I heard from a friend that Tribulus was a MAOI, and while I doubted that sincerely due to this plant being used by atheletes and body builders for its androgenic properties... it turns out that it seems to be a RIMA.
Wikipedia claims that it contains beta-carboline alkaloids harman (harmane) and norharman (norharmane). The alkaloid content of dried foliage is about 44 mg/kg.
Not sure how strong that makes it, but it does suggest that the body builders who load up on this stuff might have problems with the other things they take (steroids, stimulants etc.).
I am curious if tribulus supplements (available dirt cheap at sport supplement websites etc. in bulk) have any potential as huasca RIMAs. Anyone know anything about this. The one batch of powdered Tribulus Terrestris I saw was dark brown and very dense... it had actually congealed into a shiny, vaguely gummy rock. This makes me think it is not the leaves, but rather the seeds or the root, perhaps ground up. The bottle said it has a sapponin content of 60%.
It might be useful for DMT work.
Passionflower, for example, is not nearly as potent as Caapi or Rue, but it is easy enough to find growing wild in the right places and can be concentrated down very easily. When I was in Hawaii, the shamans there like to use passionflower and the local blue mushies for a psilohuasca analogue... Why not tribulus?
Any thoughts?
Wikipedia claims that it contains beta-carboline alkaloids harman (harmane) and norharman (norharmane). The alkaloid content of dried foliage is about 44 mg/kg.
Not sure how strong that makes it, but it does suggest that the body builders who load up on this stuff might have problems with the other things they take (steroids, stimulants etc.).
I am curious if tribulus supplements (available dirt cheap at sport supplement websites etc. in bulk) have any potential as huasca RIMAs. Anyone know anything about this. The one batch of powdered Tribulus Terrestris I saw was dark brown and very dense... it had actually congealed into a shiny, vaguely gummy rock. This makes me think it is not the leaves, but rather the seeds or the root, perhaps ground up. The bottle said it has a sapponin content of 60%.
It might be useful for DMT work.
Passionflower, for example, is not nearly as potent as Caapi or Rue, but it is easy enough to find growing wild in the right places and can be concentrated down very easily. When I was in Hawaii, the shamans there like to use passionflower and the local blue mushies for a psilohuasca analogue... Why not tribulus?
Any thoughts?