Salvia divinorum Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Salvia divinorum (also known as diviner's sage or simply salvia) is a psychoactive plant, a member of the sage genus. The plant is grown by the Mazatec indigenous people of the Oaxaca mountains in isolated, moist and secret plots. It has been used by their shamans for centuries for healing during spirit journeys.
The primary active hallucinogenic chemical is known as Salvinorin-A, but Salvia contains other diterpenes, Salvinorins B-F and Divinatorins A-C. Recent research has shown that Salvinorin A is a selective agonist of the kappa opoid neuroreceptors, a receptor class largely ignored by other known hallucinogenic compounds1,2, although several kappa-agonist drugs are used in the medical field. It is unknown at this time whether the powerful effects of S. divinorum can be attributed in whole (or even in part) to kappa agonism. Salvia Divinorum is extremely potent but generally controllable.
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2 Chemistry 3 Legal status 4 Botany 5 References 6 External links |
Usage and Effects
Traditional Use
The traditional Mazatec method for ingesting salvinorin involves chewing a ball of 15 to 20 fresh salvia leaves for an extended period of time. Salvinorin-A is considered to be inactive when ingested, perhaps because digestive enzymes destroy active components; therefore, emphasis is placed on holding the leaves (and also the saliva secreted during chewing) in the mouth as long as possible, to facilitate absorption through the oral mucosa. An alternate method used by traditional Mazatec shamans is the slow ingestion of a water-based extract made from fresh leaves.
Vaporization and Smoking
Salvinorin can be taken as a vapor using a very small quantity of leaf through a vaporizer, but only if the potency of leaf is known and the leaf can be accurately weighed. Otherwise, the dried leaves are typically smoked in a water pipe, to cool the smoke. The activation temperature required to release the salvinorin-A from the plant material is quite high and requires an intense direct flame, typically from a butane torch lighter, making smoke that is too hot to comfortably inhale directly. Extract of highly concentrated salvinorin may be taken sublingually or smoked.
Salvinorin is not very concentrated in the salvia leaves, and the body metabolizes salvinorin relatively quickly; therefore one must smoke a great quantity of salvia leaves in a short amount of time to experience any effects from the drug. Many people have therefore prepared fortified salvia leaves for smoking; that is, leaves to which a concentrated extract of salvinorin-A has been added, in order to minimize the overall amount of smoking required.
Most people perceive a small dose as clearing the mind and impairing coordination; many find a small dose useful for meditation. Consciousness is retained until the very highest doses, but body control, awareness of externalities, and individual personality disappear at modest ones.
Large doses have more dramatic effects. Taking a moderate to large dose induces a trancelike state, in which the user may experience fully formed visions of other places, people, and events. "Bad trips" are rare but do happen. If inhaled, the effects do not last long relative to most recreational drugs, with the main experience lasting only 5 minutes and generally ending completely within 10. Chewing and ingestion cause longer-lasting, but generally somewhat milder effects.
Many people report an extreme time distortion, as the heaviest (and sometimes scariest) effect.
About 10% of people seem to be unaffected by Salvia.
The most active constituent is believed to be a chemical called salvinorin-a, sum formula C23H28O8. Its presence in the body is not detectable by current drug tests. It appears not to be habit-forming, on the contrary after repeated exposure, some users report a sensitization, where less of the chemical is required to produce the same subjective effects.
Salvia seems to have somewhat of a disassociative effect, and like other dissociatives, hallucinations are perceived most often only in a dark room or closed eye environment.
The general public became increasingly aware of salvia in 2002. As of June 1, 2002, Australia became the first country to ban salvia and salvinorin. [1], [1] In late 2002, Rep. Joe Baca (D-California) introduced a bill in the United States House of Representatives to schedule salvia as a controlled substance, and the DEA has indicated on its web site that it is aware of salvia and is evaluating the plant for possible scheduling.
Civic and government action to ban salvia is often characterized as a knee-jerk reaction to what they perceive as yet another evil drug coming along to steal the minds of the innocent, gullible youth. Press accounts of efforts to ban salvia often quote law enforcement and government officials who exhibit a grossly inaccurate knowledge of the drug's effects, and frequently characterize the "high" as "chewable marijuana", or as identical to LSD and PCP [sic]. [1], [1]
For the most part, the fate of the species lies with a very small number of clone plants. Of these few clones, there are only two that are in any kind of public circulation; the Wasson/Hoffman strain, and the Blosser ("Palatable") strain. The former is a strain discovered by those whose name the plant bears, when on a visit to the Mazatecs. The latter is the same case, in regards to name, and was discovered in Oaxaca; it is called "Palatable" as well, as it is said to have more palatable leaves when ingested orally than those of the Wasson/Hoffmann strain.
This is an Article on Salvia divinorum. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Salvia divinorum Subjective Effects
Most users find that the effects of salvinorin are not very conducive to socializing or getting high at parties; in fact, while under the influence most people tend to find any external stimuli distracting.Chemistry
Legal status
Until the late 1990s, not many people knew about salvia. The advent of the Internet and the realization that the plant was not as of yet legally controlled engendered numerous Internet mail order businesses who sold dried salvia leaves, sometimes for exorbitant prices.Botany
Unlike other sages, Salvia divinorum produces very few seeds, and the seeds it does produce seldom sprout. It appears to have very little histocompatibility variation, so the pollen from a plant genetically identical to the style fails to reach the ovule. It is propagated by cuttings and by falling over and growing new roots. Although reportedly (Valdez, et al) isolated stands of S. divinorum exist in its native range, these are thought to be purposefully created and tendered by the people of the region. Therefore it is considered a true cultivar and thus does not occur naturally in the wild anywhere.References
External links
