Mind-altering tea drinkers brew planning row

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Sep 25, 2005
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http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?click_id=31&art_id=nw20090913083952920C200715&set_id=

Santa Fe, New Mexico - Two Amazonian plants used to make a psychedelic tea and a scion of the family which once ran one of the world's largest distillers are stirring up a storm in rural New Mexico.

Environmental activist Jeffrey Bronfman, whose family once owned the Seagram Company Ltd of Canada, has spent a decade battling for the right to drink the foul-tasting tea known as hoasca, brewed from two plants which contain mind-altering substances.

The tea is used in services held every other Saturday at the Santa Fe chapter of the religious group known as O Centro Espirita Beneficiente Uniao do Vegetal - Portuguese for Central Beneficial Spirit United in the Plants.
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The group claims it opens their minds and brings them closer to God. After discovering the church in Brazil, Bronfman founded the New Mexico chapter in a yurt in Arroyo Hondo, a kilometre from Santa Fe in 1992.

Now he plans to donate 2,5 acres of his land to build 11 000 square feet of new structures, including a caretaker's house, a temple for up to 100 worshippers, a greenhouse for growing the plants and a kitchen to prepare tea.

The religion was founded in Brazil in 1961 and now claims 14,000 members, including 55 in Santa Fe. Services involve drinking the sacramental tea, made from two plants with the hallucinogen NN dimethyltryptamine or DMT.

But at recent community meetings, residents voiced strong opposition to the expansion plans fearing it would increase traffic in their sleepy neighbourhood and worrying about the effects of the tea on imbibers.

Jerry Levin, who lives near the proposed construction, said residents chose the area because they can own several acres of land, keep horses and maintain their privacy.

Building a temple would mean more traffic and could open the door to more non-residential development, he said.

"This is not well thought out. It just isn't," he said. "It's like a pimple on the earth here and it's festering."

Another neighbour, Jacque Dawson, was worried about whether the tea would affect drivers, and if there would need to be increased security to protect it.

While Evelyn Bemuse, also of Arroyo Hondo, said she was not as concerned about the religion or its tea as with group's long legal battle. "It scares us when you mention the fight all the way to the Supreme Court," she said.

"It feels like it threatens us because... we're just individuals in a neighborhood who are really unhappy about a project and looking at, 'Is this some huge fight we're taking on?'"

On May 21, 1999, federal agents raided Bronfman's office in Santa Fe and confiscated 30 gallons of the tea shipped from Brazil, but made no arrests.

A year later, Bronfman and other members of Uniao do Vegetal or UDV filed a complaint in an Albuquerque court, charging the seizure violated their constitutional rights.

District judge James Parker upheld the group's right to use hoasca, but the previous administration of then president George Bush appealed to the Supreme Court.

In 2006, the high court unanimously upheld Parker in what was the first case on religious freedom for Chief Justice John Roberts, a Bush appointee.

Bronfman has declined comment on the federal case, saying there are unresolved issues. But he sat silently at the neighbourhood meeting last month as other members of his group defended the temple plan.

"Some of the opposition, I feel, has been fuelled by some people in Arroyo Hondo who found out about this and stoked the fires, saying we're a cult, we do drugs, we're dangerous drivers," said the group's vice president, Tai Bixby, a real-estate developer.

The group's lawyer Nancy Hollander told AFP the tea was not hallucinogenic.

"I don't know what you'd really call it. I think it's accurate to say mind altering and it's a sacrament but it does not cause hallucinations. It doesn't cause you to see pink elephants," she said.

In a recent letter to some 300 area homeowners, Bixby described Uniao do Vegetal as a "Christian Spiritist religion (that) exists for the purpose of helping the human being with his or her development in the moral, ethical and spiritual sense."

He said repeated studies have shown no harm from using hoasca and that dozens of everyday plants contain hallucinogenic substances, adding the effects usually wear off after four hours.

The group's website (udvusa.com) says hoasca allows "the possibility of spiritual union with the Light and Divine Consciousness, which is God."

A few people spoke in favor of the temple at the recent meetings, which were organised by a professional facilitator at Bronfman's expense.

"As far as the danger of hoasca, for crying out loud," said Roberto Gallegos of nearby Seton Village. "There's so many people in this room that have big parties where a lot of alcohol is consumed, so I think that's really a phony argument."

The temple plans are expected to go before Santa Fe County land-use panels later this year.

The yurt was recently taken down and services have been held elsewhere, but group officials declined to say where. They said the only permanent structure devoted to the group in the United States is near Norwood, Colorado. - AFP
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Jul 6, 2008
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huh, instead of legalizing drugs, maybe we can find loopholes and go aorund these laws. like setting up religious organizations as a front to do drugs. that way if we get arrested and shit, we can jsut say its part of our religion and they are violating our rights of freedom of religion. we would be worshipping the holy plant, and the dude that brings it to us, name him johnny kush-o-seed, or greg the green giant. could this work?? i know they got rasta religion. why not fight fire with fire, since they dont want to legalize drugs, we have to be creative and constructive in a way to express our freedom to do drugs as individuals.
 
Aug 3, 2005
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ya u can buy all the ingredients online, my favorite site is bouncingbearbotanicals.com, theyve got a LOT of stuff, everything ud need really minus a couple things, even the Bufo Alvarius, the toad that produces high amounts of 5-MeO-DMT (not that i would ever use one for that...;-)


here are instructions for breweing ayahuasca and the ingredients youd need.

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Introduction To Ayahuasca

Ayahuasca is a sacred drink that has been consumed for thousands of years, by the indigenous people living in the Upper Amazon area of South America. People consume the drink for divination, medicinal, religious, and other shamanic purposes.

The word ayahuasca can be translated to English as vine of the soul or vine of the dead. This is most likely due to the fact that after taking ayahuasca, a person often feels a freeing of the soul.

It may also be attributed to the fact that one of the functions of ayahuasca has been to allow a person who consumes it to communicate with the souls of dead ancestors.

Ayahuasca is usually made by mixing two or more distinctive plant species capable of producing psychoactive effects when brewed together and consumed.

It can be prepared from a number of ingredients that can vary. Rather than having a set list of ingredients, custom ayahuasca brews are concocted based on the intended application of the ayahuasca.

For example, ayahuasca intended to be ingested in order to diagnose or treat illness would be made from different ingredients than ayahuasca that was intended to be ingested for casting magic spells.

The drink is a sacred medicine that has been brewed and consumed in South America for thousands of years. Objects related to the preparation and use of ayahuasca can be dated to about 500 BC. It can be assumed that ayahuasca goes back hundreds, if not thousands of years prior to 500 BC.Ayahuasca Inspired Art From The Book Ayahuasca Visions

Hallucinations and deep personal visions are possible if enough ayahuasca is consumed.

Visions induced by the drink often include birds, dead ancestors, demons, fractals, geometric patterns, gods, jaguars, jungle scenes, plants, snakes, spirit helpers, waves of color, and wild animals. Shared visions may occur if ayahuasca is consumed in a group setting.

Traditional Ayahuasca And Ayahuasca Analogs

In the traditional preparation of ayahuasca, one of the plants always included is Banisteriopsis caapi (or another species of Banisteriopsis).

South American shamans mix sections of Banisteriopsis caapi with leaves from a number of other potential plants. The other plant or plants that are combined with Banisteriopsis caapi usually contain tryptamine alkaloids, like DMT (dimethyltryptamine).

The plants that were most often mixed with Banisteriopsis caapi to produce traditional ayahuasca were the leaves of Diplopterys cabrerana (chaliponga) or the leaves of Psychotria viridis (chacruna).

Traditional ayahuasca can also be made with no plants that contain DMT. These non-DMT brews are made by mixing Banisteriopsis caapi with plants from the Brugmansia genus.

Tobacco is often added to traditional brews and other common additives include various species of Anadenanthera and Datura. There are even ayahuasca brews made with no plants other than Banisteriopsis caapi itself.

Modern ayahuasca preparations can be made by mixing plants (other than Banisteriopsis caapi) that contain MAOI's (in the form of harmala alkaloids) with plants (other than Diplopterys cabrerana or Psychotria viridis) that contain DMT. These non-traditional ayahuasca brews are known as ayahuasca analogs.

The most common substitutions in ayahuasca analogs are:
--- 1) replacing Banisteriopsis caapi with another plant that contains a large concentration of harmala alkaloids, usually Peganum harmala (syrian rue).
--- 2) replacing Diplopterys cabrerana or Psychotria viridis with a plant that contains a large concentration of DMT, usually Mimosa hostilis (jurema).

Choosing Ayahuasca Ingredients

Various types of plants can be combined to make ayahuasca. Each of these combinations will have a different effect upon the person taking them.

Traditional ayahuasca is made with the same ingredients that have been included by South American shamans for thousands of years. Ayahuasca analogs are made by substituting the plants traditionally used with plants that contain larger amounts of active compounds.

Someone looking for an experience for magical, medical, spiritual, or a related purpose should choose traditional ayahuasca. Someone looking for a strong psychological experience should choose an ayahuasca analog.

The potency of these ayahuasca brews vary, in strength and psychoactive effect, from one batch to the next. The potency is determined by the plants included in the mixture and the skill of the brewer. Natural variations in plant alkaloid levels will also affect the potency of the ayahuasca.

Because of the variability in the potency of the particular plants you have access to, giving exact amounts of the ingredients needed to produce ayahuasca that is right for everyone, is impossible.

Here are some possible combinations for making ayahuasca. You should experiment with changing the amounts of various ingredients to produce a type of ayahuasca that you are comfortable with. Ayahuasca preparations in these proportions can be used as a starting point.

Ayahuasca Analogs
1 ----- Peganum harmala (syrian rue) seeds mixed with Mimosa hostilis (jurema): recommended for advanced ayahuasca consumers. Boil 10 grams of finely ground Peganum harmala seeds with 5-10 grams of finely ground Mimosa hostilis bark.
2 ----- Peganum harmala (syrian rue) seeds mixed with Psychotria viridis (chacruna): recommended for first time ayahuasca consumers and those with limited ayahuasca experience. Boil 10 grams of finely ground Peganum harmala seeds with 30 grams of finely ground foliage (leaves) of Psychotria viridis.
3 ----- Peganum harmala (syrian rue) seeds mixed with Diplopterys cabrerana (chaliponga): recommended for advanced ayahuasca consumers. Boil 10 grams of finely ground Peganum harmala seeds with 10 grams of finely ground foliage (leaves) of Diplopterys cabrerana.
4 ----- Banisteriopsis caapi mixed with Mimosa hostilis: recommended for advanced ayahuasca consumers. Boil 40 grams of finely ground Banisteriopsis caapi with 5-10 grams of finely ground Mimosa hostilis bark.

Traditional Ayahuasca
1 ----- Banisteriopsis caapi (ayahuasca vine) mixed with Psychotria viridis (chacruna): Recommended for first time ayahuasca consumers and those with limited ayahuasca experience. Boil 40 grams of finely ground Banisteriopsis caapi with 30 grams of finely ground foliage (leaves) of Psychotria viridis.
2 ----- Banisteriopsis caapi (ayahuasca vine) mixed with Diplopterys cabrerana (chaliponga): Recommended for advanced ayahuasca consumers. Boil 40 grams of finely ground Banisteriopsis caapi with 10 grams of finely ground foliage (leaves) of Diplopterys cabrerana.

There are various types of Banisteriopsis caapi available for making ayahuasca. These categories are divided according to the potency they impart to ayahuasca, rather than being different varieties of Banisteriopsis caapi.
--- Red caapi is considered very potent. Ayahuasca made with it was taken by a shaman when performing healing rituals. A patient would take a less potent ayahuasca (made of yellow caapi).
--- White caapi is considered moderately potent. It was associated with ayahuasca made for magic rituals. Purposes included both casting and protecting oneself from spells.
--- Yellow caapi is considered mildly potent and relatively gentle compared to other types of caapi. It was associated with ayahuasca made for first timers and those with limited experience.

You can buy these ayahuasca related plants at bouncing bear botanicals. They ship from the US to most countries.
Banisteriopsis caapi (ayahuasca vine)
Diplopterys cabrerana (chaliponga)
Mimosa hostilis (jurema)
Peganum harmala (syrian rue)
Psychotria viridis (chacruna)

How To Make Ayahuasca

Ayahuasca is legal in most parts of South America where it is a sacrament for religious and spiritual purposes. However, it is illegal in the USA unless a person is a member of a church that administers ayahuasca in religious services (there are Santo Daime churches in the US that do).

The plants that ayahuasca can be prepared from are themselves legal in the USA, but once combined to produce ayahuasca they become illegal. If you reside in a country where ayahuasca is illegal, it is suggested you refrain from producing or consuming ayahuasca. If you reside in a country where ayahuasca is legal, read this article on how to use ayahuasca before trying it yourself.

The object of brewing various plant material in boiling water is to extract the active ingredients into water so they can be consumed orally (by drinking). The extraction process will last a few hours, and it requires monitoring and stirring. If you have to stop, you can put whatever you were working on in the fridge until you are ready to resume.

To start, it is very important to dry and grind whatever ingredients you have chosen into material as fine as possible. A blender, coffee grinder, or something that will do a similar job can be used. If you haven't chosen your ingredients, see this.

Do not reduce any plant material to powder until you are ready to make ayahuasca. Doing so will probably speed the breakdown of active ingredients, causing a reduction in potency.

The water the ayahuasca ingredients are boiled in should be pure (distilled or reverse osmosis water is best). This is because minerals may limit the amount of DMT your body is able to absorb. Water with a pH of between 4.0 and 5.0 is best. Most people add some type of acid (like lemon juice) to lower the pH of the water

When ready add the plant material into the pH adjusted water and to boil for 1-2 hours, stirring occasionally. Do this in a stainless steel pot (ayahuasca will stain materials other than stainless steel) and boil gently. Add pH adjusted water as needed to keep the liquid from boiling off completely.

After 1-2 hours you should strain the plant material through a cheesecloth, panty hose, strainer, or something else that will separate the plant material from the water.

Save the water in another container and repeat boiling the plant material (that was strained out of the previous boiling) in pH adjusted water. Continue this process until the water does not change color when the plant material is boiled. Throw away the plant material when it no longer changes the color of the water

Then mix all of your boilings and gently boil them down to a quantity you can drink. As you boil the mixture, water will evaporate and leave a more potent concentration of ingredients. The taste is very bad (to many people) so try to boil it down to an amount you can drink in one shot.

Preparation Notes

--- If you are using Peganum harmala (syrian rue) seeds as an MAOI in your ayahuasca preparation, you can grind them up and put them it into empty gelatin capsules (rather than boiling them in water) and taking the capsules with a glass of water.

Ingest the capsules 20-60 minutes before you drink the DMT part of the ayahuasca. You only need to ingest 3-5 grams of Peganum harmala seeds if they are taken in capsules (regardless of how much Peganum harmala seed you recipe instructed you to boil).

--- Ayahuasca can be frozen in a dark, plastic, air tight container if it has to be stored for any period of time. You should be able to store it for a month (or a bit longer) under the proper conditions.

--- Do not eat for 12-24 hours prior to ayahuasca ingestion. Drink water only. This will increase the amount of active compounds your body absorbs and reduce the chance of vomiting.

--- The water the ayahuasca ingredients are boiled in should be between 4.0 and 5.0 pH. If you want to ensure the pH is within the ideal range, get a pH meter or test kit. Some liquid pH meters and test kits might not measure down to 4.0 pH or lower, so use a pH meter or pH test kit that can show readings in the 3.0 to 6.0 pH range.

A pH meter is usually more accurate but for most people a pH test kit is probably better, because kits are cheaper (under $20). Do not try to measure the pH of liquids with anything made for measuring the pH of soil.

A pH test kit designed for measuring the pH of liquids can be found at hydroponic stores and aquarium supply stores. Hydroponic plant growers measure the pH of liquid nutrient solutions with them and aquarium owners measure the pH of water in freshwater, saltwater, and reef tanks with them.

Lemon juice or ascorbic acid can lower the pH of water into the correct range. Ascorbic acid can be made by grinding up vitamin c pills. Making sure that the pH is between 4.0 and 5.0 will allow a maximum amount of alkaloids to be absorbed in the human body.

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Stealth

Join date: May '98
May 8, 2002
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huh, instead of legalizing drugs, maybe we can find loopholes and go aorund these laws. like setting up religious organizations as a front to do drugs. that way if we get arrested and shit, we can jsut say its part of our religion and they are violating our rights of freedom of religion. we would be worshipping the holy plant, and the dude that brings it to us, name him johnny kush-o-seed, or greg the green giant. could this work?? i know they got rasta religion. why not fight fire with fire, since they dont want to legalize drugs, we have to be creative and constructive in a way to express our freedom to do drugs as individuals.
The Establishment Clause states that the government cannot ban something based on religion.

For example, the government can't ban the ritual killing of chickens. Banning the "ritual" killing is based on religion. But the government CAN ban the killing of chickens altogether if there is no religious connotation.

In the same way, the government can't ban the religious use of drugs. But the government CAN ban the use of drugs in general. So it's really not a loophole at all - unless the gov't decides to cast a blind eye.
 
Jan 14, 2006
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oh i guess its just the actual mix or concotion that they dont want.
ive read you have to fast for like a week prior to ayahuasca
and anyways one of the main things it does to you is induce severe vomiting and/or diarrhea so i think im good...and ive read of people still in a state of delusion or whatever two days in
 
Sep 25, 2005
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it is not for the weak of heart...or of spirit for that matter. I have it in my freezer and haven't yet done it. I'm working my way up so to speak with the entheogenics...
 
Aug 3, 2005
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oh i guess its just the actual mix or concotion that they dont want.
ive read you have to fast for like a week prior to ayahuasca
and anyways one of the main things it does to you is induce severe vomiting and/or diarrhea so i think im good...and ive read of people still in a state of delusion or whatever two days in
it doesnt necessarily need to be for a week and isnt a requirement really at all but most people would fast for at least a couple days before.
vomiting is much more common than diarrhea, and is considered a purging of negative or unhealthy stuff thats in you, but even that doesnt happen every time or nething. its usually welcomed by users if it happens to happen.
 
Jan 14, 2006
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well not a week for every case i guess
but i remember reading that fasting is advised since you are taking in MAOI inhibotors i think.
still,..who likes vomiting? almost everybody that ive heard that took it vomitted
this type of stuff really is just for shaman type stuff or if you really believe that you are going to get some sort of spiritual gain. not really a recreational type thing.