This site does not condone the uuse of any psychoactive drugs, for your
minds are all too weak, and big brother says they're bad.
Ahh sweet Ipomoea Violacea. Besides being an invasive, pretty little flower, morning glory seeds have also been romanticized and bastardized for their psychoactive properties. When chewed up and ingested, these nasty tasting seeds yield the chemical Lysergic Acid Amide (LSA). Its like LSD's little cousin. Heavenly Blues and Flying Saucers have been known to contain the highest concentrations of LSA, in comparison to other garden varieties found at your local store.
The government realized Morning Glory Seeds potential to expand one's mind and foster independent thought, so they spray them with poison. No worries hippy, all you got to do is wash them off, and wash them off real good. Like better than you wash yourself. This chemical is not deadly, but it will make you feel like you wanna die. It casues violent puking and stomach cramps that last for hours.
Here is som information about Morning Glory Seeds that is intended for educational purposes only. This site does not condone the uuse of any psychoactive drugs, for your minds are all too weak, and big brother says they're bad.
(from erowid.org a great site)
DESCRIPTION
The seeds of several varieties of Morning Glory (Ipomoea violacea)
contain a naturally occurring indole called Lysergic Acid Amide (LSA),
which is closely related to LSD. Seeds are taken orally, and can be
eaten whole or the active alkaloids can be extracted.
The most common active varieties of seeds are Heavenly Blue, Pearly
Gates, and Flying Saucers. Like LSD, LSA acts as a "psychedelic" or
"hallucinogen" which can have strong mental effects.
[ Main Morning Glory Vault ]
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MORNING GLORY IMAGES
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Dose
Threshold effects of LSA can be reached with as few as 25-50 seeds,
though most recreational users find it necessary to ingest between 100
and 400 seeds to reach desired effects.
Law
Although LSA is a schedule III substance in the United States, Morning
Glory seeds and plants are sold at just about every nursery, garden
store, or botanical supply store that you can find. In practice, little
hassle is ever given to those who buy and ingest seeds, but extracting
the active ingredient puts you in possession of a relatively pure
chemical which is illegal to possess.
Chemistry
The seeds of Ipomoea violacea contain about 0.1% ergot alkaloids, including ergotmetrine, chanoclavine and lysergol.
History
Morning Glory seeds called tlitlitzin were
used ritually by the Aztec for their psychoactive properties. Spanish
chroniclers in the mid 16th century reported on the divinitory use of
these seeds. Their use has continued in southern Mexico, although it
wasn't until about 1900 that tlitlitzin was identified botanically as Morning Glory.
Slang
The Substance : Tlitlitzin (Aztec)
EFFECTS
Onset
Because use is oral, onset is affected by the last food that was
ingested. On a relatively empty stomach, onset of effects is about an
hour after ingestion, although it can be many hours before peak effects
are reached.
Duration
Primary effects last 6-10 hours when seeds are taken orally.
Contraindications
Do not operate heavy machinery. Do Not Drive.
Do not ingest Morning Glory seeds if you are currently taking
an MAOI. MAOIs are most commonly found in the prescription
anti-depressants Nardil (phenelzine), Parnate (tranylcypromine),
Marplan (isocarboxazid), Eldepryl (l-deprenyl), and Aurorex or Manerix
(moclobemide). Ayahuasca also contains MAOIs (harmine and harmaline).
Morning Glory Seeds (LSA) and MAOIs are a potentially dangerous
combination. Check with your doctor if you are not sure whether your
prescription medication is an MAOI.
Do not use Morning Glory seeds when pregnant. LSA is closely
related to LSD which is a uterine contractor that can increase risk of
miscarriage during pregnancy.
Individuals currently in the midst of emotional or
psychological upheaval in their everyday lives should be careful about
choosing to use psychedelics such as Morning Glory seeds as they can
trigger even more difficulty.
Individuals with a family history of schizophrenia or early
onset mental illness should be extremely careful as psychedelics have
been known to trigger latent psychological and mental problems.
STANDARD DISCLAIMER
{([Standard Disclaimer] lexical exceptions) Context Definition} The
author's intent: This report is based on personal research conducted on
the psychotropic effects of heavenly blue et. al. morning glory between
June 1958 and the summer of 1973. Research proceeded with intermittent
intensity throughout that period, sometimes occupying
<7dayweeks{24hrdays}> for intervals up to three months, other
times nil. Since this work has not been duplicated elsewhere to the
best of my knowledge, it seems appropriate to publish it, if only for
historical interest and to correct what appears to a general lack of
knowledge regarding this plant and its uses. This material is
'intended' as referential only and the author does not publicly
advocate the violation of any local laws or statutes, nor in the same
sense does he support any current attempts to reproduce these findings
should such an attempt be in conflict with local prejudice and deemed
criminal. This document may be freely reproduced in any media so long
as appropriate attribution is maintained and the document reproduced
intact including this disclaimer. Contextual quoting is ok 2.
SECONDARY DISCLAIMER
{([Secondary Disclaimer] personal firewall) Educational Deficiencies}
The author is not a chemist. I have had only basic chemistry
supplemented with reading and various forays into chemical synthesis
and extractions primarily involving indole alkaloids and other
psychotropic molecules as well as explosives. These experiments were
all conducted twenty years ago or more. Throughout this faq various
premises will be presented. These represent informed hypotheses based
on experience and what knowledge I do have. I would welcome the
supplementation of these premises with hard information or equally
their refutation. However, the methodologies presented here *do work*
and the experiences chronicled in Part II of this faq: Alchemical
Considerations *did occur*. Actual mechanisms and meanings are up for
grabs.
PREPARATION : BEST METHOD
Q. How do you prepare morning glory seeds to best activate their psychedelic properties?
A. Here is a simple way to process morning glory seeds which produces the best possible results as well:
- Equipment:
- Coffee Grinder or equivalent to powder seeds
- 2 Jars with Lids
- 1 Coffee Filter or Funnel
- Coffee Filters or Filter Paper
- Chemical/Biological:
- Morning Glory Seeds (1 seed = ~ 1ug) (50-500ug=1 dose)
- Petroleum Ether
- Ethanol-based liquid suitable for human consumption in approximate order of preference:
Reagent Grade Ethanol
- EverClear or similiar substance
- 100 Proof or better vodka or gin
- 151 Proof rum
- other beverages 80 proof or better
- or -
- Water-based beverages (not preferred (nausea))
- Processing Methodology:
- If using treated seeds wash thoroughly in detergent and cold water first.
- Grind seeds to powder in coffee grinder
- Place powder in jar with a "healthy" qty of petroleum ether.
(~360-500 ml/500 seeds (can't use too much, can use too little))
- Put lid on jar and shake it vigorously for a while. Let stand 20 minutes (you can shake it more if you like)
- Shake
jar, remove lid, and pour suspension into filter (with filter paper in
place). Use second jar to catch the petroleum ether than comes through
the filter paper. (Windows should be open or do this outside otherwise
you will get prematurely in a non-canonical fashion). If some
seed powder clings to the side of the jar, rinse it out with some of
the filtered ether. When finished, you will have slightly discolored
petroleum ether in a jar and the powder on the filter paper.
- *** DO NOT DRINK THE PETROLEUM ETHER ***. Put the
lid on that jar and save it to reuse next time (you can get at least
five processing cycles out of it). Dry the seed powder THOROUGHLY. Wash
and dry the empty jar.
- When powder is thoroughly dry, place it back in the jar and
add alcohol. The amount of alcohol is critical, since you will be
drinking it later, and will vary according to your propensities,
tolerances, and the intended intensity of your proposed voyage. For
light, recreational use, assuming reasonable alcohol tolerance use 1
oz. of alcohol per 30-50 seeds. For intense meditation use 1 /250
seeds. If you use a high seed/alcohol ratio you will want to prepare a
large number of seeds at a time otherwise you will be working with
micro-quantities and it gets more tedious (unless you like that sort of
thing).
- Soak the seed powder in the alcohol, shaking frequently, for three days.
- Filter again, as before. Discard the seed powder (unless you wish to make 'soap'). Keep the alcohol for use.
- Drink the alcohol to achieve desired effect.
Q. What kinds of morning glory seeds can be used?
A. Heavenly Blues (most common), Pearly Gates, and Flying Saucers are all known to be effective.
OPERATIONAL METHODOLOGY
Q. Why is this method superior to others?
A. The virtue of this processing methodology will become clear
if you sip a bit and hold it in your mouth before swallowing. VOILA:
Instant Experience! No wait, no wondering "Did I do enough?". Because
lysergic acid amides are soluble in ethanol, and because ethanol passes
through mucus membranes directly to the blood stream, the effect is
virtually instantaneous. Because of this, you can carefully meter the
intensity of your experience in the same way you can with hemp.
Q. How long will the experience last?
A.Your voyage will last the standard 8-12 hours. The morning
glory experience is clean, pure, intense and particularly enjoyable out
of doors in the daytime (drink at dawn). This is the preferred hour for
the flower and seems to be preferred for its tincture as well (this is
coming from a confirmed ). (Night trips are cool too, but the sun does interesting things in the daytime)
CHEMICAL HYPOTHESIS AND ALTERNATIVE PREPARATIONS
Q. I tried morning glory seeds and only got a headache and blurred vision.
Q. I tried morning glory seeds and got sick to my stomach
Q. What do you know about this anyway?
A.My personal experience with morning glory seeds began in June
of 1958, the day I graduated from eighth grade. Herb Caen had written
something to the effect that "If you eat 100 morning glory seeds, you
will go to morning glory heaven. Heavenly Blues, Pearly Gates, and
Flying Saucers will do the trick.." A friend of mine had read this and
invited a bunch of people to her house to try it out. I was the only
person who managed to eat a full hundred, but probably didn't chew them
enough and had only mild effects. Since then I have tried many ways of
preparing them, and this is far and away the best. There are a number
of approaches that are downright horrible.
Based on my experiences I believe the following to be true (though am
wide-open to getting "scientific"/factual refutation/corroboration. In
addition to the lysergic amides present in the seeds, there are two
chemicals or chemical complexes which are toxic. One of these,
relatively mild, is associated with nausea and is contained in the seed
pulp. This is soluble in water and will form long 'strands' in it which
are clearly visible. This material can be processed into a kind of
'soap' which lathers somewhat. It is not soluble in alcohol nor
petroleum ether. This is evidenced by soaking the spent powder in water.
A second chemical or complex is much more malicious. Ingesting it
results in headache, blurred and 'fish-eye' vision, and it also seems
to counteract the psychedelic effect. For lack of a better term with
the expectation that it is chemically non-descriptive, we will call
this the 'strychnine effect' and the associated compound(s) the
'strychnine factor'. This factor is contained in the seed husk and is
miscible with petroleum ether but only slightly soluble in water. If
you chew the seeds you break the husk but do not usually chew it well
enough to digest. Same thing if you pulverize the seeds with a hammer
or similiar instrument before eating or swallowing. In both cases, the
'strychnine effect' is not observed except as background. However the
high is not as lucid and bright as when the factor is removed. On the
other hand, if you grind the seeds into powder and do not remove the
'styrchnine factor' with petroleum ether (or other solvent(?)) but
ingest the powder itself, you will experience the 'strychnine effect'
in great and unpleasant intensity. If you put the powder in water,
filter the water, and drink it (effectively the traditional method for
indigenous peoples), the nausea factor will be pronounced, but the
'strychnine effect' will be weak.
The only approach that effectively eliminates both side-effects is the
one described above. The additional benefits provided by this method
beyond the immediate high effect will be discussed in Part 2.0.0 of
this FAQ.
Q. Does this method extract
LSD-25 from morning glories?
A. Strictly speaking, No. Morning glories prepared this way do
not provide anything like *pure LSD-25*. Instead, you get a complex of
various lysergic acid alkaloids which are psychoactive to varying
degrees in isolation, but which taken together produce a full blown
psychedelic experience no less powerful than that produced by LSD.
Q. If this is true, wouldn't it be better to refine the chemistry further to isolate/synthesize pure LSD?
A. The question of the value of additional chemical processing is a
subject open to discussion and possible experimentation. IMHO, only, it
is unnecessary and hence undesirable. This is from the engineering
perspective and from the naturalist perspective as well .
The additional effort required to produce pure d-lysergic diethylamide
tartrate is not work I have done myself and will not be discussed here.
I personally feel there is a much more fruitful opportunity in
exploring additional herbs which may be macerated along with the seeds.
Various such have been tried with varying results. Possibilities
include
ginseng,
damiana,
kava, nutmeg,
psycilocybe,
valerian,
yage, etc.
MORNING GLORY WINE
Q. Is there anything else you can do with morning glories?
A. The flowers of the morning glory may be steeped in water for
a week or two to produce a mildly alcoholic wine with a distinctively
pleasant flavor and very mild psychedelic effect, on the order of hemp.
Once again herbs and/or honey can be added to good effect.
Q. What is the focus of part 2 of this faq and why is it separated into 2 parts?
A. Part 2 is concerned with the particulars of specific
experiments which may fall under the classification of
"irreproducible". It details a set of non-scientific protocols more
aligned with shamanism and alchemy than chemistry. It also attempts to
develop a model for the understanding of
the results produced by these experiments that is somewhat coherent
with accepted thought although extrapolates fairly loosely from it. The
author considered that the audience for each of the two parts was
potentially different and that individuals who could accept the first
might have problems with the second. Further, should anyone implement
the protocols defined in the first part (and it must again be
emphasized that the author does not 'intend to advocate violation of
local laws,
customs, and prejudices'), they may well observe some of the effects
described in Part 2 independently of the author's description of them,
thus providing additional validation and possibly rendering these
results anything but "irreproducible".
Q. When and where can I get part 2?
A. Part 2 will be published in this same place in 1 month's time.
MORNING GLORY FAQ UPDATE (previously unpublished)
Apologies :
My apologies to the many who wrote requesting the location of the
Morning Glory FAQ Part II or an emailed copy of it. Although I promised
it a month after the publication of Part I, I ultimately decided not to
write it. It concerned ritualistic and shamanic aspects of preparation
and use evolved over several years of working with this and other
herbs. After reading the various responses to Part I and the email I
subsequently received regarding it, this information did not seem
suitable for this segment of the internet community.
New Questions since Part I
To those who asked about removing the alcohol prior to consumption,
ethyl vs. methyl alcohol, and the use of water as a solvent, RTF.
To those who asked about the availability of petroleum ether, I cannot
help unless you have access to a chemical supplier. Products labeled
"Naptha" are poor substitutes for what I used to purchase from chemical
supply houses as "Petroleum Ether". They do remove the toxic oils from
the seed coat but also appear to dissolve some of the lysergic acid as
well. These products include Zippo lighter fluid and Coleman fuel.
Seeds processed with these solvents produce a very weak brew. If anyone
has any _positive_ results from substituting a readily available
solvent for petroleum ether in this application, please post your
methods and results.
Technically speaking, petroleum "ether" is not an ether at all, which
is essentially an organic oxide just as an alcohol is an organic base.
Ethers in general are highly volatile compounds and come in the usual
methyl, ethyl, butyl, etc. flavors. Petroleum ether, on the other hand,
is the most volatile product produced through catalytic cracking in the
process used to make gasoline, jet fuel, kerosine, and other petroleum
products. The process is fractional distillation. Fractional
distillation involves introducing a gaseous mixture of related
compounds, in this case petroleum compounds into a cooling mechanism,
in this case a cracking tower. As the gaseous products cool
progressively, they liquify earlier or later depending on volatility.
By controlling the rate of flow through the cooling mechanism and
drawing off the liquid at specific locations along it, it is possible
to separate compounds which are otherwise miscible. You can use the
same process to separate methyl (wood) alcohol which is poisonous from
ethyl (grain) alcohol which is also poisonous, but less so. "Petroleum
ether" is the product drawn off from the top of the cracking tower.
Reagent grade petroleum ether appears to be significant more volatile
than "naptha" which is also drawn off the top of the tower and marketed
as Zippo lighter fluid, Coleman fuel, and white gas. Perhaps reagent
grade is subjected to a second distillation or perhaps is simply a more
narrowly-defined drawoff. It is definitely a different animal.
In practical terms, if you examine the effect of the solvent being used
for "petroleum ether" in this process on the seed meal, you will
observe the following: After shaking the mixture well, Zippo lighter
fluid and other substitutes will retain a brownish color. Some
substitutes will also exhibit the same kind of "tendrils" that appear
when you dissolve the meal in water. Reagent grade petroleum ether will
remain clear after shaking and the meal will fall immediately to the
base of the jar. Nothing will remain in suspension. When you filter the
seed meal after soaking in reagent grade petroleum ether, the
filtration process is nearly instaneous and the seed meal will retain
its appearance as separate grains throughout. With substitute products,
this filtration process takes several minutes to half and hour. The
seed meal is "gummy" afterward and much harder to dry.
At this point it is pretty clear, that attempts to substitute Zippo,
Coleman fuel, or other products marketed as "naptha" will not produce
an active brew. This seems to explain some of the poor results reported
in alt.drugs.
An alternative processing method occured to me since writing the FAQ in
light of the apparent current difficulty in obtaining petroleum ether:
- Proceed with a water extraction from the seed meal: Soak the meal
in water and then filter off the water with a coffee filter, discarding
the filter and solid matter, keeping the water.
- Evaporate all the water until only a brown sludge remains. Do
this maintaining the lowest possible temperature since lysergic
compounds break down at relatively low temperatures. If you have access
to a vacuum pump, use it. If you can perform this processing 5-10,000
feet above sea level or higher, do so. Otherwise, try blowing a fan
across a flat pan such as a cookie sheet or pizza pan.
- When only sludge remains, redissolve it in alcohol, perform
any shamanic rituals desired with this material, then filter again and
drink.
This process will preserve the "instant high" effect of the
process described in the FAQ without incurring the "fish-eye" toxic
side-effect.