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Acacia and Mimosa Identification Thread Options
 
limolords
#1161 Posted : 6/20/2017 3:05:08 PM

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yes mate that is definatly acuminada.
broard leaf.!
the phylodes of broad leak are quite tricky to work with!
the gold standard of acuminada is the thin phylode acuminada.
quite a bit smaller tree and the phylodes are far superier for extracting and are perfect AAA
for ayahuasca brews.
and yes you do realy need to basify to about 12 or 13ph.
acuminada is a strange acacia extraction and yeald wise.!
this time of year is the lowest point for alkaloid content.
which is quite strange considering that on the east coast this is the peak of
the alkaloid content season for obtucifolia and courtii and most
outher dmt containing acacias.!
the bark of the broad phylode acuminada will have .7-.9 at this time of the year.
and the verry peak of the season is around late october.
notice the curved tips of the phylodes ,
and look closely at the edges of the phylodes as the have verry tiny hairs on them.
best to use a magnifying glass to get a good look at them.
the phylodes could have as little as .2 up to .7% right now depending on rainfall
and soil type in the area where you found them.
i personally would not bother trying to do an extraction on those particular spieces
of acuminada at this time of the year.!
but would be a good experiment for you to try and see wat comes out.
but the bark will be beauitful .!
you should be able to collect some fallen branches easily around that area,
and if you look at the flower buds of your specimens.
they are quite small , and the main reason that acuminada is so low in alkaoid at this time of year as far as we have been able to dissern compared to the east coast acacias at this time of year,
is that they seem to put all there energy into flowering and neglect growth in the rest of the tree incase there is not much rain over the summer,
they seem to put all of there energy into flowereing and seeding.
ITS ALL ABOUT THE WATER!!!
if you notice while you are driving around the area that most of the bigger trees are on the
side of the road,!!!
that is because of the water run off to the furrows on the side of the road.!
even though that area has gotten a fair bit of rain in the past few years ,somtimes it
is extremly dry for a long time .
they are extremly drought resistant, and if they are not growing in the valleys or on the sides of the roads than they are growing out of the grannet outcrops where they can get
water or moisture from the rocks.!
if you have alook at my post under the introduction essays.
under the heading . dmt no caustic no solvent,
you will find a verry extencive pdf about all spieces of acuminada, and where to find all the different sub spieces so you wont have to stess about identification .!
the thin phylode acuminada is the gold bro.!!!
and the phylodes are pretty much pure dmt.
and can be up to 1.4-5% in late october all the way through summer.
it seems to be the heat stress in the dryer months that trigger the high dmt yealds.!i hpe that answers you id questions and then some.

LIMOLORDS

ACUMINADA DREAMING

WESTCOSTThumbs up
 

STS is a community for people interested in growing, preserving and researching botanical species, particularly those with remarkable therapeutic and/or psychoactive properties.
 
limolords
#1162 Posted : 6/20/2017 5:41:43 PM

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complete acuminada pdf

on a lighter note,
western australia still has huge amount of acuminadas all over the place.
nubies still just go to those aras around york and toodjay and northam now because it is only
1 hour out of perth, relativly close considering the size of the growing range of acuminadas in wa.
they grow all the way from geraldton , 400km north of perth , all the way down to 100 ks south east of perth , and all the way out to kalgoolie 600 km east of perth and far beyond.
pretty much 1 unbroken acaia forest,
and thy have been there for hundreds of millions of years

and in that area millions of square kms there are ,
6 main sub spieces of acacia acuminada ,
and up to 64 genetic varients and cross pollinations.!!!

WOW yes most people have no idea how many trees there are really are out there.
so there is no fucken excuse for stripping tree at all ever for any fucken reason.
there are 10s of thousands of fallen over trees and broken branches every ware.
you only have to pick the braches of the ground and still fresh enough to use ,
no wories..

and besides that ,
the phylodes have a higher content in them anyway for most of the year,
so you only need to take literaly a handfull of each tree,!!!
and as acuminada is the highest yealding dmt acacis in australia .
all you need in one kg of dried phylodes at 1.2-1.4% to get 10 to 14 grams.
more than enough for everyone if havested susstainably.

anyway ill post again soon.
goin to the beach for a surf.

susstainabillity is the only way to go forwarsd for us.

and jetflux.!

the needle poin acuminada you mentioned,
actualy isnt thin phylode acuminada,
thin phylode acuminada looks pretty much identical to broad leaf acuminada but a smaller version and the phylodes are only a few millimeters thiner than broad phylode acuminada.
with slightly longer minute hairs on the edges of the phylodes than the hairs on broad leaf acuminada.!

the one that has the needle point phylodes is called acacia burkitii.
which is one of the of the 7 varients of acacia acuminada.
there are 3 varients of acacia burkitii.!

acacia acuminada/burkitii variant 1
acacia acuminada/burkitii variant 2
both of which look almost identical to
acacia acuminada thin phylode varient
exept that where the thin phylode acuminada get sparcly spread out as
it streches out in to the more arid zones then the
acacia acuminada/burkitii variants 1 and 2 take over and stretch out into the desert.
and acacia burkitii ever grows as far east as western new south wales,
around burk and broken hill.!!!

yes thats right, you dont even have to go all
the way to western australia,!
you can get acuminadas,or shoud i say
acacia burkitii in large ares of nsw and south australia.
and yes they to are highly active with large
alkaloid contents as well..

its interesting to note about anastimisation,
that there is a direct relationship
between the loose or tight spacing of the anstimisation in the phylodes,
in the different dmt containing spieces of acacias,
and the actual levels of dmt alkloids in the different spieces.!

the way it goes is ,
the larger spacing of the anastimisation the lower the dmt alkaloid content,
in such spieces like acacia obtuifolia,
which has cosderably less dmt content say from .4 to .9,
and somtimes up to 1% .
and have quite large anasimisation spacing paterns.

where as
acacia courtii has much tighter anastimisation paterns
and is a solid 1% in winter and most of the year.

where as acacia acuminada in all varients,
has such tight anastimisation paterns that
even when held up to the sun in verry dificult
to see at all.!

verry interesting observation actualy.
as who would even notice somthing like that exept humans?
must be meant to be i think!

so there you go people.
the acuminada report that i have posted above,

will give you everything you could ever
possibly need or want to know about acacia acuminada
and all its varients.
it was compiled as a reserch study for the sandlwood industry.
as acacia acuminada is the host spieces for the westaustralian
sandlwood tree.
the sandlwood tree is a parisite spieces that feed of the acuminada tree.
interesting hey.!

thats a bit of dence reading for all you
acaciafiles.
hope you all find what you are looking for in there
there are some cool color photos too.

PEACE OUT

OM MANI PADME HUM

ACUMINADA DREAMING
DOWNUNDER

LIMOLORDS



 
limolords
#1163 Posted : 6/20/2017 6:09:17 PM

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Last visit: 09-Sep-2017
Location: byron bay OZ
sorry i didnt see back on page 36 that somone had allwready posted that pdf.
but since we are taling about acuminadas ithought id ad it in to the conversation again.
as it was a long time ago when it was posted and is still the best one

and ENDLESSNES!

you are a legend bro.
iv been out there (wa) for many years too.

peace out

LIMOLORDS

LIMOLORDS
 
melotikaci
#1164 Posted : 7/8/2017 6:23:04 PM

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I found some trees that look like Acacia(?). I'm absolute noob at identifying plants so maybe you could help.






 
roninsina
#1165 Posted : 7/9/2017 4:05:24 PM

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^^^^^^

Looks like a black locust, to me.
"We dance round in a ring and suppose,
while the secret sits in the middle and knows." Robert Frost

 
melotikaci
#1166 Posted : 7/10/2017 9:49:27 AM

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roninsina wrote:
^^^^^^

Looks like a black locust, to me.

Is that suggestion valid in eastern Europe too?
 
roninsina
#1167 Posted : 7/11/2017 12:45:36 AM

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They are native to a small area of the eastern United States, but have been cultivated throughout the world's temperate zones. I'm no expert, just used to seeing them. I could be mistaken, those seed pods are a bit short and fat.
"We dance round in a ring and suppose,
while the secret sits in the middle and knows." Robert Frost

 
melotikaci
#1168 Posted : 7/11/2017 8:24:08 AM

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roninsina wrote:
They are native to a small area of the eastern United States, but have been cultivated throughout the world's temperate zones. I'm no expert, just used to seeing them. I could be mistaken, those seed pods are a bit short and fat.

Thanks anyway!
 
leratiomyces
#1169 Posted : 8/18/2017 12:56:55 PM
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Hi Guys,

Can someone assist with an acacia ID please?

Southern coastal NSW
Mid August - winter
Altitude 300m
Typical phyllode 10cm x 0.7cm
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GarGa
#1170 Posted : 8/24/2017 5:14:44 PM

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i think this is similar to post #1164:











anyone can help?
thanks.
 
Autocultivo
#1171 Posted : 8/30/2017 4:26:40 AM
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Not after an ID. Just throwing up some photos, a few small twigs of an Acacia found in NZ. Not verified active. Some things are just obvious.

Heavily mutated phylodes, flower spikes protruding from twig tips, the entire tree is more red/purple than green, interesting specimen. No full photos, unique and stand alone, planted assumed 20+ years, going to be felled awaiting seed set and maturation. Thick gnarled bark unusual for A.Flori (in my experience) judged upon several naturalized stands (seen both in NZ, and AUS)
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Autocultivo
#1172 Posted : 8/30/2017 4:46:34 AM
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leratiomyces

To me it looks like it could be A.Flori but you need to take closer photos of the basal gland or the lack of and check other characteristics for yourself... such as flower spikes/rods protruding from the ends of branches, otherwise typically in sets of 2 and 'clustering' anatomization of the veins interconnecting between the main 1-3 (never seen one without 3 veins that I believed was a good variety) phylode width length, flower rods and formations. There's a website that has detailed information and closeup sketches of all the acacia sp. The sites name fails me currently sorry, been a while

I happened to post a photo (above) of phylodes/flowers of a cultivated A.Flori. That's the sort of tree I'd look at and assume would kick back. no basal, mutated lodes, leathery, 3 veins, appropriate bloom time and of course the prominent red coloration especially pronounced during flowering and in the veins of the phylodes. None necessarily define activity, but the more 'common positive traits' combined within the single specimen, typically raise your odds.

goodluck
 
leratiomyces
#1173 Posted : 9/1/2017 2:12:56 AM
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Thanks for your reply autocultivo.

I was just after someone's opinion as to whether it looked liked floribunda, as that was what I was thinking. So thanks for your partial confirmation.
The characteristics are a fair match with those described on world wide wattle.
Mine have 3 prominent veins, with the centre vein being far more prominent than the outer two veins. There are about 10 secondary veins with anastamoses. Stipules absent, gland absent, bracteoles absent. Petal numbers per flower is impossible for me to determine with my level of magnification (supposed to be 4). WWW says sepals are united, but by the time the flower has completely emerged, they do not look united to me - that's the main difference to the WWW description.

oh, by the way, none of the foliage has red tips. None the less, come Feb, I will collect some fallen phyllodes and proceed.
 
EntitySeeker
#1174 Posted : 9/8/2017 2:23:32 PM

:)


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EDIT: Double post
 
EntitySeeker
#1175 Posted : 9/8/2017 2:37:38 PM

:)


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Last visit: 26-Oct-2017
Hi all, I'd like an ID confirmation on these Acacias please.

TREE A:
Date of Photo: Now / early September
Location: Northam region, WA



More photos of tree A + close-ups here: http://imgur.com/a/CypFW

TREE B:
Date of Photo: Now / early September
Location: Northam region, WA



More photos of tree B + close-ups here: http://imgur.com/a/xJLor

***

I was confident they were both Acuminata but three separate extraction attempts over the last month have yielded nothing. The extractions were on; 250 grams of dried twigs (separate specimen not pictured here), 50 grams of dried twigs (tree A), and 50 grams of fresh twigs (tree B / fallen tree), all done using Earthwalkers tek: https://www.dmt-nexus.me...aspx?g=posts&t=58064

I also created a thread seeking suggestions as to why my extraction hasn't yielded anything in the FAQ subforum: https://www.dmt-nexus.me...&m=832227#post832227

In the process of figuring this all out, I'm beginning to accept the growing likelihood that these aren't Acuminata Sad

Thanks!
 
Juliali
#1176 Posted : 9/9/2017 5:22:25 AM
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chocobeastie wrote:
Yep, that's it. 100%

notice the blunt tips which are slightly serated. (obtusifolia is also called "Blunt Tip wattle"Pleased

The big spaces in between phyllodes.

The stiffness and thickness of the phyllodes.

The obvious anastomisation. (nerve network which in which the nerves meet each other)

Looks like someone has been doing some pruning?

If you can get away with it, this is the best way to approach harvesting from this tree. Taking bark from the trunk will often kill the tree :-(

Whereabout did you find this tree?

Also, try collecting a few hundred grams of flowers and doing some extractions on them and let us know how you go! They should be active and have a really nice quality to them!

 
EntreNous
#1177 Posted : 9/9/2017 5:39:13 AM

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Hello Nexii

I'm in Northern California and I see a lot of these trees, locally called "mimosa". I'm hoping someone can help me ID them. I've scrolled through the thread but haven't seen a similar purple/violet flowered tree. I can get closer shots if needed. This is my first time uploading images on the nexus, hope it works right. Thanks for the help, any comments are appreciated!



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Be regular and orderly in your life, that you may be violent and original in your work. -Flaubert-

till next time , ahskÄ›:nÄ™ hÄ™ ( Peace)
 
Sakkadelic
#1178 Posted : 9/9/2017 9:42:50 AM

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Albizia julibrissin
"Is this the end of our adventure? Nothing has an end. We came in search of the secret of immortality, to be like gods, and here we are... mortals, more human than ever. If we have not obtained immortality, at least we have obtained reality. We began in a fairytale and we came to life! But is this life reality? We are images, dreams, photographs. We must not stay here! Prisoners! We shall break the illusion. This is Maya. Goodbye to the holy mountain. Real life awaits us." ~ Alejandro Jodorowsky
 
NISMAS
#1179 Posted : 10/21/2017 7:14:46 PM

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I am tryng to attach plant foto with telephone
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DreaMTripper
#1180 Posted : 10/22/2017 11:50:50 AM

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None of these look like acacia trees.
 
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