DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1369 Joined: 22-Jan-2010 Last visit: 07-Mar-2014
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HI!!! I was just wondering if anyone out there goes out in to natural areas and plants seeds of psychedelic plants. Unfortunately, I live in an area where no psychedelic plant will grow in the wild. But if I lived in Hawaii, or southern U.S., I would spread mimosa everywhere. Or, for drier and hot U.S. climates, it would be acacias everywhere, Syrian Rue everywhere, and of course, cacti.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 2096 Joined: 20-Nov-2009 Last visit: 12-Nov-2023
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Apoc, savage seedlings around ain't good for the environment. Hawaï has already a lot to do with the human bought vegetation. Got to think about consequence as well, not only the spreading of psychedelic plants to harvest them ! Smell like tea n,n spirit !
Toke the toke, and walk the walk !
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1892 Joined: 05-Oct-2010 Last visit: 02-Oct-2024
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They're all savage and a threat? I understand some species are invasive or otherwise problematic for the land, fair point. Mimosas (if I recall) have a pretty short lifespan, But the plant itself actually conditions the soil and creates a strong environment for other species to thrive in the vicinity of itself. If anything mimosa is actually beneficial for tropical land. It even has restorative properties to forests as it recovers so quickly from fires, all in all mimosa is legit. Also, DMT Art Van D'lay wrote:Smoalk. It. And. See.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1369 Joined: 22-Jan-2010 Last visit: 07-Mar-2014
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rOm wrote:Apoc, savage seedlings around ain't good for the environment. Hawaï has already a lot to do with the human bought vegetation. Got to think about consequence as well, not only the spreading of psychedelic plants to harvest them ! is there any evidence to suggest that mimosa, acacias, or rue would be harmful to any environments? As far as I know, each of these plants are fairly delicate, and would not be competitive, especially rue. .... no one seems interested anyway
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 50 Joined: 13-Jun-2011 Last visit: 05-Apr-2013 Location: America
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Apoc wrote:rOm wrote:Apoc, savage seedlings around ain't good for the environment. Hawaï has already a lot to do with the human bought vegetation. Got to think about consequence as well, not only the spreading of psychedelic plants to harvest them ! is there any evidence to suggest that mimosa, acacias, or rue would be harmful to any environments? As far as I know, each of these plants are fairly delicate, and would not be competitive, especially rue. .... no one seems interested anyway I'm actually very interested, Apoc. I was unaware one could even grow mimosa in the states.
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Homo-divinorum
Posts: 459 Joined: 07-Apr-2011 Last visit: 05-May-2020 Location: Midwestern U.S.
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Apoc, I'd love to hear more about the planting. Unfortunately though, I really don't have any psychedelic plant seeds to plant. Maybe I'll throw some poppaver somineferum seeds around the park I live by, and maybe some rue. But that's really all I have. Let the plants guide you, for they teach lessons beyond what we humans can offer. Distorted is our perception of reality, because reality is much more distorted than we could ever perceive it to be.
All posts made by this username do not actually exist. They are hallucinations caused by the reception of light photons by the retinae of homo sapien sapien. You are already inside the rabbit hole.
Follow the path you have chosen, travelers, you will not regret the outcome, that I can assure you.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1369 Joined: 22-Jan-2010 Last visit: 07-Mar-2014
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bill wrote: I'm actually very interested, Apoc. I was unaware one could even grow mimosa in the states. It will not grow in most places in the U.S. The natural environment for mimosa is tropical rainforest. It can definitely grow in Hawaii. It might survive in Florida, Louisiana, and if there are any other wet areas in Southern States. Same with caapi. Many Acacias and Syrian Rue, however, grow in hot, semi-arid environments, like much of the Southern U.S. tigerstrike92 wrote:Apoc, I'd love to hear more about the planting. Unfortunately though, I really don't have any psychedelic plant seeds to plant. Maybe I'll throw some poppaver somineferum seeds around the park I live by, and maybe some rue. But that's really all I have. I don't know if it would work. Maybe that's why no one does it. It seems like people have a tough time getting these things to succeed even in controlled environments. I don't know if just spreading seeds would work. I have seen some vendors that sell seeds. Usually hundreds of seeds for only a few bucks. I've seen many places selling cactus seeds. I wish I could be the Johnny Appleseed of Jurema, but it won't grow too far north.
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I Eat Plant Magic
Posts: 1099 Joined: 30-Jan-2010 Last visit: 28-Mar-2013 Location: The Wilds of Wales
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I'd be careful with the rue. Syrian rue is actually banned in some states PURELY because of its properties as a noxious weed. I've definitely had the urge to plant cannabis in the wild, haven't done it yet tho ¤ø¸„ø¤º°¨¨°º¤ø¸„ø¤º°¨¨°º¤ø¸„ø¤º¨
.^.^.^.^.^.^(0)=õ
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member for the trees
Posts: 4003 Joined: 28-Jun-2011 Last visit: 27-May-2024
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..good topic Apoc, you wrote Quote:drier and hot U.S. climates, it would be acacias everywhere, ..many, if not most, aussie acacias are frost tolerant..a few (like A. alpina, A. floribunda, A. obtusifolia and A. phlebophylla are can handle snow)..the most recommended so far, A. acuminata handles very cold and arid conditions (it has 1.5% DMT bark, 0.6% leaf) & may handle snow.. ..they'd make great weeds.. ps. i've thrown Phalaris seeds about all over the place..can drive past road edges now and wave at them...
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1369 Joined: 22-Jan-2010 Last visit: 07-Mar-2014
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BananaForeskin wrote:I'd be careful with the rue. Syrian rue is actually banned in some states PURELY because of its properties as a noxious weed. I didn't know that. The last thing I would want to do is over proliferate it so that it becomes banned. Do you mean they banned it because of its psychological properties if ingested, or the plant itself was bad for the environment? nen888 wrote:..good topic Apoc, you wrote Quote:drier and hot U.S. climates, it would be acacias everywhere, ..many, if not most, aussie acacias are frost tolerant..a few (like A. alpina, A. floribunda, A. obtusifolia and A. phlebophylla are can handle snow)..the most recommended so far, A. acuminata handles very cold and arid conditions (it has 1.5% DMT bark, 0.6% leaf) & may handle snow.. ..they'd make great weeds.. ps. i've thrown Phalaris seeds about all over the place..can drive past road edges now and wave at them... Awesome. I didn't know that about certain acacias. I will look in to it right now.....
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