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albino peyote Options
 
staresatwalls
#1 Posted : 5/18/2012 10:24:42 AM

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in this article here

http://www.vice.com/read...ryptocacti-0000202-v19n5

i first heard about white peyote. upon googling i found this post on the corroboree with some awesome pics.

http://www.shaman-austra...=16028&hl=albino+lop

anyone know anything about this type of peyote? is it just white or is it different (aside from color) in that maybe it has a higher mescaline content?
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Mitakuye Oyasin
#2 Posted : 5/18/2012 11:07:11 AM

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That's pretty cool. It probably has to do with the spectrum of grow light it is under. I had a San Pedro cutting sitting in the dark for a few months and it sprouted a pup that grew to about a foot tall and and an inch wide and was completely albino. When it started getting some light from a CFL bulb it started to get a bit of green color, but was still mostly white or colorless.

Using pereskiopsis to graft sacred cactus to is a very interesting idea. AFOAF has several peruvian torch babies grafted to pereskiopsis and they are starting to plump up considerably. It really speeds up the growth cycle for seedling cactus. You could have a whole forest of sacred cactus and pereskiopsis indoors, even in the deepest winter cold as long as they get proper food and light.
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All my posts are hypothetical and for educational/entertainment purposes, and are not an endorsement of said activities. SWIM (a fictional character based on other people) either obtained a license for said activity, did said activity where it is legal to do so, or as in most cases the activity is completely fictional.
 
dg
#3 Posted : 5/20/2012 12:34:34 AM
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Mitakuye Oyasin wrote:
That's pretty cool. It probably has to do with the spectrum of grow light it is under.


no, there are genetic freaks that dont produce chlorophyll, most wont survive seedling stage and need to be grafted to continue on
 
Dante
#4 Posted : 5/20/2012 1:00:37 AM

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staresatwalls wrote:


That is a great thread! Hopefully one day Ill have the time and the space to do something like that Rolling eyes
Listen to a man of experience: thou wilt learn more in the woods than in books. Trees and stones will teach thee more than thou canst acquire from the mouth of a master. St. Bernard
 
Mitakuye Oyasin
#5 Posted : 5/20/2012 3:35:03 AM

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dg wrote:
Mitakuye Oyasin wrote:
That's pretty cool. It probably has to do with the spectrum of grow light it is under.


no, there are genetic freaks that dont produce chlorophyll, most wont survive seedling stage and need to be grafted to continue on


Very interesting dg, I had no idea. I've seen pictures of pink peyote growing on pereskiopsis grafts under lights. Is this the same or similar genetic abnormality?

I wonder if planting into soil a grafted cacti with the pereskiopsis that has already established its root system would keep the rapid growth cycle going. I've not heard of this, but it does seem to make sense because you have essentially increased the nutrient pipeline to the grafted cacti with the pereskiopsis tube.
Let us declare nature to be legitimate. All plants should be declared legal, and all animals for that matter. The notion of illegal plants and animals is obnoxious and ridiculous.
— Terence McKenna


All my posts are hypothetical and for educational/entertainment purposes, and are not an endorsement of said activities. SWIM (a fictional character based on other people) either obtained a license for said activity, did said activity where it is legal to do so, or as in most cases the activity is completely fictional.
 
dg
#6 Posted : 5/20/2012 3:22:13 PM
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no, pink is usually pigment from mild "sunburn"
more mature lophs take a lot of sun w/o pigment change
 
rOm
#7 Posted : 5/20/2012 9:33:01 PM

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This albino peyote is something really good looking. Remind me of albino cubensis.
Smell like tea n,n spirit !

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peyote
#8 Posted : 7/9/2012 8:40:44 PM

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not peyote.

peyote is lophophora williamsii

not lophophora fricii

cool none the less
THE peyote coyote...
 
 
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