| 31. |
Heimia salicifolia - Sinicuichi
( - Lythraceae - Southern North America to Argentina, West Indies)
The natives believe that sinicuichi has sacred or supernatural qualities, since they hold that it helps them recall events which took place many years earlier as if they had happened yesterday; others assert that they are able, with sinicuichi, to remember pre-natal events.
|
| 32. |
In Depth Report Regarding DMT
( - by Peter Meyer)
In this article I wish to draw attention to a strange property of DMT which sets it apart from other psychedelics, namely, it's ability to place users in touch with a realm that is apparently inhabited by discarnate entities of an intelligent nature.
|
| 33. |
Ipomoea violacea - Morning Glory
( - Convovulaceae - Mexico to South America)
Under construction.
|
| 34. |
Leonotis leonurus - Lion's Tail
( - Labiatae - South Africa)
Smoked by the Hottentot tribes smoke the resinous flowering tops and leaves from this plant as a euphoriant.
|
| 35. |
Leonurus sibiricus - Siberian Motherwort
( - Labiatae - Siberia to East Asia, Central and South America)
Under construction.
|
| 36. |
Lophophora williamsii - Peyote
( - Cactaceae - Mexico, Texas)
The peyote cactus is a flowering plant of the family Cactaceae, which is a group of fleshy, spiny plants found primarily in the dry regions of the New World.
|
| 37. |
Lycoperdon mixtecorum - Bovista
( - Lycoperdaceae - Temperate zones of Mexico)
PUFFBALLS (Lycoperdon mixtecorum and L. marginotum) are used by the Mixtec Indicins Of Oaxaca, Mexico as auditory hallucinogens.
|
| 38. |
Macropiper Excelsum - Maori Kava
( - Piperaceae - New Zealand)
This subspecies from the New Zealand mainland is the variety used by the Maori in their medicines and rituals and belongs to the kava family.
|
| 39. |
Mandragora officinarum - Mandrake
( - Solanaceae - Southern Europe, north Africa, west Asia, Himalayas)
Under construction.
|
| 40. |
Maquira sclerophylia - Rapa dos Indios
( - Moraceae - Tropical zones of South America)
In the Pariana region of the central Amazon in Brazil, the indians formerly prepared a hallucinogenic snuff of the dried fruits. The snuff was taken in tribal ceremonials, but encroachment of civilization has obliterated it's use.
|