Table of Contents
We Salute the McKenna Brothers for their pioneering wisdom!
STEP I: - LOCATING AND IDENTIFYING THE FUNGUS: COLLECTING AND GERMINATING SPORES
STEP II: - GROWING STOCK INOCULA
STEP III: - GROWING ON STERILIZED RYE
STEP IV: - CASING AND RECASING
STEP V: - HARVESTING, PRESERVING, AND DOSAGE
A CHRONOLOGY OF PSILOCYBIAN MUSHROOMS
WATCH THEM GROW...
We Salute the McKenna Brothers for their pioneering wisdom!
Psilocybin Magic Mushroom Grower’s Guide sparked the imaginations of so many interested in mushrooms. Now expand your cultivation knowledge with Psilocybin Mushroom Handbook: Easy Indoor & Outdoor Cultivation By L.G. Nicholas and Kerry O’Gamé
Written for those who enjoy the unique biology and growing habits of the Fungi kingdom.
• Covers several up to date cultivation methods & tools
• Provides a detailed list of supplies
• Highly visual: 100 photos, charts, plus a 32-page color section.
See all of our oultivation books at www.quioktrading.com
Journey From One End Of The Mushroom Life Cycle To The Other
Available In Print and eBook
DEDICATION
This book is respectfully dedicated to R. Gordon Wasson and Albert Hofmann, whose investigations of the botany and chemistry of the magic mushroom brought psilocybin to the world.
“At last you know what the ineffable is, and what ecstasy means.”
—R.G. Wasson, 1972
Rock painting from Tassili Plateau, Southern Algeria, circa 3500 B.C.
PREFACE TO THE REVISED EDITION
It is not often that something as fragile and culture-bound as a religious mystery can rise from the ashes of near extinction. Even the natural life of a religious mystery ends finally in erosion of connection to the mysterious driving power of some archetype. But few religious mysteries exist long enough to experience this decadence. Most are suppressed by dominant orthodoxies already in place or recently imported through conquest. This latter situation is an apt description of the status of the mushroom religion of Meso-America at the time of the Spanish Conquest.
In the case of Meso-American mushroom use, an ancient shamanic religion—of which we know next to nothing—confronted a Spanish Catholicism whose relatively advanced technology meant complete subjugation of the people, complete breakdown of the ancient gnosis. Practitioners of the mushroom cult were burned as heretics. The Indians’ insistence on the mushroom as the “flesh of the gods” must have particularly excited the heretic-hunters and perhaps left them not a little uneasy as they went about their bloody business. After all, “flesh of the gods” is a claim explicitly made for the Christian Eucharist, yet it is not nearly so effective a visionary vehicle as the persecuted mushroom.
The use of the mushroom retreated to the remote mountainous peripheries of Spanish Mexico. The ritual itself was all but lost under a layer of Christianized associations. The mushrooms were called “Jesus” or “St. Peter”—their old names, names of the planetary gods of the Mayans, forgotten.
Thus the matter stood for centuries. In the 1950s Wasson made the initial discovery of the slumbering mystery, and more than two decades of mostly academic “ethnomycological” study followed. This book, first published in 1976, opened a new phase in the rebirth of the mushroom religion by placing the knowledge of cultivation into the body of publicly available information. More than a hundred thousand copies of this book have been sold, it has spawned several imitations, and it continues to sell well. This means that there are now many thousands of mushroom cultivators in the world. It is reasonable to suppose that more people are now actively involved in a religious quest using psilocybin than ever before in history. This is a complete rebirth of a religious mystery and it has taken place in less than a decade! What are the implications of this emergence of a pagan mystery into the banal world of modernity? What are its implications for those closest to this decisive, historical shift, those who, by cultivating and teaching others how to cultivate, are making the change happen?
It is clear that pharmacology intends to provide the future with an ever-expanding repertoire of psychoactive chemicals. But I wonder whether what is needed are new drugs or the courage to shamanically apply the botanical hallucinogens already sanctioned by millenia of folk usage. Few of the productions of the laboratory will be found to be as somatically benign as psilocybin or to be so structurally analogous to those compounds naturally occurring in the human brain and responsible for “normal” consciousness.
Once one has actually grown the mushroom, it becomes obvious that the mushroom uses the same strategy whether it is enveloping a petri dish or a society. A tiny part breaks away from the main body, it becomes a new center of radiative growth that expands until it reaches a critical limit, then it too spawns break-away particles with a life of their own. By this