
  4. 2 points
    I don't think there is any single category of dark beings... and they always look different to me. I think many are parasites who feed on human energy, (like we feed on plant energy or animal energy), to me many of these guys look like big insects. Some are deceivers/tricksters. And then there are demons. (as in the opposite of angels) Then there are characters out of a dark fairytale or lizard people. Then there are cybertronic forces, who look more like robots. Human like beings. Then there are negative versions of animals we have on earth like mantises or elephants. And Jellyfish like beings. Grey alien beings. And so on and so forth. They are dark insomuch as they bring malevolence, they either want our energy, want to deceive us, cause us suffering, maintain us in a framework of control or set us on paths that behoove themselves (normally some kind of vampirism) or they have some kind of agenda that may be mysterious to us.
  5. 2 points
    Got off to a slow start but thought its time to contribute some photos, loving the way some of these are turning out already! Bridgesii x Validus Bridgesii 'Helen' x Huanucoensis Huan open Huan open Huan x Kimnach Huan x Kimnach Huan x SS02xSS01 Juuls open Juuls x Peru Juuls x Validus Macro x 'Helen' Pc x 'Helen' Peru x Kimnach Spachianus open Spachianus x Juuls SS02xSS01 x Kimnach Validus open Validus x 'Helen' Validus x Pc
  6. 1 point
    Seen heaps of cactus at a mates recently, she doesn't know what any are. Any help with id appreciated. Psycho0 Verified 1 Sausage plant. Verified 2 Stenocereus pruinosus. Verified. Thanks Evil Genius 3 Trichocereus macrogonus Verified, possibly 'Fields' 4 http://trichocereus.net/nothink/ 5 Trichocereus knuthianus x pachanoi Verified 6 just for viewing pleasure. Cheers edit: updated names
  7. 1 point
    theuserformallyknownasd00d - have you ever attempted taking cuttings/clones? This might be a more successful means of propagating.
  8. 1 point
    This is an excellent 10 part lecture about Consciousness Featuring Alexander Shulgin, Christof Koch & Koch at Cal Tech
  9. 1 point
    https://youtu.be/7_u0reE6bjI
  10. 1 point
    I don't think I've posted here in a long time, so here's a little update :-------) Trichocereus pachanoi monstrose (believed to be Altmans Monstrose) got a pup that terminated and then decided to un-terminate and go tastily inermis This is a graft of a pup from the monstrose that was all brain-like which has now crested Trichocereus pachanoi PC variegate reaaaaallly slightly variegated, very hard to capture with a camera, especially a phone camera TBM Long Form all grown up : ' -- ) and getting nice and fat Fricii Monstrose/Cristata suffered a nice cocktail of spidermite, scale and sunburn but getting better with the tasty new growth
  11. 1 point
  12. 1 point
    Some root grafts... Zellys LW Texana Astro asterias f/nudum Astro asterias struggling to break through the callous
  13. 1 point
    Post from the front of the EGA page - http://www.entheogenesis.org From Medical to Recreational: The Road the Regulation On Saturday the 5th of December EGA premiered the Melbourne screening of DrugLawed, a New Zealand documentary following the atrocities of the global drug war instigated by the United States. The screening was followed by a panel which focused on current drug policy issues and pragmatic ways to move forward. The panel was chaired by host of Enpsychedelia (http://www.enpsychedelia.org & http://www.3cr.org.au/enpsychedelia) on 3CR Nick Wallis and included the following guests: Greg Chipp: Greg Chipp is a director of Drug Policy Australia, a newly-established public health NGO primarily concerned with drug policy advocacy and with promoting new legislative approaches to minimise the harms associated with the use of psychoactive substances. He has been actively involved in politics and public policy development for several decades, beginning with his involvement in the Australian Democrats, a political party he helped establish in the 1970’s. More recently Greg stood as a Drug Law Reform candidate in the 2013 Federal election campaigning on a platform of decriminalising the use of all drugs and calling for a Royal Commission into the health and economic costs associated with the criminalisation of recreational drug use. Greg believes that the current prohibitionist approach of criminalising drug use does more harm than good, and that a new regulatory system for Australia based on the ‘Portugal Model’ is both realistic and achievable. Helen Barnacle: Helen Barnacle is a psychologist with over three decades of experience. Now in private practice, Helen continues to work with people with addiction issues, ‘victims of crime’, trauma, women experiencing violence and the general community. She is also a musician who spent many years performing and song writing. Between 2000 and 2010 she devoted considerable time and energy to utilising the arts to work with young people, particularly young women in custody in the youth justice system. Helen is the author of ‘Don’t Let Her See Me Cry’, a best-selling autobiography depicting Helen’s remarkable journey from a hopeless young heroin addict facing prison with a new baby, to successful psychologist. Helen became the first woman to keep her baby in prison beyond the age of one, after receiving the longest drug-related sentence ever meted out to a woman in Victoria. Greg Denham: Greg Denham is the Executive Officer of the Yarra Drug and Health Forum and is also the Australian representative for LEAP – Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a US based group made up of police who want to end the war on drugs. He has over 25 years of local, national and international experience in illicit drug policy and policing. Greg is a former member of Victoria Police and has spent a significant amount of his career training police on drug harm minimisation policies and principles. In recent years Greg has been an advisor on several international harm reduction and HIV prevention projects in Asia and East Africa. He has also worked for the UN, work that focussed on providing technical advice for law enforcement, government, non-government and community groups on HIV prevention through harm reduction programs. Greg is a strong advocate for drug policy reform and is committed to removing punitive and discriminatory drug laws that stigmatise drug use and deny human rights. Fiona Patten: Fiona Patten is the founder and leader of the Australian Sex Party and a Member of the Victorian Legislative Council for the Northern Metropolitan region. She came to politics after 20 years of lobbying for the rights of organisations involved in civil liberties movement – including HIV/AIDS organisations, sex worker advocacy, adult media and anti-censorship groups. Fionahas been a drug law reform advocate for decades and has been very proactive in the movement. Arik Reiss: Producer of DrugLawed and currently working on the sequel, DrugLawed Two. There is a Kickstarter campaign currently running to help fun the next film. Details can be found here: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1989898482/druglawed-2 PANEL OVERVIEW: Fiona Patten MLC has submitted a wide ranging inquiry into Victoria’s current drug laws. Details on the 'Inquiry into Illicit and Synthetic Drugs and Prescription Medication' can be found here: http://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/lrrcsc/inquiries/article/2809 and it is not due to report until March 2017. The Terms of Reference of the inquiry are very broad: 1. reviewing the effectiveness of drug treatment programs in Victoria with recommendations on how treatment and harm minimisation strategies could be used as an alternative to criminal penalties; 2. reviewing the effectiveness of Victorian government investment into illicit drug supply reduction, demand reduction and harm reduction strategies and programs; 3. reviewing effectiveness of drug detection programs including roadside testing and procedures for deploying drug detection activities at events; 4. assessing the impact of prescription medication on road safety; 5. reviewing and assessing the effectiveness of laws and regulations relating to illicit and synthetic drugs; and 6. assessing practices of other Australian states and territories and overseas jurisdictions and their approach to drug law reform and how other positive reforms could be adopted to Victorian law. The inquiry will look into practices such as using Passive Alert Detection (PAD) dogs, commonly known as sniffer dogs at music festivals and other events. This particular topic had been in the news surrounding the panel, as sniffer dogs operations at festivals have been linked to dangerous consumption behaviour by patrons trying to avoid detections. At the time of writing this, nearly 40,000 people have signed Adriana Buccianti’s Change.org petition (https://www.change.org/p/my-son-died-at-a-music-festival-don-t-let-any-more-young-people-die-at-australian-festivals), asking that sniffer dogs be called off. Adriana is the mother of Daniel Buccianti, who passed away following an opiate overdose at Rainbow Serpent Festival 2012. The campaigns for cessation of sniffer dogs is a step in the right direction, but another step toward reducing harms is the introduction of drug checking services such as as pill testing. The panelists briefly touched on this topic, which has been building in momentum for many months and has recently reached a high point. The peer-based psychedelic and other drug harm reduction and education service DanceWize has lead the push for these services to be implemented at Victorian festivals. The panel also touched on the recent introduction of an amendment to Victoria’s prohibition legislation which seeks to widen the scope of prohibition and the penalties associated with possession, supply, manufacture and cultivation of Schedule 11 substances, which includes cannabis, LSD, MDMA and psilocybin. The amendment has already passed the Lower House with very little debate. The only amendments offered so far were from the Liberal Party, who wanted to increase already extensive sentences proposed in the Bill. Sections 71E and 71F of the proposed amendments focus on the possession or distribution of instructions relating to the cultivation, supply or manufacture of a Schedule 11 drug. In layperson terms, this means that if you possess a book or magazine that includes basic cannabis cultivation instructions, then you could potentially face hefty penalties, including jail time. It seems plausible that even printing out a copy of psilocybe mushroom growing tips could be considered grounds for prosecution. (http://enpsychedelia.org/enpsychedelia/blog/victorias-book-ban-on-the-horizon-for-2016/). Greg Chipp of Drug Policy Australia is working with a small team of people to protest against the introduction of these amendments. The Bill is currently sitting in the Legislative Council and won’t be debated until Parliament resumes in 2016 on February 9th. Over your holiday season, make sure to get in contact with your representatives in the Legislative Council and let them know that you think Sections 71E and 71F of the Drugs, Poisons and Controlled Substances Amendment Bill 2015 go too far. The more that your representatives hear your voice on these important issues, the more likely it is that they will raise objections, discuss this with their colleagues and potentially introduce amendments to stop this sort of thing from happening. The panelists went on to take a more optimistic and pragmatic look into how currently illegal drugs could be regulated in the future, giving us some of their ideas and thoughts on this particularly complex issue that receives too little attention. The key to making change happen is for you to get involved. There are people already out there doing some heavy lifting. Find the others and give them a hand. Writing to your politicians helps to seed ideas in their mind but also writing to your paper, speaking to the radio stations and television stations and of course getting out on social media are all good ways for you to engage. Be polite and check your facts when you engage. An informed advocate is far more effective than someone who is passionate but unable to communicate well with those who don’t already agree with the position of the passionate advocate. WHAT CAN YOU DO? If you’re a University student, get involved with the beginning of drug policy reform groups on campus. http://enpsychedelia.org/enpsychedelia/blog/help-setup-university-campus-drug-policy-reform-clubs/ Write to your local members of parliament. Make sure you know who you are writing to, whether they are your federal representative or state representative and which house they sit in. Participate in the online discussions. Write to your local paper, call your radio station, write to your television station. Become involved with groups like Drug Policy Australia (http://www.drugpolicy.org.au/), UnHarm (http://www.unharm.org/) and DanceWize (http://hrvic.org.au/dancewize/volunteer-form/). Attend EGA events (http://www.entheogenesis.org). Support PRISM (http://www.prism.org.au). Listen to Enpsychedelia (http://www.enpsychedelia.org). Speak to your peers and relatives openly and honestly about your own drug use or interest in drugs. Open up the dialogue. Keep compassionate. Remember that your preferences may not be the preferences of others and that is not a reason to judge another negatively. If someone is having a difficult battle with a substance, help them rather than stigmatise them.
  14. 1 point
    i saw the band Goat last week or the week before? and i have to say they really, REALLY fucking moved me. The bass was that threatening (live) that i had to run off to the composting loo's and when i got there i wasn't gunna line up ......................like an idiot, so i just kept walking past each cubicle until one person opened the door and i jumped the queue and quickly went in and locked the door. Between Goat and all the booing from people outside only made the experience even more enjoyable........fuck you hipsters - you do know that your fad is dead and all your beards are now obsolete.
  15. 1 point
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  17. 1 point
    i have ordered a calf which I'm going to call cubensis this calf hasn't even been born yet and is 3 months away i live in a state that is in the south of the country and cubensis don't grow here at all. i believe by introducing spores to the cows water we may see some results at certain times off the year when the conditions may be right here. i thought we might want to chat about it while we await cubensis's arrival in 3 months time once she has been properly weened from her mum etc am going for a meat cow as i can't be bothered milking a cow 2ce a day
  18. 1 point
  19. 1 point
    The title of this thread needs to be changed to "The life of a grafted basketball" Wonderful stuff.
  20. 1 point
    quite a cool one , not what i expected... "Only Lovers Left Alive" http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1714915/
  21. 1 point
    Like I said above, yes, it appears to have come from a garden in that area. He also had 3 terscheckii pups taken from a garden in the area that were each about 60cm X 30cm. Not rooted and very, very scarred. He just wanted WAY too much for them. $200 each!!! Pics of his terscheckii pup that was in the best condition of them all, (and wasn't for sale) And EG, here are some more pics of my "pasacana" which has to be something else like a chilensis or a hybrid terscheckii/chilensis I think. Thoughts? Flower pics are about October 2014. Pics of new fresh growth are taken early March 2015. He is a bit over 3 feet from the ground to the top now. Has 3 pups now which have formed over the last 3 months too.
  22. 1 point
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  24. 1 point
    alot of the cactus has a great blue color, really nice looking plant
  25. 1 point
    My solution to the problem is not to have any money at all. Simple.
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