If it's harmalas from caapi, the wash water will be clearer than harmalas from syrian rue.
With rue, due to the harmaline content (which is near non existent in caapi) the wash water will start to dissolve harmaline and colour it yellow-ish.
To keep all harmaline freebase, you can add a knife tip of sodium carbonate in your wash water, the pH will be like 9 and the harmaline will not dissolve in your wash water anymore.
In the "VDS papers" he proposed to wash with:
Quote:...wash residue with ammonia 3% or Na2CO3 solution 0,5%...
I wash in a big pot with like 5 liters of wash water, just one wash.
I've my freebase filtered out in a coffee filter, add this sludge in the wash water volume, swirl, let settle, swirl, let settle, poor of the clear water and strain the particles trough a coffee filter to catch.
You can however finalize with poring one some plain water over the freebase in the coffee filter, but overkill I suppose. And I've come to the thought that this tiny remainder of dried sodium carbonate trace on the freebase surface keeps it from oxidizing to orange. If I wash with diluted ammonia then I've got the impression orange-oxidizing of the freebase happens way sooner.