Thanks for your input vodsel. The paper you have attached is an excellent resource and I am glad to have read it.
There is some awesome data on concentrations of alkaloids detected within Ayahuasca potions and source materials contained within. Unless I missed it, the paper did however not have any reference to dosage information so I am unable to compare it to the previous paper or my last brew.
Generally I tend to harvest fresh materials and brew 170g of wet vine and around 80 leaves of Chacruna. This recently changed when one of my 5 year old Cielo vines died as it was growing through a wire fence and grew too thick, resulting in its premature death. Having an abundant supply of dried vine and with the monsoon fast approaching I decided to store some chacruna leaf also, as in my experience alkaloid levels significantly drop in chacruna in the monsoon rain season. Working back from my experience with fresh materials I worked out the dose of 100g dried vine and 22g of dried leaf. The experience from this brew was literally out of this world so I decided to work out the concentration of the vine to determine the alkaloid content and look further into what is considered to be a more standard dose (if such a thing even exist, likely not). The paper I attached was my first opportunity to compare the brew to a published effective Ayahuasca brew. From my experience I would not bother brewing 10g of vine and 15g of leaf as I doubt it would trip off on a journey. However I could be wrong and this is why I started the thread. To ask other folks their opinion on whether the brew would trip off in their experience.
I also gained some excellent information on Chacruna from your attached paper. I was previously aware of the following information -
samples of P. viridis, collected in the morning on the same day from several locations throughout Brazil, the DMT concentrations were found to range from 0.00 to 17.65 milligram per gram (mg/g) of dried leaf. Most samples had a value of approximately 10mg/g DMT, and only one had undetectable amounts. It is possible that this specimen was not P. viridis, but another species of Psychotria.
Most remarkable were the results from the consecutive samples taken from the same plant at several different times throughout the day. The highest levels of DMT were found in those leaves that were collected at dawn (8.97mg/g) or before dusk (9.52 mg/g DMT). The leaves that had the least amount of DMT were those collected at midnight (5.57 mg/g), and another depression in alkaloid content appeared near 10:00 am (8.01 mg/g DMT) and subsequent values remained low throughout the hotter parts of the day. One could argue that these are simply variable values from different leaves, although special consideration was taken to include leaves at equivalent stages of development. It is also important to note that these quantitative results are in agreement with what has been observed over years of practical experience.
From Phytochemistry and Neuropharmacology of Ayahuasca, JC Callaway, 1999, in Ayahuasca by R Metzner
Your attached paper has built on this further stating that DMT concentration rapidly drops at dusk and that the afternoon samples were taken at 6pm. It also suggests that DMT might aid the plant in the absorption of solar radiation. I will now be more careful to finish collection of leaves an hour or so before dusk to ensure alkaloid levels are not dropping in my harvested material.
I have contributed further information on my experience at harvesting Chacruna leaf in this thread -
https://www.dmt-nexus.me...aspx?g=posts&t=52437Also to give you an idea of where I will be going with my next brew using the same materials -
Last brew - 22g dried Chacruna leaf (approx 220mg DMT) 100g dried vine (approx 670mg caapi alks)
Planned next brew - 20g dried Chacruna leaf (approx 200mg DMT) 80g dried vine (approx 536mg of caapi).
Obviously set and setting will also have a significant influence on the planned upcoming journey so that will need to be considered also when comparing to the previous brew. I'm also planning to move forward and learn a few lessons from the last journey so that will effect the next journey also. Such are the challenges a psychonaught faces in evolving with entheogens and in particular plants with varying levels of alkaloids depending on the surrounding environmental influences. I guess it can be put down to 'Drink the brew and take Your medicine', as partakers are situated to deal with events at hand regardless their nature and intensity.
Thanks again for the paper.
From where is the noise?