A couple suggestions. If you harvest (dig out) a fresh plant, try freezing it, then thawing it, repeat a few times. Water expands when frozen and explodes each individual plant cell wall. With Phragmites, its delightful that there is a huge supply in nature that can never be eradicated. But there is also a huge supply of dried, harvested, quality controlled Phragmites Communis (same plant as Phragmites Australis) rhizome at any Chinese herb shop. Let's use this up first before getting our hands dirty. When used in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) its called Lu Gen. Not every chinese herb store will sell it to you but with proper social engineering or by mail order, it can be obtained easier than digging. If you want to make tea, I'd suggest soaking it for 30 minutes and boiling it for up to an hour, adding a teaspoon of vinegar from time to time and eventually letting it boil off. There is also powdered extract, but I'd like to confirm if this is effective because they make that using water extraction. I don't think DMT is very soluble in water, unless the water has an acid pH. The other good news about Phragmites is that Chinese medicine has been using it for several millennia so at least the water soluble phytochemicals are unlikely to be toxic or mutagenic. Here is the Merck Index 14th ed. entry for DMT [quote:deefd97c76]Monograph number: 03262 CAS Registry Number: 61-50-7 CAS Name: N,N-Dimethyl-1H-indole-3-ethanamine Additional Names: 3-2-(dimethylamino)ethylindole; DMT Molecular Formula: C12H16N2 Molecular Weight: 188.27 Percent Composition: C 76.55%, H 8.57%, N 14.88% Literature References: Occurs naturally in plants with hallucinogenic properties. Isoln from the leaves of Prestonia amazonica (Benth.) Macbride (Haemadictyon amazonicum Spruce & Benth.), Apocynaceae: Hockstein, Paradies, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 79, 5735 (1957). Metabolism: St. Szára, Experientia 12, 441 (1956); B. R. Sitaram et al., Biochem. Pharmacol. 36, 1509 (1987). Relationship between hallucinogenic activity and electronic configuration: Snyder, Merril, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 54, 258 (1965). Synthesis: I. Fleming, M. Woolias, J. Chem. Soc. Perkin Trans. 1 1979, 829. Differential interaction with serotonin receptor subtypes: A. V. Deliganis et al., Biochem. Pharmacol. 41, 1739 (1991). Fluorometric detection: O. Jules et al., Anal. Chim. Acta 169, 355 (1985). Review of biosynthesis, metabolism and bioactivity: S. A. Barker et al., Int. Rev. Neurobiol. 22, 83-110 (1981). Properties: Crystals, mp 44.6-46.8°; also reported as plates from ethanol and light petroleum, mp 46° (Fleming, Woolias). bp 60-80°. pKa 8.68 (ethanol-water). [b:deefd97c76]Freely sol in dil acetic and dil mineral acids.[/b:deefd97c76][/quote:deefd97c76]