Hey DMT-Nexus, After going for a bushwalk on my property. On the walk I came across 3 mature Acacia Longifolia's and 2 mature Acacia Floribunda'sthat had been ring barked by the local council because of infestation. I decided that I would crop some of the bark from the already damaged trees . So I sliced a few pieces of bark and pealed it back without trying to damage the tree any more than it already was. I did this to a small portion of each of the 5 Acacias. I also cropped a small amount of leaves, stem and flowers from both species of damaged Acacia. I don't plan on making a large amount of DMT, just enough so that I can familiarize my self with low doses until I feel I'm ready for a breakthrough experience. I've only had a non breakthrough dose before and it's made me realise how important patience is with this process. I'd really appreciate it if anyone who has extracted Acacia species before could give me any helpful advice/tips. "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it."
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Just to add. I'll be using these links for reference. The second PDF link seems most suitable as a guide for me being Australian. DMT Nexus Wiki - Extractions.The DMT Handbook."Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it."
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Hey guys. I went for another walk today along some bushland I know. There was a storm last week and some violent winds which knocked over a large gumtree, doing so taking out an Acacia Floribunda. It still looked extremely healthy but the main stem was completely snapped. I didn't want the tree to go to waste so I harvested a few small strips of bark,. I've harvested A. Floribunda bark before but this bark from the fallen tree was much more " Resinous", the underside of the bark a dark red and it also oozed a sap of a similar colour. Is colour a possible way of estimating " Ripeness" of Tryptamine content? "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it."
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I have Acacia Longifolia growing on my Northern California property, installed as a screening plant ten years ago and grown so quickly that I now have to cut it back regularly. I recently peeled off some bark from my prunings and scraped material from the inside surface of the bark. This material had an unusual fragrance and I had a "sense" that alkaloid concentrations are higher there. I'm going to try an extraction soon to see if this is a viable source of The Molecule we seek. I'll post results, negative or positive. I'll be curious to hear how it goes for you also. "You cannot see Me with your normal eyes, therefore I give you divine eyes with which to behold the Power of My Yoga." Bhagavad Gita, chapter 11, The Universal Form, verse 8
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- "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it."
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- "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it."
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- "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it."
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are you extracting or just collecting?
not sure how much 'a backpack full.' + 'another bag full' + 'more Acacia Floribunda and Longifolia bark today' equals, but in Australia material determined to contain a prohibited substance can be deemed itself to be that substance. i haven't found it necessary to work with more than 500g of known material at any one time.
just always good to be careful.
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- "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it."
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are you positive the tree you have is a floribunda? reason i ask is because there is some definite genetic variance in melbourne with the floribundas.. some of which are active, some of which are not. i myself have only had negative results from the council planted floribundas. I have a sneaking suspicion they hydridise with an inactive strain of maidenii. I would love to know what style floribunda J.J was extracting from which he has found to be so consistent it seems the phyllode length and width are especially variable.. the commercial floribunda sold at nurseries in melbourne has quite narrow phyllodes I've noticed, as well as a great deal of the mature trees in the area. though when looking at the different plant sketches from books and also world wide wattle, there are much broader phyllodes shown. it also seems that some trees have softer more papery and hairy phyllodes which I am told is the one to go for... these are the ones with the most narrow phyllodes... the phyllodes on the floribunda apparently vary in width from 1mm-12mm....
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bricklaya wrote:are you positive the tree you have is a floribunda? reason i ask is because there is some definite genetic variance in melbourne with the floribundas.. some of which are active, some of which are not. i myself have only had negative results from the council planted floribundas. I have a sneaking suspicion they hydridise with an inactive strain of maidenii. I would love to know what style floribunda J.J was extracting from which he has found to be so consistent I can't be positive but I'm pretty confident. They were sourced from 3 different areas. The barks colour and consistency ranges from thin, green and oozes a slight white sap to Thick dense red and resinous. "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it."
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don't come accross many floribundas with the wider phyllodes like this one.. the ones that i do look more like maidenii... i have tested none the less with no success   mainly see these down here 
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Thanks heaps for those photos! "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it."
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no worries... im uploading some photos i took the other day of a tree which is confusing me between floribunda and maidenii... it has broader phyllodes like the sketch i posted above... more floribunda-like flowers than maidenii whose rod flowers are much smaller and more compact... but i'm just not sure. the phyllodes look very maidenii to me check the acacia identification thread.. or for a more in depth gallery of the same tree go on my acacia and mimosa gallery thread. will have em up in 10mins good luck keen to hear your results with the flori
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Hi people! Good to be back after so long. i was hoping someone could verify one of these as acacia floribunda ? 4d attached the following image(s):  P1010992.JPG (162kb) downloaded 156 time(s). P1020001.JPG (167kb) downloaded 155 time(s). P1010987.JPG (2,916kb) downloaded 156 time(s). P1010999.JPG (171kb) downloaded 158 time(s).
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Sorry the first photo isnt very good, I have another to id too.. 4d attached the following image(s):  IMG_20130719_161117.jpg (224kb) downloaded 142 time(s).
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It seems the more I learn about the various species in my area, the more I discover the range of sub species to be taken into consideration. I recently discovered a felled tree which I have had tentatively confirmed as A. Floribunda ...but I was curious as to whether the season in which it fell from the tree and dried out (obviously unkown) will have bearing on molecular content. I performed a 'burn test' on some of this dried matter and there is a faint tryptamine smell. For context and clarification, here is a photo from the grove I found of 2 species that both seem to register as Floribunda via Google and forum searches .  JefFlux attached the following image(s):  11798449_10204220893235319_1114624225_n.jpg (153kb) downloaded 94 time(s). 11798034_10204220894355347_235993977_n.jpg (126kb) downloaded 89 time(s).
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