..groovy
Caravel..
Snu Voogelbreinder 'Garden of Eden' (2009) says of
D. leptolobus:
Quote:..recently D.leptolobus extracts have been bioassayed, both in the form of ayahusaca analogues,
and vapourised freebase extracts.
while
D. illinoensis is published as having more DMT (0.34%DMT, 0.11%NMT, traces gramine & indole-acetic acid), Trout and others say that D. leptolobus is the more consistent and higher yileding species..may also have traces gramine and some NMT
..i can't find any alkaloid info. about
D. pernambucanus,
D. cooleyi had traces of DMT, and
D. velutinus sometimes small amounts [Applessed 1993;Van Heiden 1998 ) ..it is possible that low yields in D. illinoensis could have been due to mis-identification of these other species..it grows as far north as Canada
..
northern explorer, this plant can take snow, but dies back to the roots over winter..from '90s reports i think it is worth experimenting with..
fall would seem the time to harvest..acacia experimenters are used to having to working out what the ideal seasonal time is..
also, because Desmanthuses are small plants, they are suited to indoor or hydroponic growing
techniques.. (suggest plenty of nitrogen)
in extraction techniques it is worth exploring full spectrum non-polar solvents like xylene, d-limonene, or maybe
hexane..these can bring out higher yields than napatha, & gramine is only trace and not a real issue..
.