Before anything, I was unsure about appending this to endlessness'
Phalaris Analysis Thread, since it's still a very basic work and my analytical skills are pretty green. So I'm leaving it to the mods consideration.
One of the hurdles in growing phalaris is the price and availability of seeds for already valuable strains for the community. Phalaris Canariensis, the common bird seed, hasn't been one of them. However, and according to the HPLC analysis by Fabio Calligaris attached of the end of the 1994 Festi and Samorini paper, shared by endlessness in the first post of the mentioned Analysis Thread, the relative alkaloids content of portuguese P.Canariensis is marked as a 2/5.
That bit, along with the fact the P.Canariensis seed is extremely common and affordable in western Europe, made me think it was worth to give it a try in my first attempt with Phalaris.
So, this is my first report - work in progress.
I bought a pound of seeds in my local herbal store for $6, and I germinated a little bunch of them easily indoors under Cool White fluorescents, moving the established sprouts outdoors and giving them a few hours of morning sunlight. The plant grew easily, I fed her every two weeks with a moderate nitrogen solution, and I waited for two months (
see photo #1) before harvesting early in the morning a small batch of top leaf cuttings, aproximately 25 grams.
- Leaves were blended in a food processor immediately after harvesting. The texture obtained was not as uniform as what you would get with a wheat juicer, but seemed fair enough to work with.
- The blended leaves were added to a cooking pot with distilled water and a dash of white vinegar, and slowly boiled for an hour, keeping an eye on the water level and refilling when necessary.
- Contents were poured through a cloth filter, and the plant material recovered for a second boil. Both acidic extractions showed a promising color according to the Phalaris teks I know (
see photo #2). Liquid was reduced and poured through a coffee filter paper to a mason jar.
- 4 grams of lye were dissolved in hot water and added to the reduction for basifying. That immediately produced a generous amount of precipitate (
see photo #3). pH was checked with a litmus paper going virtually off the chart, which should equal 12-13.
- I wanted to use a selective solvent, so I measured 30 ml of hexane and added them to the jar. Analysis so far suggests that undesirable alkaloids such as gramine and hordenine are not particularly soluble in it.
- Proceeded to mix, and let it separate layers for a couple hours. I should have waited longer actually, since after that time I could still see a thin layer of precipitate right between the solvent and the basic mix; that layer has completely disappeared the morning after. I apologize for not providing pictures for this step, I basically forgot.
- The hexane was pulled with a glass dropper and poured in a pyrex evaporation dish. I decided to stay with one pull, reserve the mix and see what I got there.
- The following morning I found in the dish a thin oily layer, with a very slight yellow tint, and an unmistakable smell of tryptamines.
I tested a little amount of the result (rubbing a little improvised blotter in the oil) with reagent Marquis. The initial color reaction was a light-medium brown, slowly darkening after that. The color result agrees with N,N-DMT according to the information provided by endlessness
here. You can see the sample color after one minute in
photo #4.
I think the results so far are promising. Reports also say that the first re-growth after cutting will deliver the highest alkaloid content in Phalaris strains, so theoretically a second harvest will give better results than the ones obtained so far with just a simple pull.
I have not bioassayed the oil yet. Before that, and even before doing some additional pulls, I wanted to share this and open wide my ears for any comments or suggestions.
Also, I'd like to find a way to ID the precipitates in the solution. I presume TLC is the way to go, so I'll try to learn about that soon and find the required materials.
Thanks for reading
Vodsel attached the following image(s):
plant.JPG
(166kb) downloaded 989 time(s). reduction.JPG
(91kb) downloaded 981 time(s). precipitate.JPG
(65kb) downloaded 987 time(s). marquis.JPG
(65kb) downloaded 984 time(s)."The Menu is Not The Meal." - Alan Watts