Hi peeps,
@Jamie01 - I'm sorry to hear about the ulcerative colitis, but regarding this, given that it is a chronic inflammatory condition, you might be interested to know that P. natalensis has been found to harbour other compounds with
anti-inflammatory effects (with a few anecdotal accounts on the web from people with inflammatory health conditions reporting benefits from ingesting this species). However, somewhat confusingly, this is before this species was distinguished from P. ochraceocentrata, when previously they were mistakenly lumped together as the same species (more on this
here). So while this study paper is referring to P. natalensis, I'm pretty sure they are in fact referring to
P. ochraceocentrata (spores of the 'real' P. natalensis have only very recently started to make their way into cultivator circles, but it doesn't appear to be very potent (with
initial analyses suggesting low P. cubensis potency ballpark) with a much longer fruiting time, so P. ochraceocentrata may be the more promising species for cultivators. That's cool you're also growing lion's mane, this is also a species I cultivate, teaching the odd workshop on how to do this.
Of the various wood-lovers, I've sampled P. cyanescens (off a patch I stumbled across one winter a stone's throw from where I was living at the time), and P. azurescens. The P. cyanescens were fine mushrooms (I resonate with your description of them providing a clean fast blast off) but the P. azurescens were on a different level. While most mushrooms feel earthy to me, these felt like they had escaped some interdimensional Elf scientist's lab or something. An electric body feel at high doses, where it feels like your nervous system has been plugged into the Gaian energy socket. Fast moving, very colourful and immersive visuals. On these mushrooms - despite attempts to journey inwards - I was much more interested in exploring the outside world. They could be deeply ecstatic. One friend who doesn't generally react well to mushrooms and tends to have hard quite gruelling trips found the P. azurescens to put her in a loving, light filled and connected state. Another friend was sceptical that different species of mushroom differ in vibe...until he sampled P. azurescens. I've seen the paper claiming that P. azurescens and P. cyanescens are both descended from P. subaeruginosa from Australia, and that the former two species are actually different morphs of a singular species. Not sure I'm fully on-board with this theory though...while mushrooms can be polymophic so differences in appearance alone cannot be relied on (although P. cyanescens and P. azurescens are distinct in appearance), they also have different microhabitat preferences - and (much more subjective) - elicit wildly distinct experiences when consumed (in my experience anyway). Wood-lover paralysis is obviously something to be aware of, even if its rare (more of an issue when combined with setting as you describe, due to the risk of exposure). In case it's of interest, no cases of wood-lover paralysis have yet been reported in association with the consumption of wood-loving species
P. aztecorum or
P. niveotropicalis (a warm weather wood-lover).
@doubledog - I agree that fresh is best...there is an extra fullness, richness and sparkle or myco mojo to fresh mushrooms over dried, most (but not all) of my most profound mushroom experiences have come through consuming them fresh (one notable exception is my one and only high dose dried P. subtropicalis experience). I think it's really interesting what you say about sensitivity to differences in effects profile between species likely varying across individuals.
@dithyramb - that's interesting regarding your experience with liberty caps, and Mexicana musings. P. mexicana has been described as the "Mexican liberty cap", and mycologist John Allen has sampled both species and described them have a similar tranquil effect. In addition to apparently being Maria Sabina's favourite, apparently the Zapotec Indians in Mexico give this particular give this mushroom to their children as they view it as the friendliest and most forgiving.
Regarding
P. subtropicalis, it has a rather tangled taxonomic backstory. It was previously classified as P. hoogshagenii var. convexa...and before this, as P. semperviva (which translates to “ever-living,” due to its tenacious and long-lived nature when it comes to fruiting, being capable of producing many flushes over an extended time frame potentially). It is placed in Section Zapotecorum, along with P. zapotecorum and
P. ingeli.
On the topic of mushroom species held in high regard by Indigenous groups in Mexico - aside from P. mexicana and P. subtropicalis - two others worthy of mention here are P. caerulescens and P. zapotecorum.
P. caerulescens is considered one of the likely candidate species of
teonanácatl, or god’s flesh of the Aztecs, and is still used ceremonially today, being held in high esteem by a number of Indigenous groups in Mexico and Western psilonauts that have sampled it (also the species R. Gordon Wasson and Tim Leary first experienced in Mexico). One experienced cultivator recommends the "La Montaña" culture as being among the easier and faster fruiting to grow of this species for anyone interested.
P. zapotecorum is another mushroom species held in very high regard by Indigenous groups such as the Mazatec, Mixtec, and Zapotec (from whose name it is derived). The culture "Popocatépetl Volcano" comes recommended as a particularly tenacious one better suited to beginner growers of this species...this cultivator even succeeded in fruiting it in
Cubensis fruiting conditions. P. zapotecorum can be highly potent. This species also tends to be consistently held in very regard by Western psilonauts that have sampled it.