DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 73 Joined: 13-Jan-2011 Last visit: 07-Jul-2014
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So, found these little babies at my local store. Are they peyotes maybe? LetSoulsDevour attached the following image(s): IMG_0089.jpg (2,082kb) downloaded 126 time(s).
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1453 Joined: 05-Apr-2009 Last visit: 02-Feb-2014 Location: hypospace
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No. Matucana madisoniorum is what you have there.
Rumored to be active but there zero confirmation of this by people who have ingested it so far as I know.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 152 Joined: 30-Dec-2012 Last visit: 17-Mar-2014
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Peyote has no spines, just fuzzy hairs.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 73 Joined: 13-Jan-2011 Last visit: 07-Jul-2014
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AlbertKLloyd wrote:No. Matucana madisoniorum is what you have there.
Rumored to be active but there zero confirmation of this by people who have ingested it so far as I know. Ok cool, should I try it maybe and report? It is not dangerous?
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1453 Joined: 05-Apr-2009 Last visit: 02-Feb-2014 Location: hypospace
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Might be a waste of a beautiful plant, but you are certainly free to do as you will. Only LKophophora jordaniana has spines, but they are small. http://www.cactus-art.bi...phophora_jourdaniana.htmAll other Lophophora lack visible spines when mature.
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catdestined
Posts: 356 Joined: 08-Nov-2012 Last visit: 16-Feb-2023 Location: felinity
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iirc this plant may be the ancestor of peyote or the other way around achuma puma
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1453 Joined: 05-Apr-2009 Last visit: 02-Feb-2014 Location: hypospace
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It is in an entirely different tribe than Peyote is. Peyote is in the tribe Cacteae while Matucana is in tribe Trichocereeae. While they are both cacti they are not very closely related. Matucana is a South American cactus, while Lophophora is North American. While I don't regard this text as useful it has some entries about both... http://www.cactus-mall.com/mss/old.html
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 833 Joined: 19-Oct-2010 Last visit: 21-Aug-2023 Location: Planet Earth
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AskErowid wrote:From guest answerer, Kakster from Kak-tall-a-tree.
Paul Hutchinson of the University of California Botanical Gardens discovered Borzicactus madisoniorum about 1963 or so in an valley in Peru. It is now alternately called Submatucana madisoniorum or Matucana madisoniorum, named after the town of Matucana. Being a small globular plant with ribs resembling Lophophora, the ones that lack spines look so much like peyote that the uninformed may think they actually are.
I had a large old specimen outside that disappeared while some Mexican workers were working in the yard - I suspect they stole it for ingestion. In natural habitats they grow slowly and are very hard like jade, but in greenhouses or grafted they grow quickly with tissue that is less firm. I had a sample analyzed by GCMS once and it was completely negative for alkaloids.... ...Narcotic and Hallucinogenic Cacti of the New World (pp.47-48 ) cites several cactologists as believing that this species is psychoactive. Sadly it sounds confirmed to be inactive, though you never know. --------------------------------------------------*Kash's LSA Extraction* * Kash's Mescaline Extraction*------------------------------------------------------ All things I say are complete and utter ramblings of nonsense. Do not consider taking anything iterated from the depths of my subconsciousness rationally and/or seriously.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1453 Joined: 05-Apr-2009 Last visit: 02-Feb-2014 Location: hypospace
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I have read first hand reports of ingestion with no effect.
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"No, seriously"
Posts: 7324 Joined: 18-Jan-2007 Last visit: 02-Nov-2024 Location: Orion Spur
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Exactly this cactus species I tested with TLC to see if it had mescaline and the results are negative: NO mescaline. Kind regards, The Traveler
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