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MHRB vs Jurema

Migrated topic.

Dosed Guru

Rising Star
Alright everyone first of hello! I hope everyone is having a fantastic day/night/life. So, it's been a few years since I've made any aya. Back in the day I would buy some MHRB and do the standard TEK and ingest with syrian rue seeds. 3gs SR to 5-10g of MHRB. I'm at a point in life where I feel mother aya calling and getting back into getting the answers/push she gives. My research so far all I can find is jurema. Is there a difference in the two? If I remember correctly I've read that jurema is active and doesn't require any SR. Are the Teks the same ie dosage, heat etc. Any help or anyone willing to point to some articles to read would be greatly appreciated!
 
All are nicknames for the true nature of things

Nothing makes ayahuasca a nickname and b.caapi a name, the name ayahuasca is more ancient and definitely relates more to the true nature of _________ than b.caapi
:love:
 
Sakkadelic said:
All are nicknames for the true nature of things

Nothing makes ayahuasca a nickname and b.caapi a name, the name ayahuasca is more ancient and definitely relates more to the true nature of _________ than b.caapi
:love:


I suppose you are correct, I myself prefer the name ayahuasca. It does sound a bit more mysterious than b. Cappi doesn't it:twisted:

Thank you for catching me in the fallacy of considering modern western terms the most important, a helpful reminder
 
Sakkadelic said:
All are nicknames for the true nature of things

Nothing makes ayahuasca a nickname and b.caapi a name, the name ayahuasca is more ancient and definitely relates more to the true nature of _________ than b.caapi
:love:

The scientific name for the plant is Banisteriopsis Caapi

The "common name" is: ayahuasca, yagé, cipó, vegetal, natem, shori, mihi, etc...

(The word ayahuasca refers to the B. Caapi vine, as well as a brew made from just B. Caapi, and also refers to brews made with psychotria viridis / diplopterys cabrerana, B. Caapi and other admixture plants.
Ayahuasca is a quechua word, and serves as a good title, however I don't understand why "ayahuasca" was preferred over any of the other common names from other tribal peoples...

The reason why we use Latin names is because this way it doesn't matter what country or region you live in or what language you speak, the plant receives a set name that is the same EVERYWHERE and for everyone...

So, technically, the Latin name is always the scientifically correct and preferred nomenclature, it's also the preferred nomenclature if you wish to be understood by people from other regions of the globe or people who speak other languages.

-eg
 
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