Blue Lotus (Nymphaea caerulea) is a water lotus with beautiful blue flowers. It is believed to have been used by the ancient Egyptians as a medicine and ritual herb. Traditionally, Nymphaea Caerulea was orally consumed after being soaked in warm water or wine, while a cigarette made of the dried flowers was smoked. These are flowers and tops only and are suspected to contain aporphine and nuciferine, natural alkaloids. Effects: The Blue Lotus was traditionally used to relieve pain, increase memory, increase circulation, promote sexual desire, and create feelings of euphoria and ecstasy, without the use of narcotics. It turned out recently to be one of the greatest daily health tonics ever found. Traditionally, it has been used to create a feeling of well-being, euphoria, and ecstasy. Dosage: We recommend 3-5 flowers or 5grams for the effect to take place. You can eat it or make it into a tea (use about 20-25oz of water to get maximum content).
Lions Tail, also know as Motherwort, belongs to the mint family of plants. Wild Dagga is smoked or made into a medicinal tea by the Hottentot tribe of South Africa. Because of its euphoric effects and marijuana-like experience, Wild Dagga is often referred to as a Cannabis substitute. Leonotis leonurus (Wild Dagga, Lion's Tail) species is also used in Eastern medicine as euphoriant, purgative, and vermifuge. The main uses of lion’s tail in western herbal medicine are to relieve premenstrual discomfort, ease menopausal symptoms, and regulate menstrual periods. In addition, it may have some effectiveness for normalizing rapid heartbeat -- especially when a "pounding heart" is associated with anxiety. Less intense and overwhelming trips were reported when smoking lions tail with salvia divinorum. Dosage:
Prickly poppy is a stout, prickly-stemmed annual to perennial 2' to 5' tall with pale yellowish sap, and alternate lanceolate to ovate leaves that are deeply-lobed, prickly, and at least in the upper clasping at the base. It is often made into a tea and has been used as an anesthetic for surgery due to owning many of the same chemicals as its namesake, the poppy plant (papaver somniferum). It has been used to treat cancer, the common cold, fever, inflammation, and toothache in the past. This poppies chemical constituents include protopine, berberine, and several isoquinilines.
From the foothills of the Sierra Mazatec Mountains in Oaxeca Mexico, the leaves are ready for shipment immediately. Taken from our own organic growing reserve, where we grow and nurture salvia exclusively for potency, these leaves have been tested by several labs to have extremely high Salvinorin A content. Shipping daily, these salvia leaves have been very well dried and often come weighing more than what is ordered.