Hey gang! Thanks for the promotion - big love!
I thought that I would stick this information in a more relevant location so that it might draw some attention from the community and maybe get some others on board for a bit of testing. Personally, I think that this is a HUGE find and could greatly aid in identification / sustainable harvesting of active acacias.
I have done a fairly detailed write up of my findings over at my introduction essay so if you want the full detailed story and a bit of perspective head over here:
https://www.dmt-nexus.me...aspx?g=posts&t=96775In short, I have found that active A. Obtusifolia bark when scraped down to a certain layer glows bright bright blue under UV light. I'm suspecting this is concentrated DMT as no inactive acacia that I have tested glows this way nor does any other tree that I have checked.
I've also found that this is a great way to ID dead, fallen material & trees leading to a much more sustainable form of gathering material. It seems that the phyllodes even glow in the dead of night - some more than others (potentially indicating a higher alkaloid content?)
Moving forward what we need is more testing! I'm calling out for anyone growing active acacia that's able - get a UV light and lets gather some data! The UV light that I used was just a cheap 365nm torch from eBay but I expect anything close to that wavelength would be fine.
I'm also not sure exactly what layer of the bark this technically is. It seems to vary in depth and sort of form "veins" that flow much deeper at some points. Looking at a detailed breakdown of outer bark it could be the Phellogen, Pheloderm or Phloem layer.
Another test that I want to do is to seperate this blue layer and do an extraction on only that material and see how it compares to the rest of the layers. Does anyone have any knowledge as to what exact layer contains the dmt? All of them to some degree?
I've attached some pictures so that anyone not wanting to go and read my very long post can visually see what I'm on about.
ThresholdExplorer attached the following image(s):
UVTop.jpg
(103kb) downloaded 250 time(s). Top.jpg
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