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Buy Ariocarpus fissuratus Cactus

Legal Mescaline Cactus For Sale




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."
Nicknames: Living Rock; "False Peyote"; aka "Tsuwiri", "chautle", "chaute"; "Dry whiskey" and "star cactus";[1] | Synonyms: Ariocarpus retusus;
Classification: Psychedelic; Medicine;
Plant Family: Cactaceae;[1] Subfamily: Cactoideae;[1] Genus: Ariocarpus;[1] Species: A. fissuratus;[1]
Ethnobotany: Ariocarpus fissuratus is a sacred Cactus utilized by traditional cultures such as the Tarahumara Indians, for its "magical" and narcotic properties, due to the fact that it produces mescaline and related constituents.[1][2][3][4] Mescaline is an illegal psychedelic drug and medicine.[1][2]
Natural Habitat: Northern Mexico and Texas Of the United States.[1] That makes it one of many Native American Ethnobotanicals.
Synergizes with: Passion flower, banisteriopsis caapi, Bobinsana, Syrian rue, or other MAOI Harmaline / harmine producing ethnobotanicals. All of the ethnobotanicals that I just listed produce harmaline and related MAOI constituents.[10] Harmaline is a phytochemical, and it has an entire family of related chemicals that are produced along side it in certain plants.[5](P.158) It and its family of related constituents, are what allow the DMT in Chacruna(and or other DMT producing ethnobotanicals), to absorb into the bloodstream for those who consume
O.G. Observations: Gangs of people in occult groups are running protection for their own in the ethnobotanical industry, and going after people that can't keep secrets. I'm an eye witness to this, having worked with some of the biggest O.G's in the industry, prior to its destruction and theft by the socialist during the planned-demic of 2015-2021. I worked with: Arena Ethnobotanicals, BotanicalSpirit.com, Bouncing Bear Botanicals, Meridian Botanicals, and Mr Botanicals., One of the biggest secrets related to ethnobotanicals is that a small percentage of them are connected to illegal drug manufacturing operations because they naturally produce controlled substances(like Mimosa hostilis, and Hawaiian Baby Woodrose, etc). The socialist don't want people to follow in Bouncing Bear Botanicals footsteps and promote these facts and products, because they don't want the politicians to gain wind of this, and start banning these products. It's a lot easier for them to operate if the ethnobotanicals that produce controlled substances are sold out in the open legally(and covertly), than it would be to maintain and hunt ethnos that really aren't that well known to too many people. Most plants that produce controlled substances are known by very little people I think. They are using social media shadow banning to rope off the economy, so they can take control of the international trade(hints their attack on the world trade center, as it symbolizes the global economy, aka world trade.) This will allow the socialist to hide future new drugs and sources for controlled substances and precursors so they can coverup their illegal drug manufacturing operations. These operations are multi-million dollar in value, and are being run by people in high places. Here are two stories to prove this: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/new-pacific-drug-trafficking-route-narco-subs-colombia/ and Vice - Krystle Cole - Missle Silo Turned LSD Palace, Worlds Largest Underground LSD Lab Bust
What is Phytochemistry? What are Phytochemicals? Phytochemist study ethnobotanicals in the lab, and isolate out drugs and medicines that they produce.[5][6][7][9] This is how we know about the most miarculous drugs and medicines on the planet, from morphine, to ephedrine, to codeine, all drugs and medicines can be traced back to these ethnobotanicals in some way.[5][6][7][8] Both Ethnobotany, and Phytochemistry are academic fields of study, and are critical in the future discovery and production of all drugs and medicines, even illegal ones.[5][6][7][8] To put it bluntly and concise, phytochemicals are drugs or medicines produced by plants.[9]
Phytochemicals: Again, there seems to be a lot of confusion about what phytochemicals are, and what ethnobotanicals are. Phytochemicals are NOT drugs that have been laced onto plants, but rather: are drugs or medicines that are PRODUCED BY PLANTS, like how Marijuana produces THC and CBD, and how Coffee produces caffeine, and how Tobacco produces nicotine, etc.[5] [6][7] Living rocks cactus also produces a phytochemical called: Pellotine;[3] A. fissuratus(False Peyote Cactus) also produces: Mescaline;[3][1] "Two alkaloids, hordenine and N–methyltyramine, were detected and isolated in crystalline form by using dry–column chromatography."[8] When you read about these from the various academic sources that publish data on their benefits, you'll notice a pattern: Each one of these phytochemical components is a unique medicine of its own, having far more beneficial applications in medicine than any man made drug.
Pharmacological / Medicinal Properties: In this section I will discuss individual phytochemicals produced by the Ariocarpus fissuragus cactus, and their pharmacological properties(their medicinal value) Pellotine: "Pellotine has been reported to have short-acting sleep-inducing properties in humans."[13] The same source that discusses these sleep-inducing properties goes on to refer to the substance as "hypnotic".[13] Mescaline: It's scientific name is: (3,4,5-trimethoxyphenethylamine).[15] It's similar in structure to dopamine.[14] Its effects are caused from its interaction with the serotonergic 5-HT2A-C receptors, and therefore they are very similar to those induced by other psychedelic substances, like lysergic's and psilocybin(4-PO-DMT,[4-phosphoryloxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine]).[15] Mescaline is also structurally similar to the neurochemicals: norepinephrine (3,4,β-trihydroxyphenethylamine), and epinephrine (3,4,β-trihydroxy-N-methylphenethylamine)![16] As far as its safety goes, according to one academic source: "most intoxications appear to be mild and are unlikely to produce lifethreatening symptoms, which favors the contemporary interest in the therapeutic potential of the drugs of the class."[15] Hordenine: | N-methltyramine:
More blogs: Acacia berlandieri produces methamphetamines | African Dream Herb Entada rheedii Seeds | Agrimony(Agrimonia eupatoria) | Are Amanita Mushroom Gummies Safe?[NO!] | Argyreia nervosa seeds(HBWR)[Lsa/lysergics!] | Abronia fragrans(Prarie Snowball), A Native American Ethnobotanical | Acacia rigidula produces mescaline, and DMT! | Achuma cactus(Trichocereus bridgesii) produces illegal mescaline! | Adders Tongue(Erythronium americanum) | Albizia julibrissin(Silk Tree)[DMT!]
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Academic citations:
[3] Saroya, Amritpal Singh, and Jaswinder Singh. Psychoactive Medicinal Plants and Fungal Neurotoxins. Singapore:: Springer, 2020.
[4] Bruhn, Jan G., and Catarina Bruhn. "Alkaloids and ethnobotany of Mexican peyote cacti and related species." Economic botany 27.2 (1973): 241-251.
[8] Braga, D. L., and Jerry L. McLaughlin. "Cactus alkaloids V. Isolation of hordenine and n–methyltyramine from Ariocarpus retusus." Planta Medica 17.01 (1969): 87-94.
[9] Burrell, R. C. "Phytochemistry. What it is and how it has developed." Journal of Chemical Education 14.11 (1937): 520.
[10] Lewerenz, Laura, et al. "Pilot study on the uptake and modification of harmaline in acceptor plants: An innovative approach to visualize the interspecific transfer of natural products." Phytochemistry 174 (2020): 112362.
[11] Wu, Chao, et al. "Effects of CYP2D6 status on harmaline metabolism, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, and a pharmacogenetics-based pharmacokinetic model." Biochemical pharmacology 78.6 (2009): 617-624.
[12] National Library Of Medicine: "Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors (MAOI)" : Via: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK539848/
[13] Poulie, Christian BM, et al. "In Vitro and In Vivo Evaluation of Pellotine: A Hypnotic Lophophora Alkaloid." ACS pharmacology & translational science 6.10 (2023): 1492-1507.
[15] Dinis-Oliveira, Ricardo J., Carolina Lança Pereira, and Diana Dias Da Silva. "Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic aspects of peyote and mescaline: clinical and forensic repercussions." Current molecular pharmacology 12.3 (2019): 184-194.
[16] "Mescaline". PubChem. https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/4076[2] Gottlieb, Adam. Peyote and Other Psychoactive Cacti. Ronin Publishing, 15 June 2009.
[5] Balick, Michael J., and Paul Alan Cox. Plants, People, and Culture: The Science Of Ethnobotany. Garland Science, 2020.
[6] Tyler, Varro E, et al. Pharmacognosy. 1988.
[7] Swerdlow, Joel L. Nature's Medicine : Plants That Heal. Washington, D.C., National Geographic Society, 2000.
Encyclopedia Sources:
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ariocarpus_fissuratus
[14] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mescaline
Other resources:
M.A.P.S. Ethnobotanical Studies By Scholars
PubChem - pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov