Everybody is welceme here. This is my hobby, so it would be shame not to share the results.
So, let's go with the testing and results...
I have decided to test 20 commerically acquired clones from various entheogen vendors.
These were 30-40cm long and 6-10cm wide when bought and were rooted through spring/summer 2018 and grown till the autumn. Then they were dormant till spring 2019 and cut when first signs of growth were apparent leaving rooted part in the dirt with about 20cm above the ground.
All cuts were tested for bitterness, giving readings between 0-3 on
my bitterness scale. The worse half of them was discarded and the more bitter half was extracted giving O.6mg/g(raw) of alkaloids.
The bases were left growing through the summer 2019, all of them having two or more pups.
One clone of these 20 specimens (#77) was in very bad condition and was not willing to root, so I decided to put it aside. This is the first (highest) result in the results graph.
Few days back the new growth (from pups) was cut, providing 100-135g of fresh material for tests.
Every specimen was tested for bitterness and rated on
my bitterness scale.
Then it was
extracted with just one pull of quite large volume of 75ml of toluene. The toluene was
titrated by 1.85% HCl with nitrazine. Volume of one acid drop is 0,064516129ml and it salts 8,298926mg of mescaline. Drops are counted until nitrazine turns yellow.
Usually 3 pulls are necessary to extract +90% of alkaloids, so remaining gain was estimated although second and third pulls were not done.
Accuracy : These tests are indicative and are just trying to provide some information for the correlation between bitterness and alkaloid content. There is no need to get everything out of the cactus, as far as all samples are treated the same way. Therefore only one pull is done.
Every sample has got at least one drop of acid, so the value "HCl drops" should be evaluated first. If there is the value : 1, then there may be lack of any alkaloids, as we are within the error given by one drop (see above for the mesc content). The value "Gain mg/g*10" is working with count of drops, so it already contains the error. When I see the nitrazine color is still lightly blue, but likely not for whole drop, I use 0.5 for next drop rather than 1. Therefore some drop counts may not be whole numbers.
The value "Gain mg/g*10" is of course taking into account the entry material weight is in the range 95g-135g.
Results : I haven't made any conclusions yet. It was quite a work and I need to take some rest. Moreover the results are quite low. I thought the alkaloid content values will be much higher. Which is sort of disappointment for me, I hoped there will be some highly potent piece that I could use. After
the disappointment from my most bitter specimen grown on the peres and its lack of alkaloids, this is second punch and I am really frustrated and having no energy to continue with these endeavours.
But that's what the life is like, I have to take it as it is.
If anyone can look into it and tell me what can be read of these data, please go ahead!
The sample #77 is an exception - it is not fresh growth, this is the damaged clone stored for more than one year before extraction.
Just one interesting note - if you compare the average gain for the most bitter half of the samples (0.28mg/g(raw)) with previous extraction result of the same plants that were cut after dormancy (0.6mg/g(raw)), you can see the results are significantly higher.
pete666 attached the following image(s):
BitternessTestsResults.jpg
(58kb) downloaded 90 time(s).Acceptance of the fact that our reality is not real doesn't in fact mean it is not real. It just leads to better understanding what real means.