Jump to content
The Corroboree

∂an

Members2
  • Posts

    1,079
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

Posts posted by ∂an

  1. this link is an oldie but a goodie:

    https://www.erowid.org/library/books_online/magic_mushrooms_aunz/magic_mushrooms_aunz.shtml

    cubensis season in nsw has pretty much ended now. when in season, these can be found in cow paddocks within 50-100km max of the coast.

    as others have said, now would be a good time to start researching psilocybe subaeruginosa. they can be found in cooler forested areas growing on decomposing wood. i've found botanic gardens to be good places to look for these, lots of wood chipped garden beds.

    good luck with your research!

  2. Might be useful to have some small pieces of these super hot chillies on standby if your doing a deep journey. Wade davis in the book one river mentions that some shamans in the amazon use chilli to reconnect with the body if they find themselves flying too high. Inhaling the vapour given off from the fry pan when cooking with chilli does have a focusing effect somewhat similar to nicotine.

    • Like 1
  3. subbalteatus?

    yeah the cap looks similar but the stem in this one is much thinner than seems to be typical for cinctulus. plus that mushroom is not that common in this part of australia as far as i am aware, and this mushrooms was very strong in alkaloids.

    it looks similar to the mushrooms referred to as psilocybe coprophila and panaeolous sphinctrinus (inactive) on this page:

    http://www.mushroomjohn.org/ruminantsandhabitats15.htm

    I think there are at least three dung loving active species in oz

    • Like 2
  4. My favourite scene from this movie is where the French guy and the protagonist are walking down the street and he mentions datura, and how fucked up it is. Must be one of the only big budget films where such a relatively obscure ethnobotanical is mentioned.

    • Like 1
  5. Love the glowing Omphalotus nidiformis story!

    "

    The Tasmanian George Robinson wrote: "Various are the fungus which the natives eat, and all are known to them by different qualities which they possess, and all are known by different names".

    "

    Tribes like this would know about any psilocybes in the area. I wonder if their art reflects this...

    • Like 2
  6. Since this thread was created, at least one scientific journal article has been written on the subject of the rock arrangements at Wurdi Youang.



    Wurdi Youang: an Australian Aboriginal stone arrangement with possible solar indications



    Their testing of the hypothesis that the egg shape rock arrangement was designed to indicate astronomical phenomena, namely the position of the sun at the solstices and equinox, is scientifically rigorous and convincing.



    post-6519-0-89894000-1419668977_thumb.jp



    Now we just need to find a site that indicates aboriginal knowledge of Earths axial precession (i.e. that the constellations behind the sun at the equinoxes and solstices change over a period of 26,000 years).


    post-6519-0-89894000-1419668977_thumb.jpg

    post-6519-0-89894000-1419668977_thumb.jpg

    post-6519-0-89894000-1419668977_thumb.jpg

    • Like 2
  7. yeah merry christmas y'all

    how do we make this transplanted co-opted northern hemisphere shamanistic cum crypto-christian festival more australian? as plant heads, it seems what we really are celebrating at this time of year is the summer solstice. midsummer was often celebrated with a bon fire in pagan europe, but given that it is so hot and bushfire dangers maybe not so appropriate for oz? one thing christmas in qld always reminds me of is mushrooms and snakes, both seem to rear their heads at this time of year.... so how about a mushroom serpent festival?!

  8. while on the topic of AI, many of you probably heard or saw Stephen Hawking warning of the dangers posed by AI. I heard it on the radio whilst driving; it was quite surreal to hear one of the most amazing minds this planet has produced, now aided by a computer for speech, predicting dire consequences if we let AI evolve too far. It seemed like a line from Terminator 2... maybe James Cameron was onto something.

    • Like 1
  9. Being a computer programmer, I always found the notion of AI unconvincing, because it seemed that the computer was just running through the instructions you gave it. The approach used in the article linked above, however, seems more plausible as it is attempting to recreate the neural network of the brain itself rather than the behaviour. After all, the behaviour of an organism is a result of brain activity.

    It follows that the search for true AI would seem to be closely linked to the study of the human brain and consciousness. Questions like "where does our creativity come from?" will surely need to be answered if we are to develop AI that can behave like us. If at least part of our creativity comes from so called non-ordinary states of consciousness (e.g. dreams or psychedelic experiences), things could get pretty freaky with the robots. I can imagine giving my household computer a psychedelic trip in software format, to enhance its creative performance...

  10. some panaeolus sp. in various states of decomposition. hard to identify them when they are like this, but from my experience the blackening with age is a sign of psilybin. the fatter stems on the two on the left, however, say possibly antillarum, but my instinct on the one on the right was active.

    post-6519-0-50552200-1418895297_thumb.jp

    post-6519-0-50552200-1418895297_thumb.jpg

    post-6519-0-50552200-1418895297_thumb.jpg

    post-6519-0-50552200-1418895297_thumb.jpg

    • Like 1
  11. Hmm yeah I read on Wikipedia that the vaporisation temperature of nicotine is 247 C, but there is definitely a nicotine effect in the 200 to 230 C range. I haven't tried only tobacco as for me things like Damiana, wormwood and blue lotus resin greatly improves the astringent taste of the tobacco.

  12. so the other day curiosity finally got the better of me and I put some ground up damiana, wormwood and good quality organic tobacco in a volcano vaporiser. I gave it a good 200ºC blast and inhaled. Yes it doesn't taste as good as what your supposed to put in a volcano, but compared to the usual pyrolysis route it allows much smoother, perhaps less intense but certainly interesting experience. it allowed me better appreciate what exactly the taste and effect of tobacco is as it wasn't obscured by the experience of consuming smoke. has anyone else tried this?

  13. Here is another one I want an id on I'm pretty sure its a look alike. Grows in dung looks very similar to p cyans but doesn't bruise blue... its rather abundant in qld and I'll usually see a few poking up well above the grass. This is a pic of a young medium and old one20141214_113514-1.jpg20141214_113448-1.jpg

    looks like this one I posted in another thread, which I was informed is panaeolus antillarum.

    there are also some other inactive panaeolus species around, one with a more copper coloured top and brown to red stem. when I was in Indo the locals reckoned they were active but wasn't convinced, no noticeable blueing. come to think about it, the fact that psilocybin containing mushrooms stain blue is quite convenient. it is almost like they want to be found...

    • Like 2
  14. out of about 8 chocolate habanero seeds a sowed in september, only 2 came up. this is one of them:

    post-6519-0-88008800-1418521140_thumb.jp

    I planted the seeds in one of those multi-site mini green houses. might have been a bit too cold for them, a heat mat is not a bad idea.

    post-6519-0-88008800-1418521140_thumb.jpg

    post-6519-0-88008800-1418521140_thumb.jpg

    post-6519-0-88008800-1418521140_thumb.jpg

×
×
  • Create New...