Sabina, By Hubcap Wellness
Sabina a collaboration with Cabinet de Curiosité is Hubcap Wellness’ first curated strain. The strain gives homage to Maria Sabina, the Mazatec healer who ultimately brought psilocybin to the western world.
The Sabina Package includes 3.5+ g of dried Mazapatec mushroom and 1 g teabag.
Instructions for tea:
Boil hot water and let it rest for 1 minute before pouring over the teabag. Let the tea steep for 10 minutes before drinking the tea. You can steep another cup of tea with the same teabag. For flavouring, you can add some honey to the tea.
Ingredients:
Ground Mazpatec mushroom, Lions Mane, Organic green rooibos, Organic apple, Organic vervain leaf, Organic licorice root, Organic lemongrass, Organic lemon peel, Organic valerian root, organic lemon oil, Ginger, Crystallized ginger (ginger, sugar, sulphur dioxide), Lemongrass, Honey ginger crystals (cane sugar, ginger, honey, glucose), Natural sweet ginger flavouring.
Mazapatec Mushroom History
For centuries in central America, indigenous peoples used magic mushrooms for recreational and spiritual purposes. Many groups were likely using this very strain of psilocybin fungi: Mazatapec Cubensis. Today, in a few small villages of the central highlands of Mexico, the consumption of hallucinogenic mushrooms still survives. In the mountainous region of the Sierra Mazatec (located in the northern part of the state of Oaxaca), there are three species of hallucinogens that grow between June and September, during the rainy season.
The Mazatec people are an indigenous tribe that hails from the mountains of Oaxaca, Mexico, best known for their syncretic form of Christianity and indigenous shamanism. In their most sacred rituals, the Mazatec use powerful visionary plants like psilocybin mushrooms and salvia divinorum to commune with spirits, divine information, heal ailments, and have a direct experience with the divine. When Westerners were “allowed” to participate in these rituals in the early 1950s, it opened a psychedelic pandora’s box. Psilocybin and salvia whee introduced to the modern world, influencing major players in the psychedelic revolution. It forever changed the landscape of our relationship to psychedelics.
Potency:
Mazatapec magic mushrooms, a member of the Psilocybe Cubensis family of fungi, is a potent psychedelic that can send users into a potent psychoactive experience. These mushrooms make a great entry point to psilocybin for new psychonauts, as well as a trusted standby for longtime users. Get back in touch with one of the original magic mushroom strains: Mazatapec Cubensis.
For first-time magic mushroom users, it’s important to keep dosage fairly low. This will give you an idea of how psilocybin affects your individual body and mind. A single gram is usually enough to start – after that, feel free to increase the dosage.
High Potency
Maria Sabina
María Sabina Magdalena García (22 July 1894 – 22 November 1985) was a Mazatec sabia, or curandera, who lived in Huautla de Jiménez, a town in the Sierra Mazateca area of the Mexican state of Oaxaca in southern Mexico. Her healing sacred mushroom ceremonies, called veladas, were based on the use of psilocybin mushrooms, such as Psilocybe cyanescens.Velada is the name of the healing vigils carried out by Mazatec curanderos (such as María Sabina). The rituals involved the use of psilocybin (magic mushrooms) or Salvia divinorum[1] to commune with God and experience enlightenment.
Maria Sabina was the first contemporary Mazatec shaman to allow Westerners to participate in psychedelic mushroom veladas (healing ceremonies). Among the first people to attend one of Maria’s veladas was mycologist R. Gordon Wasson in 1955.
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