SPORE PRINTS
Field collected Psilocybe Allenii spore prints.
(Mendocino County, California)
Psilocybe allenii was described as new to science in 2012 by Jan Borovička, Alan Rockefeller, and Peter G. Werner. The original sample was collected in Seattle, Washington. It is noted to be microscopically similar to Psilocybe cyanescens, but lacks the wavy cap margins characteristic of that species.
Field collected Panaeolus Cyanescens spore prints
(Westmoreland Parish, Jamaica)
Panaeolus cyanescens is a mushroom in the Bolbitiaceae family. Panaeolus cyanescens is a common psychoactive mushroom and is similar to Panaeolus tropicalis. It is also known under the common names of Blauender Düngerling, blue meanies, faleaitu (Samoan), falter-düngerling, Hawaiian copelandia, jambur, jamur, pulouaitu (Samoan), taepovi (Samoan), tenkech (Chol).
Laussmann & Sigrid Meier-Giebing (2010) reported the presence of psilocybin at 2.5% and psilocin at 1.194% average from 25 samples seized by German customs that were shipments from commercial growers (making modern commercially cultivated strains of this species the most potent hallucinogenic mushrooms ever described in reputable published research). Other researchers have documented a significant presence of serotonin and urea in this species as well as the presence of baeocystin which may also be psychoactive.
Psilocybe Cubensis F1 Selection
(Hanover Parish, Jamaica)
F1 Spore Prints from North Coast Myco's domestication and isolation of Jamaican Landrace Psilocybe Cubensis our team foraged in March 2024. This is the first time these domesticated spores are offered for sale. All proceeds support sustainable mycology education for Jamaican locals.
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