His journey begins in 1977, the year he graduated from high school. He showed remarkable kinship with the plants and herbs of his botany classes and field research. His experimental growing technique proved bountiful in the realms of cannabis and other ethnobotanicals.
Tech at that time was nonexistent, no internet as we know it today. it was all book work. The library, magazines, writing letters, all the things of the past he used for his learning.
Even so, the tech evolved into today. His simple beginnings of tinctures and oils, the most advanced tech at the time, extractions based on alcohol and oils, the best we could get in our High Times mag or Whole Earth Catalog.
Trying to find the Honey Oil in the Thai Stick was our highest goal.
After tinctures and oils he ventured into soponifacation of oils into soap, it seemed a logical next step, and he began a successful soap company for several years and learned the powers of NaOH. The empowerment of this process brought him many rewards. After years of experimentation from everything from wild lettuce to coleus, San Pedro to Mushrooms, his tech evolved.
His first A/B extraction was MHR in a naphtha capture. It was beyond his dreams. Such a powerful ethnogen in such a relatively easy process.
His next extraction was the extraction of pure psilocybin crystals via 98% ethyl alcohol. Such an amazing, and easy, transformation of the gross matter into the elixir, the aqua vita, so easy compared to all the other techs from harmala to salvinorum. This conundrum confounded the student to no end. He would still like to know why the psilocybin extraction was so easy compared to all the others.
His next alchemical miracle shall be harmala crystals to bio with the psilocybin crystals.
A report should be in order at that point.
Until then my fellow psychonauts.
Electric Blue Toad
ElectricBlueToad attached the following image(s):
IMG_20171228_214443237.jpg
(2,892kb) downloaded 123 time(s).The conditions of a solitary bird are five: The first, that it flies to the highest point;
the second, that it does not suffer for company, not even of its own kind;
the third, that it aims its beak to the skies; the fourth, that it does not have a definite color; the fifth, that it sings very softly.
- San Juan de la Cruz, Dichos de Luz y Amor