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Invisiblemjshroomer
Sage
Registered: 07/21/99
Posts: 13,774
Loc: gone with my shrooms
Magic Mushrooms in Mississippi: Part Two * 1
    #1557580 - 05/18/03 10:12 AM (20 years, 10 months ago)

Hi everyone.

Before reading this article which was originally published in 1975, I would like to warn all that this is one of the many published papers which provided science with horrible misinformation about these magic shrooms.

This article posted below was based on F. C. Ghouled,s 1972 field guide, "A Field Guide to the Psilocybin Mushrooms. 16 pages with two colored photos and two black and white photos., published by Guidence Publications in New Orleans.

It was wrought with errors and much misinformation which will be discussed at the end of this article.

Unfortunately, my copy of the Ghouled book has disappeaered during my divorce period in the middle 1980s. There is a printed version of the Ghouled book at erowid minus the photographs which I have posted below.

As I just mentioned I will describe the confusion further exploited by Dr. Jacobs who had no knowledge of what it was he was writing about.

Thus spreading this misinformation across the country and the world.

mj

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Hallucinogenic Mushrooms in Mississippi
by
Keith W. Jacobs, M.A.
Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

The Journal of the Mississippi State Medical Association vol. 16(2):35-37. February 1975.





















XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXx
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXx

Okay. Now a few points of interest.

In the original book by F. C. Ghouled, Mr. Gholed notes that the Amanita muscaria is the Famed Magic Mushroom of Mexico and that it is a Psilocybin mushroom.

As we already know, the Mazatecs and other tribal groups in Oaxaca used Psilocybe mushrooms not Amanita.. This was a major error on Ghouled's part to say this with no references to back up his statement.

While there are some Amanita mushroom stones from Guatamala, that does not indicate that the Aztecs used the Amanitas but does suggest that the Mayan culture may have employed them ritualistically.

Dr. Jacobs also claimed that many people have mistaken Amanita muscaria for Psilocybe cubensis. This is also not true and is a good examplle of misinformation. And Dr. Jaconbs provided no references for this statement except to cite Ghouleds booklet.

Ghouled also made another major mistake which most likely was the cause of some of Dr. Jacobs comments about the Amanita muscaira mushrooms deadlyness.

In the Ghouled book, Mr. Ghouled describes Psilocybe cubensis from the Southeastern USA from Texas to Georgia and Florida. He also describes the hay/compost and sometimes manure mushroom, Panaeolus subbalteatus with two photographs. And claims that it was the 2nd most widely used mushroom in America and the World. This si also not true since the PNW's liberty caps were well known of to recreational drug users in the early 1970s. See other comments about the PNW below.

However, Mr. Ghouled's two photographs of Panaeolus subbalteatus are actually two button stage images of Psilocybe cubensis in their young stages, with speckles of white scabs on the shrooms, which are sometimes notable in young cubensis. And sometimes the Cubies will have an apperace of Amanita due to the scabs ont he cap of the shrooms. My image is just suggestive of the actual photos posted inthe Ghouled booklet

I am posting here below a similar image of P. cubensis since I do not have the Ghouled book to post the original Amanita looking cubes which Ghouled labeled as Panaeolus subbalteatus in their young stages. I post this to give you an idea of how they looked.



Wait a minute. I might have a copy in my files of the black and white image.

hold on while I go look.

Hm. My xerox copy is not good for reproduction. I will go to the University of Washington's Northwest Rare Book Room this week and photograph it with my digital and repost it over the image I just posted here.

Okay. Now regarding Panaeolus subbalteatus

Dr. Jacobs also listed this species as the second most common shroomin America and
Quote:

"is frequently found growing amid clumps of Psilocybe."
Quote:



as we all know, at least those in Florida, Georgia to Texas, I doubt that anyone has found P. subbalteatus growing in manure with P. cubensis..

There are other incosistencies and mistakes in both books but I need not go into them here.

I wanted to show you how one can misidentify shrooms with no knowledge of them and then write about them in published papers with errors.

Of course, when this paper was written, there were only a few shrooms known of in the USA. For instance, Jacobs lists these two species (P. cubensis and Panaeolus subbalteatus and the Mexican specis. No knowledge of the PNW shrooms which Singer and Smith wrote the first monograph of Psilocybe in 1958 and published it in Mycologia vols 50.

Leonard enos wrote his book in the early 1970s as did Everett Kardell who all listed the PNW, yet Jacobs was unaware of their publications.

enjoy. I now have other things to do.

mj

Oh yes, I will get a coy of the original Ghouled image for this post and repost the image where I put my black and whuite cubes at.

How he could mistake those for panaeolus subbalteatus inthe Ghouled book or how Jacobs could mistake the cubes for Amanits is beyond my comprehension. It seems he was definately not a mycologist.

mj

Here is the Ghouled book posted at erowid.org without the images.

FIELD GUIDE TO THE PSILOCYBIN MUSHROOM
Species common to North America
by F.C. Ghouled


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Important Erowid Note : The following Field Guide, from 1972, has a fair number of dramatic and potentially dangerous inaccuracies, especially in its information about Amanita muscaria mushrooms. It is presented here as a look into the history of psychoactive mushroom identification and should not be used in the identification of any mushrooms as there are MANY better and more accurate guides now available.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-Psilocybe cubensis
-Panaeolus subbalteatus
-Psilocybe caerulescens

This is a complete re-typing of the book, FIELD GUIDE TO THE PSILOCYBIN MUSHROOM written by F.C.Ghouled published by Guidance Publications PO Box, 15667 New Orleans, Louisiana 70175 in 1972. I found it while perusing an
ex-hippie-family-member's books. I sincerly doubt that more than a handful of copies were ever sold and finding one in a bookstore nowadays is almost an impossibility. I don't own a powerful enough computer to reproduce the four full color pictures in the book. However, the descriptions of the mushrooms are precise and leave no margin for error. Pictures of the mushrooms can be found in general mushroom field guides, some of which are listed at the end
of this file. The three species here ARE pictured in The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Mushrooms which can be found at most bookstores and libraries. When searching for a visual reference, be sure to find one
that pictures all four of the STAGES of the mushrooms, notably Ps. cubensis, as each stage of the mushroom's growth alters its outward appearance somewhat.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

-=- INTRODUCTION -=-

All psilocybin mushrooms contain the same two desired alkaloids, psilocybin ans psilocin, although they do occur in varying amounts with each species. Hence, the experiance gained from species will be essentailly the same as an experience gained from another species. Some variation will be noted with usage of some of the rarer varieties, but again, the effects will be essentially the same. Over 16 species of psilocybin mushrooms exist -- only a few are common. One would have to spend many hours in study and searching the fields to locate and catalogue them all. Only the most common
species need be studied and indentified by the person interested in the consumption of the mushroom.

The reader has a simple task to preform in order to locate the most common psilocybin mushroom. He must search cow pastures after rain storms during those months in which the temperature is between 65 to 85 degress Fahrenheit. Only those specimens which occur on manure, turn blue when damaged and have a hollow stem need be considered. There is no chance for error.

The reader is referred to the article by Wasson listed in the
bibliography and to a good library to read about alkaloids. These articles will enhance your cultural and chemical understanding of the mushroom. Good hunting.

-=- CAUTION -=-

Psilocybin mushrooms are against the law. In Louisiana: possession is a felony. The law-enforcement agencies in some areas are alert to the 'threat' of a plentiful and naturally-occuring (not to mention exotic) psychedelic. Consult the Bureau of Dangerous Drugs in your state to find out whether you are committing a felony or a misdemeasnor. Avoid registering the stock-reaction "hippie" in the natives of the areas explored. Probably the old guise of a mycology student will no longer serve.

-=- THE THREE PSILOCYBIN SPECIES COMMON TO THE SOUTH -=-

Of the fifteen domestic species known to contain psilocybin, at least three are found commonly in the southern United States, from California to Lousiana and South Carolina to Florida. One of these, the Ps. cubensis and Panaeolus subbalteatus will be found in the same area as they all grow on manure. The Amanita muscaria (Mexico's 'magic' mushroom) a psilocybin mushroom, is also noted below, because it is sometimes found in the woodland areas of the U.S. South. A reference is made in the bibliography to a fine
article on the mushroom-cult of Mexico.

-=- SETTING OUT MUSHROOM HUNTING -=-

Your first trip need not be elaborate. The author has found an ample supply of Ps. cubensis growing within a 50 mile radius of New Orleans. For your first trip, it may be best to select a site close to home. You can increase your range after you have learned to identify them. The psilocybin
mushrooms described in this guide, like many mushrooms, may be found in greatest quantity in a well-drained or sloped area.

The Ps. cubensis and Panaeolus subbalteatus grow only on cow, horse, pig, sheep or even goat manure (all grass or grain fed animals) or soil that has been enriched with manure. They grow most commonly on cow manure. The Ps.
caerulescens grow on stream or river banks. All species grow at temperatures between 45 and 85 degrees Fahrenheit. They prefer a well-drained site because
the immature mycellium is damaged by an excess of water. The mature mycellium, however, demands a large quantity of water for maximum production. The mycellium is the stage of the fungus that produces the mushroom. It is germinated from the spores and grows, permeating the soil or manure. It looks
like a moldish web-like growth and maay take from 6 to 12 weeks to longer to mature.

The mushroom, the actual fruit, is grown under the soild and with time and proper moisture pops up and appears to grow extremely fast. In the case of the Ps. cubensis, the fruit matures in 24 hours. Therefore, check the weather reports for frontal systems bringing cool air and rain. These onditions,
especially in late spring and early fall (but not during the hot summer months) are excellent for mushroom growth. Less psilocybin is produced during hot weather. Even if you do get a good rain during a long hot spell, the poor quality of the few specimens you might find makes them harly worth taking.
Also, an excess of that other vital ingredient, water, will cause the mycellium to rot. The mycellium can handle a few inches of rain on one day and even a few inches a day for several days, but over a prolonged period of time it will die back and become sickly. The warm dry summer promotes the growth of the mycellium, and a cool, moist fall will bring forth the mushrooms in plentiful numbers. The sun quickly causes those mushrooms left growing in the field to age and rot because they are over 90% water.

If picked freshly, however, the mushroom will retain its potency for years, provided they are not sealed in an air-tight container, which causes them to rot in thier own residual water content. The air-dried shrivelled mushrooms may be stored for future delectation.

-=- A WARNING -=-

It is well known that a few species of the non-psilocybin mushrooms are dangerously poisionous. Ingestion will cause the body to flush itself through the bowels and by vomiting, with extreme cramps varying from mild to severe discomfort to death. For this reason, not even a tiny piece of any shroom
collected by the beginner should be eaten in the field. First compare the fresh mushrooms to the descriptions and photographs herein. The descriptions are calculated to be exhaustive; even so, when you are certain that you have
a specimen of one of the described species, refrain from eating or smoking more than a tiny bite.

The person sensitive to other drugs, such as grass or LSD, will be able tell whether the desired substance is present; a person not so sensitive wil still feel something. You will also be able to determine whether the species
you have collected (be it not psilocybin) is poisonous or not. Six of the eight alkaloids present in the chemical structure of the psilocybin mushroom are toxic (the two other are psilocybin and psilocin). From this mild toxicity, a slight queasiness of the stomach may resulty. Also, even if the
beginner has happened on a genuine psilocybin mushroom, the eating of it in the field may result in lack of interest in the further work of collecting, with the consequent loss of many pounds of muchrooms which he might otherwise have collected and dried.

The famed 'magic' mushroom of Mexico, the Amanita muscaria, causes intense hallucinations and is therefore well sought after, but a word of caution is in order. The A. muscaria is a highly toxic mushroom. It contains yet more poisonous alkaloids. It should be avoided as ingestion of more than a few specimens can cause illness and possibly death. The other common species listed in this book are all safe and non-poisonous. The A. muscaria is a red ball-shaped mushroom. It is very distinct and bears not the least resemblance to any of the three species catalogued in this text.

-=- IDENTIFICATION PROLOGUE -=-

All of the psilocybin species described herein may be most conclusively identified by an enzyme that occurs with the psilocybin. This enzyme turns blue thru an oxidation process after the flesh of the mushroom is damaged.
Crack the stem to check for the reaction, which takes from 20 to 120 minutes to occur. The blue is similar to blue ink, unless the flesh of the mushroom is yellowish, in which case the color will appear blue-green. All psilocybin mushrooms (with the exception of one uncommon species that is not covered in this manual) turn blue in this manner. A few chemicals will speed up the oxidation/bluing process but are not readily available. Because these chemicals are unstable and are difficult to work with, to hassle with them in
the field, for most people, is not worth the trouble.

This natural bluing-reaction noted in the psilocybin species is also noted in one other non-psychedelic genus. To even the least observant person the difference in physical appearance is extremely obvious. The non-psilocybin
mushrooms that turn blue are: large, bulbous and usually very smooth. This fat cap cannot be confused with the psilocybin cap. The cap and stem will be yellow or yellow-brownish evenly over the entire surface. With age, the
specimens of this genus may be noted to turn blue on parts of the stem. The underside of the cap has pores instead of gills. These pores, appearing as an organic sponge, will be of the same color-range. The stem is proportioned like the cap and is quite solid and fleshy. These species do not occur on dung but may be located in pastures and lawns after rains.

-PSILOCYBE CUBENSIS-

The CAP is 1/2 inch to 4 inches wide. For the first few hours cone-shaped, quickly becomes convex, then flat and finally edges uplift, forming a bowl-shaped cap in the mature mushroom (age 24-48 hours after the rain). The bowl-shaped cap will have an umbo or may become a depression. A
sticky protective film will be observed over the entire cap in fresh specimens. The color varies widely, from an almost pure white with a gold center-spot to an overall light-brown still retaining the gold center-spot. This species becomes translucent when it has absorbed excess water. At this
time the cap (except for the center spot) will appear a dark-olive which is actually the dark spore color showing through. Both the water-soaked and normal specimens will dry to a yellow-rust color still retaining the orange-to-gold center spot.

The GILLS are rather closely spaceed and are light-brown in the young stages, becoming a deep purple or black with maturity. In early stages the gills will be connected to the stem but may separate with age.

The STEM will be from 1.5 inches to almost 6 inches tall and up to 1/2 inch thick. The stem base (volva) is many times, although not always, thickened. The stem will be hollow, fibrous and generally white or at least a lighter color than the cap. There will usually be a ring of tissue hanging on the upper portion of the stem (the veil) which usually turns blue with age. The inside flesh of the broken stem will usually yield the fastest bluing-reaction.

The FLESH of this species is white, has little odor and tastes like fresh grain. It is usually located on cow-manure (although it is located on the manure of other grain-fed animals as well) or on soil that has been enriched with such manure.

-PANNAEOLUS SUBBALTEATUS-

The CAP in young specimens will appear bluntly cone-shaped with an incurved margin. As maturity is reached the cap will expand but the incurved margin will usually still be observed. The color of the cap is light-cinnamon and is uniform and will be covered by a small white flecks in the younger stages. With age the center of the cap will become lighter or darker thus forming a distinctive ring that is the margin coloration. In younger specimens the veil will be off-white, never bluing, and will hang downward from the
closed (cone-shaped) cap. The veil will disappear as the cap expands wil age.

The GILLS will usually be very closely spaced and in young specimens will be very light-brown. This color will become black as the specimen matures.

The STEM will be from 1.5 inches to almost 4 inches high and never over 1/2 inch thick. The stem will be very uniform and evenly shaped. The top of the stem will be vertically grooved and the lower portion of the stem will be covered with a mat of hairlike scales and fine white powder. The stem color will usually be white but a tint of sepia of light-cinnamon may be noted. The stem is hollow. The bluing-reaction is noted best in the stem of this species.

The FLESH of this species will be white to yellowish. It has a taste and odor that is like that of fine table-mushrooms purchased at the store.

This species has been collected by our team (on cow-dung) while harvesting the Ps. cubensis. These notes have been placed in this book so that you will not throw away this species when it occurs with the Ps. cubensis. It is not extremely common (for every 25 Ps. cubensis collected you may find as many as 3 this species [12% as common]) and will be discovered only occasionally. This species matures slowly so that it will rarely be seen in older stages if it is discovered while harvesting the Ps. cubEn7Zs.

-PSILOCYBE CAERULESCENS-

The CAP of this species measures from 1 inch to over 3 inches wide and is cone-shaped when young, gradually expanding to the traditional convex-to-flat shape of the mature specimen. The margin will exhibit a downward curve. The surface of the cap is smooth and sticky, particularly in
the young specimen. This species is translucent when moist and the dark lines of the gills will be obvious at these times. In mature specimens the margin of the cap will be either lighter or darker than the center of the cap appearing as a ring. In young specimens the color will be a deep green to black that
will fade with age. The separation of the center and the opposite colored margin of the cap is irregularly shaped. In mature specimens the faded color may be from a cinnamon to rust but often times it will retain the faded olive-green color.

The GILLS will be closely spaced, wide and light-cinnamon to light-brown color and will become dark brown to black with age. The edges of the gills will be a lighter color.

The STEM of this species will range from 1.5 inches to 4 inches tall and will be up to 1/2 inch thick depending on the size of the specimen. It is usually very even, hollow and smooth and the top with thick fibrous hairs balling up the rest of the way to the even base of the stem. The veil usually
falls away very early in the life of the mushroom and the stem is fibrous and tough.

The FLESH of this species is off-white to yellowish occasionally with tints of light brown in the cap. It has a strong grain-like odor and turns blue, particularly after being handled.

This species occurs on the banks of streams and rivers and has been located thoughout the entire southern U.S.

-=- TAKING THE MUSHROOM -=-

The psilocybin can be extracted by drying the specimens collected and
grinding them into a powder. They are then soaked in methyl alcohol for
several days. THe alcohol is then strained off and evaporated in a shallow
dish. The residue should be scraped up and stored at a cool temperature. It
can be further refined by repeating the same process with the residue obtained
from the first process. Pentane, a more specialized solvent, is used for the
refining process. Before ingesting this extraction, be sure that all of the
solvent has been evaporated off and pay close attention to the potentcy.
I prefer to consume the cap (without preparation) as an organic creation.
The mushroom produces a very comfortable high with extreme dilation of the
pupils. Strong light should be avoided. The dried caps are better than the
so-called 'organic' pills. The experience ranges from a grass-like high with
similar physical feelings to strange electric pulsations and stong to mild
body rushes. At its best (with a large enough dosage) intense hallucinations
will be experienced. The color photographs in this book were taken on a cloudy
day near New Orleans. The species have been collected everywhere, from
northern California to souther Florida. With the climatic conditions described
above, you can be sure the Ps. cubensis will be located in quantity following
a rainy day. The others will be there as well. They grow everywhere.

Dosage:
4 to 6 mushrooms. The active alkaloids are psilocybin and psilocin. Each
dry gram of mushroom will contain about 2mg of the desired alkaloids. The stem
will contain the same amount of the drug as the cap. The Indians of Mexico
regularly eat 30 to 40 of the Ps. cubensis (or in Mexico, also the
Ps. Mexicana), per ceremony. They extinguish all of the lights and have
detailed and colorful visions until dawn. Increasing the dosage will act to
intensify the experience rather than prolong it (see bibliography). No
realistic figures on the concentration of the desired alkaloids can be stated
as this factor varies considerably.

-=- CULTIVATION -=-

Mushrooms require a special compost. By far the most common is the
manure compost manufactured from horse manure, wheat-straw and added chemicals
to provide the best growing medium. It is manufactured by piling the materials
together, having soaked the wheat-straw well in water. The ingredients begin
to decompose, generating their own heat up to 180 degrees Fahrenheit and
killing any spores, insect or their larva and molds growing in the medium. As
it heats up, the straw breaks into short pieces and the manure crumbles. The
entire pile then loses its smell and takes on the odor characteristic of the
woods in autumn. The compost should ball when squeezed in the hand but no
excess water should be observed. It should not be compact-looking as the straw
serves to aerate it besides adding valuable minerals and nutrients. Several
good books are available on composting (see bibliography). And a book from
our company on the culturing of the Ps. cubensis in your home for fun and
profit is to be started shortly. The Ps. cubensis is extremely easy to raise
and grows in large quantity. Our upcoming text will enable you to set up a
perpetual compost-box that will produce many pounds a month of this species.
The prepared compost must then be inoculated with some stage of the
mushroom's life-cycle. This is usually done by composting horse-manure alone
that has been enriched with malt-extract sugar. When this mixture has been
shredded, composted and packed loosely into a wide-mouth jars, it is
inoculated with parts of a fresh cap of the variety and strain preferred by
the experimenter. The mycellium will then be observed to run, growing all
through the manure. When it has completely permeated the compost the bulk is
removed from the jar and dried. Small chunks of this spawn (as it is called)
are inserted into the compost at regular intervals. They will beging to grow,
and after a number of weeks will completely dominate the prepared
mushroom-bed. The bed is then covered with a 1-inch layer of sterilized soil
or acceptable substitute, and watered lightly now and again. The compost
MUST NOT be flooded with water. This will kill the mycellium and ruin the
compost. The casing will serve to hold all of the moisture that the compost
will need and prevent the excess from sinkning. The mushrooms will grow
through the one-inch casing, gaining support from the top layer. The beds
should be made about 12 inches deep in a container small enough to be handled
easily. The traditional compost will last for 4 to 6 months with a yield of
two or more pounds of mushrooms per-square-foot. Our text will outline a newly
discovered and yet (commercially) unproved method for constructing a perpetual
bed that will be self-regulating. Cultivation is an alternate to arrest for
trespassing or a possession-of-psilocybin charge. The above is not sufficient
for successful cultivation and the reader is referred to the bibliography.

-=- LAST WORDS -=-

Becasue the species in this book are so common, there is little need for
cultivation. Collected specimens can be dried at room temperature in a few
days. They can be stored for decades with no loss of potency in the least. My
favorite method for storage is to construct a drying-rack by stringing thread
across the face of a box and taping it taut. The lower section of the stem is
then sawed lightly back and forth until the thread has cut half-way through
the stem. It is then pulled slightly downward and left to dry for several
days.

-=- BIBLIOGRAPHY -=-

FIELDBOOK OF COMMON MUSHROOMS, Thomas, W. Sturgis, New York, Putname, 1948.

THE MUSHROOM HUNTERS FIELD GUIDE, Smith, Alexander H., Ann Arbor, University
of Michigan Press.

MUSHROOM GROWING TODAY, Atkins, F.C., Macmillian and Co., 1967.

MUSHROOM GROWING FOR EVERYONE, Genders, Roy, London, Faber and Faber, 1969.

SEEKING THE MAGIC MUSHROOM AMONG MEXICAN INDIANS, Wasson, R.G., Life Magazine,
May 13, 1957 (pages 100-109).

ROAD TO ENDSVILLE; Psilocybe Mexicana, Newsweek, February 9, 1959.

A KEY TO THE AMERICAN PSILOCYBIN MUSHROOM, Enos, Leonard. The Church of One
Sermon, Lemon Grove, California. This book is out of print. It contained
water-color drawings rather than color photographs.

ALICES' ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND (Advice from a caterpiller, Chapter 5),
Carroll, Lewis. Random House.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

When the novice has collected a specimen he should always consider the
major identification points. This open-format identification sheet may prove
helpful. Try reproducing it in your notebook to outline each species'
characteristics.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
1. [Age and condition of specimen.]
2. [Does it turn blue?]
3. [CAP]
Coloration -
Shape & size -
Margin (incurved or regular) -

4. [GILLS]
Coloration -
Shape & size -
Spacing -
Attachment to stem -

5. [STEM]
Coloration -
Shape and size -
Base (volva) present ? -
Hollow or solid? -

6. [FLESH]
Coloration -
Texture -
Thickness -
Special color traits -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Climate and environment:

7. [Last rain: 24 hrs.? for week?]
8. [High and low: bye 24 hrs.? for week?]
9. [What is the fungi growing on?]
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
10. [Name of species?]
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
***



A further note is that later Ghould and Meredith published an updated Psilocybine Cultivation Book with some more errors about PNW shrooms in it. And while his first book posted aabove sold over three hundred and fifty thousand copies at $1.75 ea, in multiple reprints, he never once corrected the errors in his book, although he was informed of them by many people.

mj

Ghouled further says about Psilocybe caerulescens
Quote:

This species occurs on the banks of streams and rivers and has been located thoughout the entire southern U.S.




It was only oiriginally found one time in Huntsville, Alabama in 1924 and was botanically identified fromthere as the type species. Later it was found to be the Derrrumbe mushroom of the mazatec Indians of Oaxaca. Only recently was it found in a few southern states. Not as Mr. Ghouled said which was a fabrication on his part. Probably unintentional.

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Invisiblemjshroomer
Sage
Registered: 07/21/99
Posts: 13,774
Loc: gone with my shrooms
Re: Magic Mushrooms in Mississippi: Part Two [Re: mjshroomer] * 1
    #1560757 - 05/19/03 04:45 PM (20 years, 9 months ago)

Bump for GGreatOne234

mj

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Offlinemrerm3
Stranger
Registered: 01/26/12
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Last seen: 12 years, 1 month
Re: Magic Mushrooms in Mississippi: Part Two [Re: mjshroomer] * 1
    #15724829 - 01/27/12 12:16 PM (12 years, 1 month ago)

can i see the pictures??? i joined the site just cuz i thought they were blocked to unregistered users...

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InvisibleByrain


Registered: 01/07/10
Posts: 9,664
Trusted Identifier
Re: Magic Mushrooms in Mississippi: Part Two [Re: mrerm3] * 1
    #15724837 - 01/27/12 12:18 PM (12 years, 1 month ago)

Quote:

mrerm3 said:
can i see the pictures??? i joined the site just cuz i thought they were blocked to unregistered users...




This thread is nearly 9 years old, afraid the pictures are long gone.

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OfflineAlan RockefellerM
Mycologist
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Re: Magic Mushrooms in Mississippi: Part Two [Re: mrerm3] * 1
    #15724886 - 01/27/12 12:32 PM (12 years, 1 month ago)

Quote:

mrerm3 said:
can i see the pictures??? i joined the site just cuz i thought they were blocked to unregistered users...




Nah, unregistered users can see the pics just the same as registered ones.

The pics are gone because OP got mad and deleted them in 2007.

Welcome to the site.  : )

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Invisiblekoraks
Registered: 06/02/03
Posts: 26,693
Re: Magic Mushrooms in Mississippi: Part Two [Re: Alan Rockefeller] * 1
    #15727836 - 01/28/12 01:16 AM (12 years, 1 month ago)

Quote:

Alan Rockefeller said:
The pics are gone because OP got mad trolled by a bunch of annoying kids on this site and deleted them in 2007.




Anyway, enough said on that. The pics are gone, one way or the other.

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