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Acacia berlandieri Plant Produces Methamphetamines





Ezekiel 47:12 "And by the river upon the bank thereof, on this side and on that side, shall grow all trees for meat, whose leaf shall not fade, neither shall the fruit thereof be consumed: it shall bring forth new fruit according to his months, because their waters they issued out of the sanctuary: and the fruit thereof shall be for meat, and the leaf thereof for medicine."
Most important fact on this blog post: Acacia berlandieri is a plant that produces methamphetamines(Shulgin 2001) DMT and others(Phytochem. 1998).[1][2][3][4] There's a full list below, but you'll also be interested to know that I found academic sources which also report that it produces Mescaline, which is made by the illegal Peyote cactus(and over 40 other varieties that are legal in the US), and A. berlandieri also produces Amphetamine, and even Nicotine and Dopamine![1] There's a book you can buy on Amazon and at Walmart called "Peyote and other psychoactive cactus", that tells how to extract illegal mescaline, and which cactus specimens produce the drug. The DEA is not "investigating" Walmart however.
Nicknames: Berlandier acacia, guajillo acacia, guajillo, huajillo, huajilla;[7]
Classification: Let's just say this plant has its own illegal pharmacy going on within its plant matter. It's a complex chemical factory that's producing illegal substances while it appears to be just sitting there being a dumb tree.
Plant Family: Fabaceae; Genus: Senegalia; Species: S. berlandieri;[7]
Ethnobotany: This is one of the plants that Krystle cole put out there when she did her blog back in the day called "Plants That Contain DMT". I'm expanding on her work, it was very bare minimal, but then again it was still an insane amount of work none the less. I can see why she retired the page where she did. Anyway, this plant was one of many accessed by the Native Americans, as it grows wild indigenously in North America. Just because this plant produces methamphetamines, doesn't necessarily mean that making a tea out of it will get you high. Some phytochemicals made by plants are soluble in water, others are not. Some dissolve in your stomach, others require assistance from an MAOI or alt consumption method. Other phytochemicals may only dissolve in alcohol. So don't assume that just because something produces something, that you can "get high off of it". It's said that this plant only produces trace amounts of mescaline, which would render it useless to a drug cook in that department, unless they were in posession of insane amounts, but still. At any rate, I still want to get the word out about these things.
Natural Habitat: Southwestern United States and northeast Mexico;[7]
OG Observations: The more I learn about drugs and the plants that naturally produce them, the more my mind is blown. I had no idea that methamphetamines was a naturally occuring drug. I knew that Ephedrine, which can be isolated out of Ephedra sinica and other strains, could be chemically converted into methamphetamines, but did not know(or forgot rather), that plants produce it. This is very interesting indeed. I want the whole world to know about this, but the corrupt drug theft, manufacturing, and distribution operations being run within the DEA, FBI, and police departments across America do not want me to get the word out about this. It's scholars as well that are mostly involved with the illegal drug trade. I'm also an eye witness that real estate and police are working together to turn empty houses into marijuana grow operations.
What is Phytochemistry? What are Phytochemicals? Phytochemicals are pharmacological chemicals produced by plants. They're where all medicine on planet earth comes from, both legal and illegal, whether it gets you high, or doesn't, it comes from a plant directly, or is a knock-off synthetic version of a substance that's produced within a plant. Ethnobotany, The Ethnobotanical Industry, Big Pharma, and The Occult Are All Connected.
Phytochemicals: Phenethylamine, N-Methylphenethylamine, N,N-Dimethylphenethylamine, N,N,N-Trimethylphenethylammonium hydroxide, Amphetamine, Methamphetamine, N,N-Dimethyl-α-methylphenethylamine, p-Hydroxyamphetamine, p-Methoxyamphetamine, Tyramine, N-Methyltyramine, Hordenine, Candicine*, Dopamine, N-Methyldopamine, N,N-Dimethyldopamine nd, 3-Methoxytyramine, Mescaline(also found in Peyote, which is illegal), N-Methylmescaline, Trichocereine, 3,4,5-Trimethoxyphenethyl-N,N,N-trimethylammonium hydroxide*, 3,5-Dimethoxytyramine, 3,4-Dimethoxy-5-hydroxyphenethylamine, β-Methoxy-3,4-dihydroxy-5-methoxyphenethylamine, 3,4-Dimethoxy-α-methyl-5-hydroxyphenethylamine, Nicotine, Nornicotine, Anhalamine, Anhalidine (N-Methylanhalamine), Anhalonidine, Mimosine, methyl ester, 3α-Cumyl-1,3,4-oxadiazolidine-2,5-dione, Nortriptyline, Musk ambrette;[1][2][3]
Pharmacological / Medicinal Properties: "Studies have indicated that Acacia species, such as Acacia nilotica, have displayed antimicrobial activity"[5]
More HerbsPedia Blog-Posts: Sleepy grass(stipa robusta), and LSA seeds are used in illegal LSD manufacturing operations | Mimosa hostilis is used to free-base illegal DMT | A beginners guide to using kratom(Mitragyna speciosa) | Ayahuasca vine is used in witchcraft but has non-occult applications as well | Kratom As An Aphprodisiac | Amanita muscaira products exposed as poison and fake magic mushrooms! | Is Wild Dagga really psychoactive? A non-bias investigation. | How to grow Hawaiian Baby Woodrose seeds and plants from cuttings and sprouts. | Opium poppy seeds are sold across the USA legally
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Academic citations:
[1] Lalama, Abelardo Pachano. "Acacia berlandieri & Acacia rigidula."
[2] Sadgrove, Nicholas J. "Rumors of Psychedelics, Psychotropics and Related Derivatives in Vachellia and Senegalia in Contrast with Verified Records in Australian Acacia." Plants 11.23 (2022): 3356.
[3] Lalama, Abelardo Pachano. "Category: Sacred Cacti 4th edition Post navigation."
[4] Pawar, Rahul S., et al. "Determination of selected biogenic amines in Acacia rigidula plant materials and dietary supplements using LC–MS/MS methods." Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis 88 (2014): 457-466.
[5] Gonzalez, David Israel. "Determination of Antimicrobial Activity and Secondary Metabolites in Acacia rigidula and Acacia berlandieri." The FASEB Journal 33.S1 (2019): 650-4.
Encyclopedia Sources:
[7] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acacia_berlandieri
Other resources:
M.A.P.S. Ethnobotanical Studies By Scholars
PubChem - pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov