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The Corroboree

Xperiment

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Posts posted by Xperiment


  1. 11 hours ago, mindperformer said:

    Under SSRI- medication longer than 3 weeks, the presynaptic 5-HT1A- receptors (reduce Serotonin levels) are back-regulated, for the 5-HT2A- receptors the situation under SSRIs is more complicated. It seems that the population density of them is down-regulated and the downstream effectors are also changed (GIRK- channels), but the receptor-affinity for Serotonin is up-regulated, so they don't have the right constitution for Tryptamines anymore.

     

     

    Sorry to dumb this thread down,  but does this change in 5-HT2A receptors stay around after SSRI medication has ceased? 


  2. I've had this app for a while.

    It's great for helping to remember the names of plants I've forgotten, but it struggles a bit with Australian natives and lesser known plants. 

    It's still worth the space on my phone though :)


  3. Hi, 

    I'm looking for a couple of plants for propagation. In order of priority; 

    1. A small/cheap piece of TBM to grow forth.

    2. A section of freshly cut caapi vine to grow from. 

    3. Psychotria "Nexus" or similar fast growing variety. Fresh leaf to grow from.

     

    If someone has all 3 that would be ideal to save me on postage.

    I'd also look at rooted plants but trying to do this on the cheap,  so by all means let me know what you've got,  but my finances are fairly limited. 

    Can PayPal if that suits. 

     

    Cheers! 

    • Like 1

  4. Hi,  

    I was given 3 cactus cuts by a friend. 

    I'm 90% sure that the right hand one is pachanoi, but not sure what the others might be.  Any help is greatly appreciated. 

    They broke off his plants some time ago and had been sitting in an empty pot in the shade. After I got them yesterday I put them into dry perlite. Is there anything different you would do to root them?

    Thanks in advance! 

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  5. A couple of decades ago I was a semi-professional sportsperson. Since then my fitness has fluctuated between couch potato and fitter than I was back then. 

     I find the biggest mental impediment to frequent exercise is the pain that comes a few days after you try to jump straight back into what you used to do. Nothing motivates you to stay on the couch like sore stiff muscles. Easing into it is the key. 

    My sports were fairly hard on the body so I found glucosamine to be fairly helpful with the inevitable joint pains that come when you try to re-mobilize the creaky joints on a 40-something year old bag-o-bones. 

    Creatine - I took that for a while but it gave me an uncomfortable sort of bloated feeling, not much else. 

     

    My most recent fitness attempt was a 10 minute workout where you perform workout A on Monday,  Wednesday and Friday and workout B Tuesday,  Thursday and Saturday. In the past 5 weeks I've done 2 workout A's and one workout B. 

    Small steps :rolleyes:

     


  6. I'd usually transplant earlier than that. Say at 4-5 true phyllodes. 

    However, transplanting a small plant from a large pot makes the job a bit awkward. You risk the root ball falling apart and damaging the roots. 

    If it was me I'd start them in a smaller pot (Like the little orange pot sitting in the big pot)  and when you see a root pop out of the drainage holes, whack it in the ground.

    As it is now,  the plant looks pretty healthy so you could leave it in the big pot until the roots are developed enough to hold all that soil together,  then plant it in the ground. 

    Hope that makes sense

    • Like 1

  7. A useful book I've owned for years is "Field Guide to the Native Plants of Sydney" by Les Robinson. It has identification keys which are really useful when you don't know where to start. 

    According to the book,  a lot of the usual suspects are found in the Sydney area. Among them:

    decurrens, falcata, floribunda, longifolia, maidenii, and obtusifolia. 

    Depending on where you are there's probably a bush regeneration nursery/Greening Australia/State Forest nursery that would have tubestock of many of those species, for a good price. 

     

    • Like 2

  8. If you web search "simple plant deficiency guide" it'll show you a handy chart to identify classic symptoms of deficiencies. Often there are multiple issues or trace elements lacking. 

    Depending on your location,  Australian soils are often deficient in most things plants need. Potting mixes also,  especially the cheaper ones. 

    You can buy iron chelates to correct an iron deficiency, or a complete trace element blend,  to correct multiple problems. 

    That said,  also check your soil pH levels,  as nutrient availability varies drastically with soil acidity changes. Optimal for most plants is 6.5 - 7.

     

    Hope that helps

    • Like 3

  9. Hi, 

    I found this little fella in the garden section of my local big green warehouse. 

    The label offers no more insight than "Cactus" so I tried a phone app I have which identifies plants from your photos (pic attached) The app is OK, not great. Anyway the app's 3rd suggestion is L. Williamsi.

    I'm pretty new to this and I don't *think* it's a Loph.... 

    But,  is it?  :P

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  10. I know what you're talking about. 

    I gave up alcohol completely,  almost 18 months ago, and I consider it the beginning of my spiritual and conscious awakening. 

    I went from being a daily drinker, and an avid home brewer,  growing hops,  culturing yeast strains, and temperature controlled fermentations -  to tipping it down the sink. 

    A change in diet for me was almost unavoidable. I didn't really care what I shoved down my food-hole when I was under the influence. I didn't really care about much at all. Maybe that's one of the reasons alcohol use is so prevalent in our society. 

    And culturally, not drinking is even more unacceptable and suspicious to the average bloke  than not being interested in football (which I am also guilty of).  These cultural obsessions, or lack of participation in them,  tend to put one on the fringe of society anyway. And that's a good thing, for me anyway. 

    So I try to eat what i know is good for me, and try to get my family doing the same. 

     

    • Like 2

  11. Another great post. 

     

    Common garden plant amazing potential. After your last mention of Gardenia jasminoides I picked one up from that big green warehouse as tubestock for ~$3

     

    Just did a quick search on which part of the plant is used for GYP extraction,  and it seems to be the fruit. Interesting...  Because I don't think I've ever seen (or should I say, noticed) any fruit on a gardenia. Or is it just me? 

    • Like 1

  12. Hi @Martyh64,

    I first started along this path,  already being a bit of a gardener,  and reading about Terence McKenna. That lead from mushrooms to Ayahuasca and on and on. So those would be on my "one day" list. One day being when I'm off the meds. Pretty keen on salvia one day too. 

     

    One thing about my anxiety is that it makes me overly cautious,  until one day I have a blinding flash of confidence and decide to challenge myself and do something outrageous,  so I thought I'd forearm myself with some knowledge first in case that day comes soon and I can make a smart decision. 

     

    I like the idea of growing my own plants,  so some of what I have growing might give you an idea of my interest:

    T. Pachanoi seedlings

    Wild dagga

    Mugwort

    Calea zacatechichi

    Hops

    Passiflora

     

    Mild to wild I know, but some relate to my other interests (or former interests, like brewing) and others I started to help with sleep. 

    Anyway I am open to any ideas I am just fascinated by plants and enjoy growing them for their own sake. 

    Thanks for your reply Martyh64

    • Like 2

  13. Thank you for your helpful replies. 

     

    @Alchemica I have read through many of your posts on here and while some of the technical aspects fly way above my head,  I get the gist of it. I appreciate the time and energy that you put into it.

     

    I will read some more on saffron and dietary changes and give it a try, as well as the Gardenia and Aptenia. 

    I have tried pot and lemongrass (for myrcene) separately. Pot didn't seem to affect me the way it used to when I was younger,  didn't do a great deal at all but then I only used a small amount.

    The tiny amount of lemongrass I smoked make me feel so tired and heavy that I laid on the floor for almost 2 hours with no energy to move.  As my energy slowly returned, with it came a splitting headache that lasted several days. So I thought no more experimenting without further advice. 

     

    @☽Ţ ҉ĥϋηϠ₡яღ☯ॐ€ðяئॐ♡Pϟiℓℴϟℴ

     

    On sertraline I do feel as though I don't care about anything,  if not completely then at least nowhere near how I used to. I feel like I'm going through the motions a lot of the time in a world that doesn't make sense. I think I appear outwardly "normal" (maybe a bit eccentric), not that I really care how I appear, but for someone like me with a full time job and a bunch of kids,  I think I don't seem as crazy as I feel sometimes but often I "come to" with no solid recollection of what I'm doing or how I got here.

    The sleep thing is a problem for me because I need to get up at 5am for work. Ideally I would like to go to sleep at 930 ish, but often it's not til after midnight that I drop off.  I don't function very well on less sleep.  

    Regarding sugars,  I really need to take them out of my diet. I've always had a sweet tooth but now I feel like my sense of taste and smell is disappearing too,  I like to scoff down a dessert after dinner for some sensory pleasure :-)

     

    Thank you both for your responses,  I now have some ideas where to start. 

     

     

    • Like 2
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