kerelsk wrote:Wabi-sabi, I'll have to remember that, I totally see your point.
Oftentimes when I have a plant looking so far from its natural environment, indoors, warped from various stressors... I feel pretty bad about it and want to get it outside and fending for itself, even if it means death ultimately for the plant
I'm happy to see the wabi-sabi in that setup, and happy you're cool with it hah
You can provide plants with environments that are actually better than their natural environments, in this case, I can only provide what I have available.
I'm doing the best with what I have, and I'm happy knowing that they have the best soil, lighting, nutrients, water, pest control, and so on, as I can possibly provide for them.
Out door cultivation is not an option where I live. And would mean certain death for these plants.
Like I said, these cacti have been through a good deal, but they still receive optimal soil, pest control, Sun light and a T-5 box for light, scheduled watering, basic care and so on.
Judging by all other gauges of health aside from visual appearence, I'd say they are doing fine. There's no pests, no molds, no fungi, very little etiolation, there's nothing to indicate nutrient deficiency and they are rapidly producing healthy New growths...like I said, they are beat up, they have been through a lot, but they are happy.
Here's a piece of conjecture one must also consider:
As a means of stress response, humans have a compound called "cortisol" which is produced and released as a means of activating the stress response system.
In a similar manner, mescaline production in these cacti may be as a reaction to activation of their stress response system...
Meaning they are producing mescaline in relation to stress.
...Though this is just conjecture, not fact.
But it would lead one to feel that older cacti, that have been stressed, and have recovered would thus contain higher mescaline levels.
Once the mescaline is produced it really doesn't seem to degrade*, so once it's produced its stored....
I would love to know if anybody has ever taken 10 healthy T. Pachanoi or L. Williamsii plants, where first a test is done to determine mescaline content, then 5 cacti would be kept in stressed conditions and 5 would be kept in optimal conditions, testing content throughout the time of observation to determine if stressed cacti do in fact produce more mescaline...
Again, I'm not growing these cacti to raise prize specimens, or because I'm a great botanist, or anything like that, I grow them simply because I like them, I like having them around me.
(*in "the shumla cave" texas, ancient dried peyote buttons were discovered, these carbon dated from around 5,000 BC and still contained 2% mescaline)
-eg