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DreamingNagual

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Everything posted by DreamingNagual

  1. Can you give a little more info? What dosage was taken? Were any other substances consumed as well? (Ie, Alc, SSRI'S, MAOI's or any other Prescription or street Drugs?) What if any foods were eaten prior to ingestion of the Subs?
  2. Hey there Tarnicus, I have mentioned in a couple of previous threads about the Distinct Smell of subs & came up with an answer as to what it was. Look Here From Post #9 onwards. http://www.shaman-australis.com/forum/inde...9&hl=Windex I have yet to find the other thread about this subject, But I am still searching! Cheers!
  3. Thanks T, I had done a rough Google myself and found That Same website. I will send an Email & try & get in touch with Marj. Thanks Again.
  4. Just spotted this thread, Short answer is yes for me! Also been getting a feeling of being outside the body, Like I will be sitting still & get the tactile sensation of being a few inches to a foot above beside or behind my body, Like a dual existence, Also Dreaming has become more "REAL". All has been escalating more in the last few month.
  5. I was waiting for someone to mention opiate withdrawals, Try magnesium sups, Or cattapress, They really helped for me. also chocamine!
  6. Thanks HK, I should of been more descriptive, The whole cardboard & hessian technique is what helped get me to this stage. Its a bit more advanced than just Blindly Squirting Spores Across a patch on the ground. I used thick black Plastic bags instead of styro tubs to hold the Chip/Mulch layers. One contained Clean Chips & sawdust, That I left to decay for a month then I added parts of the Myc covered Cardboard, hessian, Small sticks & stem buts, Then Left to do its thing under the shade of a lemon Tree & few Tobbaco plants. The other 2 was a mixture of Clean Chips & Sawdust Mulch Layed with heavily Colonised Woodmulch & ground matter from a very healthy wild Patch. The first bag is the only one thats was left dry after finding the whole 3 had dried up over the summer. Its also the only one yet to fruit so I was thinking of ways to help it along, And wondering what, If any extra benefit the heavily sporated water would of had on the areas of colonisation still active and exposed. Cheers.
  7. When I was younger and very unexperienced in hunting and Psychedelics in general, I was looking amongst native eucalypt and wattle ground litter & we found a heap of the Fungi thats pictured in the third photograph of tyler83durdens post. To us uneducated young blokes they were what we thought "Gold Caps" were sposed to look like, So we proceeded to pick a bag full and head back to our shack. They were cut up and stirred into a mix of mince and 2 minute noodles in a frypan to make some sort of stirfried concoction. Luckily after eating them, waiting half an hour or more and nothing happening, We threw the rest away putting it down to "Bunk Mushies" or That the kid who told us they were the real deal was telling us porkies, This is where I got worried about being poisoned and started to stress as we had no way of contacting Emergency services or transport out of the bush from where we were. In the end no Ill effects were experienced and we put it down to dumb luck & stupidity. Looking back we were very lucky not to have been in serious trouble or worse. Sorry for raving! I just wanted to share that story.
  8. Sorry if this has been asked before, But I am not able to research this further where I am at the moment! So Hypotheticaly speaking, If one were to make up some spore water syringes using freshly taken prints. Then was to introduce the spores in & over a bed of chips & mulch that was already partly colonised and fruiting. (Keeping in mind that the optimal conditions needed for development will be artificially supplied to suit their needs!) Would these spores produce or help to produce anything of value in this same season or would they need time to do whatever spores do to get their shit into gear and not show anything till next year? Thanks in advance.
  9. Try what I use, A moat filled with beer surrounding the thing needing protection, Or just 2 or 3 margarine tubs or similar strategically placed & buried to ground level then filled with beer, I guarantee you that they will go for the booze first everytime!
  10. Hello Folks, I wonder if anyone here can help me out? I have been working in the garden of an elderly friend of the family for about the last week or two. In the process of weeding I accidentally pulled out and disposed of some saplings of the poor old ladys favourite plant, Which was a Miniature Wisteria! I would greatly appreciate it if anyone here had some seeds or cuttings of this plant that they would like to trade? Or can point me in the right direction of a cheap source for this plant as well as I have very little funds! This is an urgent matter as this plant means a lot to this dear old Lady. Thankyou in advance, Mojo!
  11. Hey all, At About this time last year some bags of Sawdust & Woodchip mulch was spread outdoors amongst a few wild patches in an attempt to provide a fresh and new enviroment for this seasons Flushes to take advantage of. Some of the pre-existing ground matter containing a lot of Mycelium was taken and placed in a black garbage bag with some of the fresh mulch layered over the top. This was left and forgotten about, And because the bag was ripped open most of the medium had actually dried out almost compleatly over the summer. Well, Today while in the garden, Just out of curiousity a corner of the bag was peeled back to reveal a baby Sub, Poking its head out of the Mulch. I will try and get some pics up asap!
  12. I seen the ad for this yesterday, I wonderin if its the one where she gets injected with THC? It Looks pretty good none the less.
  13. http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Science/2009/0...9501651-ap.html 47 million-year-old skeleton revealed. May shed light on primate evolution. By Malcolm Ritter, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. NEW YORK - The nearly complete and remarkably preserved skeleton of a small, 47-million-year-old creature found in Germany was displayed Tuesday by scientists who said it would help illuminate the evolutionary roots of monkeys, apes and humans. Experts praised the discovery for the level of detail it provided but said it was far from a breakthrough that would solve the puzzles of early evolution. About the size of a small cat, the animal has four legs and a long tail. Nobody is claiming that it's a direct ancestor of monkeys and humans, but it provides a good indication of what a long-ago ancestor may have looked like, researchers said at a news conference. In an evolutionary sense, the fossil is like an aunt from several generations ago, said Jens Franzen of the Senckenberg Research Institute in Frankfurt, Germany. The fossil is the best preserved ever found for a primate, said Jorn Hurum, of the University of Oslo Natural History Museum, one of the scientists introducing the specimen. It's about 95 per cent complete, even including fingertips with nails, and lacks only the lower portion of one leg, Hurum said. It also includes gut contents, showing the creature ate leaves and fruit in its rainforest environment. Experts not connected with the discovery said the finding was remarkably complete because of features like stomach contents. But they questioned the conclusions of Hurum and his colleagues about how closely it is related to ancestors of monkeys and humans. "I actually don't think it's terribly close to the common ancestral line of monkeys, apes and people," said K. Christopher Beard of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh. "I would say it's about as far away as you can get from that line and still be a primate." Rather than a long-ago aunt, "I would say it's more like a third cousin twice removed," he said. So it probably resembles ancestral creatures "only in a very peripheral way," he said. Beard said scientists already have a fossil from China of about the same age that is widely accepted as coming from monkey-ape-human ancestral line, and it's much smaller than the new-found fossil and ate a different diet. "They are radically different animals," he said. John Fleagle of the State University of New York at Stony Brook said the scientists' analysis provides only "a pretty weak link" between the new creature and higher primates, called anthropoids, that includes monkeys and man. "It doesn't really tell us much about anthropoid origins, quite frankly," Fleagle said. Fleagle said the scientists did an "extraordinary" job of extracting detailed information from the fossil. "There's certainly a lot more information about this individual than probably any other fossil primate that's ever been recovered," he said. The animal was a juvenile female that scientists believe died at about nine or 10 months. "She tells so many stories. We have just started the research on this fabulous specimen," said Hurum. The fossil, recovered from a mine about 40 kilometres southeast of Frankfurt, is nicknamed Ida after Hurum's six-year-old daughter. Its scientific name is Darwinius masillae, after Charles Darwin and the area where it was found. The fossil was unearthed by a private collector in 1983 and remained in private hands until Hurum's museum bought it in 2007. Ida was unveiled at New York's American Museum of Natural History, which will feature a replica cast in a new exhibit about mammals. It was promoted by a news release for the cable TV channel History that called it a "revolutionary scientific find that will change everything." Mayor Michael Bloomberg, among the speakers at the news conference, called it an "astonishing breakthrough." The story of the fossil find will be shown on History, which is owned by A&E Television Networks. A book also is planned. Hurum saw nothing wrong with the heavy publicity, which preceded the publication of a paper about the fossil Tuesday in the scientific journal PLOS (Public Library of Science) One. "That's part of getting science out to the public, to get attention. I don't think that's so wrong," Hurum said. http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Science/2009/0...9501651-ap.html
  14. Hey there HK, What were the prints taken on? Foil, Paper? Prints that are Thick and drop a lot of spores tend to appear Jet Black when they are actually more of a Very Dark Purple colour. Hope this helps!
  15. Hello meanies, That was a great story, Thanks for sharing it with us!
  16. Happy Birthday T! Well Done & all the best for another year
  17. Cracking The Maya Code 8:30pm Thursday, 21 May 2009 Documentary CC G http://www.abc.net.au/tv/guide/netw/200905...2009T203000.htm Cracking The Maya Code is arguably one of the greatest of all archaeological detective stories. The Maya script is the New World's most highly developed ancient writing system. Records of this written language were all but destroyed by European conquerors, who burned an untold number of Maya books. Today, only four known, partial examples survive. The ancient Maya civilisation of Central America left behind an intricate and mysterious hieroglyphic script, carved on monuments, painted on pottery and drawn in hand-made bark-paper books. For centuries scholars considered it too complex ever to understand - until recently when an ingenious series of breakthroughs finally cracked the code and unleashed a torrent of new insights into the Maya's turbulent past. Unlike the Rosetta Stone, which unlocked the secrets of Egyptian hieroglyphs in practically one fell swoop, deciphering the Maya script involved a long series of hunches and tantalising insights as well as false leads, blind alleys and heated disagreements among scholars. Cracking The Maya Code presents the epic inside story of how the decoding was done and what Maya writings now reveal. As Maya inscriptions were slowly deciphered it became clear that this was an empire of divine rule and blood sacrifice, with warrior-kings waging constant battles, conquest and power struggles with rival lords. Today, the decoders are working with the descendants of the ancient Maya to link their spoken language with the deciphered glyphs, and modern Maya are reclaiming the rich and complicated history that has finally been unlocked. http://www.abc.net.au/tv/guide/netw/200905...2009T203000.htm Sounds like a very interesting an Informative program, I wouldnt be missing this one People!
  18. Not really a super power But "I Swear" That I have experienced on more than one occasion mutual telepathy with more than one other person, As well as group hallucinations on Fungi! And experienced Telepathy whilst under the influence of Phsychedelics With a person or persons that were sober at the time of the event!
  19. Excellent Work there Morg , I was almost certain I was Correct! So it shows right here folks, How many different opinions & conclusions people can come up with for the same samples of Fungi. Its great to be Pulled up every now and then like that "Patricularly at this time of year" And use it as a reminder to take some time to Re-familiarize yourself with The processes of ID'ing all Fungi you may find, not just Subs & Gallerina's! A good way to start this, is to find and Identify all the Fungi species within your Property or backyard and then expand eventualy to the whole neighbourhood. Cheers.
  20. Hey there HK, To me It looks like a Mushroom Cloud from a Little Atomic Bomb Going off in the desert
  21. Glad too help out buddy! And congrats to ajna for the winning entry!
  22. Cool, But I Dont have a work address, Just a home Addy! Will that be sweet? Cheers, Mojo!
  23. Update.. The Prize now includes, Sharxx101's Narrow Leaf Khat seeds, 35g of Tasmanian P,som seed from GSK, Small Satchel of HBWR, & Satchel of P,Harmala seed.
  24. ^ Cheers! How did we go MORG?
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