SWIM recalls that on his strongest mescaline experience, he had taken in a good deal of Vitamin C, and that other doses from the same batch hadn't been nearly as powerful. On most of SWIM mescaline experiences, he had made a point of consuming a good deal of theobromine and caffeine but hadn't considered the specific consumption of vitamin C, and most were rather lackluster compared to previously mentioned one and others he had had in the past.
This thread is to be a two part inquiry into the occurrence of redox reactions of mescaline within the body: Whether oxidized mescaline can be reduced with reduction agent such as ascorbic acid within the body to potentiate its bio-availability and whether mescaline can oxidize within the body, decreasing its bio-availability (possibly not being able to cross the blood brain barrier). Perhaps this can partially explain the variations that many experience in the mescaline experience and possibly resin's effectiveness and resistance to heat (in the case that lemon juice is used in its production):
Infundibulum wrote:Mescaline citrate may be much more heat resistant than the cognate mescaline present in the cactus. On top of that, antioxidants from lemon juice can offer additional protection to the alkaloids from heat.
While ascorbic acid is generally accepted for the preservation and potentiation of psilocin--in vivo or otherwise--there seems to be very little discussion of it's function with mescaline.
The easiest way to test this is that if anyone's having trouble getting the desired effects from mescaline acetate or any other form that seems to oxidize easily or just doesn't seem as potent as expected, try consuming a fair amount of vitamin C prior to administration and see if that makes a difference.