Have you been consider for a material that could give you a nice, blissful experience by being one with nature? Magic mushrooms can do that for you. This consciousness-expanding mushroom can let you have a wonderful experience of unity with Mother Earth, hear the pleasant music of nature and feel the essence of the mushroom all in one great mental phantasm.
Magic mushrooms, or scientifically known as psilocybin mushrooms, have been used by people since early times. However, this plant is not actually illegal or forbidden. With just the right dose, the hallucinogenic mushroom is just fine with the right mental and psychological effects, reserved for the mentally fit and physically capable adults.
Some people say that they have experiences ranging from having rapid, unfathomable emotional experience to having a strong sense of connection with the universe.
Cultivating magic mushrooms can be done not just for the sake of it, but also as a hobby and some source of income. Growing magic mushrooms can be fun. There are online sites that provide useful and informative tips in growing the plant.
Depending on the laws of your country, the cultivation and selling of the plant can also be a good source of additional income. So you will not only get to smoke and get high with nature, you can also have a practical and pleasurable hobby.
The use of psilocybin mushrooms has been practiced by people since ancient times - as far back as 1000 B.C.
All about Magic shroomsMagic mushrooms also have some cultural and traditional importance to some races and cultures. It is not simply a substance that one can use and abuse at his or her pleasure.
The acute and the chronic psychotomimetic potentials of the hallucinogen lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD-25) have been recognized for almost 40 years. That additional types of the biological effects should have come under scrutiny was directly attributable to widespread use and abuse of this drug on a world-wide basis. Although "genetic toxicology" encompasses a broad spectrum of disciplines, including many areas of highly specialized research, perhaps the most germane, and those on which this review has concentrated, are Clastogenicity, Mutagenicity, Teratogenicity and Oncogenicity. Based on our current understanding and interpretation of the available data, the genetic toxicology of LSD provides an excellent example of Newton's "third law of motion", e.g., to every force there is an equal and opposite reaction force. However, several of the "controlled" investigations assessing the in vivo effect of chemically pure LSD suggest a transient increase in lymphocyte chromosome breakage. On the other hand, the results of cytogenetic studies on experimental animals are contradictory. Although human studies are nonexistent, in those experimental organisms tested, using accepted techniques, LSD proved to be, at best, a weak mutagen, if mutagenic at all. Teratogenicity studies in animals are confusing due to the multitude of organisms and plethora of discriminant parameters studied. However, with regard to man there has been ample opportunity and one can conclude that LSD is not teratogenic. As to the drug's oncogenic potential, the 3 reported cases of leukemia in LSD users are most likely the result of coincidence.
Post a Comment