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Burma Cubensis Mushroom Spores

$100.00$200.00

The Burma strain was discovered by a Thai student who collected a sample from buffalo dung nearby the city of Rangoon.

Classification: Hallucinogenic
Cultivation Difficulty: Easy
Substrates: Equine dung and Enriched soils
Temperature: Subtropical
Strain Origin: Burma

Description

About Burma Cubensis Mushroom Spores

Burma Spores mushrooms and their spores are also some of the most sought after psilocybe cubensis magic mushrooms ever found.  Spores from the Burma Spores mushroom are available here at SporeStore.com because you asked for them! Find both mushroom spore syringes and also mushroom spore prints. This psilocybe cubensis magic mushroom was first discovered on a farm growing in a pile of dung and straw as its mushroom substrate in Burma. There is no psilocybin or psilocin contained within magic mushroom spores, making them completely legal to purchase and posses in most jurisdictions throughout the USA. As well as make sure to check your local laws before ordering. The original Burma Spores mushroom spores’ genetics from the true Burma Spores psilocybe cubensis mushrooms from Burma are brought to you by SporeStore.com, the leader in mushroom spores.

Spores from this strain are in abundance as it’s a healthy spore depositor.

Burma Spores magic mushrooms are easy to grow.  Check your local mushroom growing laws.  Growing mushrooms for identification and taxonomy purposes?  We have your spores!

In addition to the PES Amazonian Spores spores, here are some other mushroom spores that you may be interested in reviewing: Alacabenzi mushroom magic spores, B+ mushroom spores which is also called B Plus mushroom spores, MalaysiaSpores mushroom spores, PES Hawaiian mushroom spores, Ecuador spores

Furthermore check out our new Mushroom Grinder!

Mushroom Capsules found here…

 

More Detail:

Habitat: Bovine, Equine Dung and Enriched Soils

Climate: Subtropical

Strain Origin: Burma (Myanmar)

Cap: 50+ mm in diameter, convex to broadly convex to plane at maturity. Reddish cinnamon brown maturing to golden brown to light yellow because the surface is dry with pronounced and persistent remnants of universal veil on cap (spots) and the flesh is white soon bruising bluish green.

Stem: 125+ mm in length, yellowish. Flesh bruising bluish green where injured. Persistent membranous annulus (ring) from partial veil that becomes dusted with purple brown spores at maturity.

Gills: Attachment adnate to adnexed. Grayish coloration in young fruit bodies becoming nearly black in maturity.

Spores: Dark purplish brown, subellipsoid on 4-spored basidia

 

Storage: Store in a dark, cool and dry place and use within six months after delivery!

Taxonomy:

Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Strophariaceae
Genus: Psilocybe
Spores: purplish brown to dark brown, 11.5 – 17 x 8 – 11 µm, ellipsoid

Habitat and distribution in nature:

Rye grain, wheat straw, horse or cow manure. This species can be found in the subtropical and tropical climate zones all around the globe under the following conditions: Spawn run incubation: 28 °C | Primordia formation: 23.3 – 25.6 °C | Fruiting: 23 – 26 °C

A 2011 study also found that more than a year after participants had a single psilocybin experience, their self-reported measures of openness remained significantly elevated, which researches in this study and beyond attribute to a somewhat mysterious but powerful aspect of a mushroom trip: the mystical experience.

In this case, a mystical experience is defined as “feelings of unity and interconnectedness with all people and things, a sense of sacredness, feelings of peace and joy, a sense of transcending normal time and space, ineffability, and an intuitive belief that the experience is a source of objective truth about the nature of reality.” The religious identification of people who have reported having a mystical-type experience during a mushroom trip span the spectrum, but interestingly the profundity of such experiences don’t seem to correlate to religious belief—even atheists have reported the importance of their psilocybin-induced mystical experiences. Additionally, research has shown that the more intense the mystical experience, the greater the positive, long-term changes a person sees.

These subjective effects, such as feelings of interconnectedness, are likely a result of psilocybin’s ability to decrease the interconnectivity of integration hubs in the brain. In plain speak, that means psilocybin allows for more “cross-talk” between regions of the brain that are typically segregated. Researchers speculate that this enables a state of “unconstrained cognition,” meaning the ways we typically organize, categorize, and differentiate the aspects of conscious experience are broken down, and thinking becomes more flexible. To understand how this might be beneficial, it helps to know that similar brain activity patterns are also observed during various states of meditation.

Habitat: Bovine, Equine Dung and Enriched Soils

Climate: Subtropical

Strain Origin: Burma

Cap: 25-50+ mm in diameter, convex to broadly convex to plane at maturity often with persistent acute umbo (nipple). Reddish cinnamon brown maturing to golden brown to light yellow with nearly white edges. Surface dry lacking remnants of universal veil on cap (spots). Flesh white soon bruising bluish green.

Stem: 150+ mm in length, yellowish. Flesh bruising bluish green where injured. Persistent membranous annulus (ring) from partial veil that becomes dusted with purple brown spores at maturity.

Gills: Attachment adnate to adnexed. Grayish coloration in young fruit bodies becoming nearly black in maturity.

Spores: Dark purplish brown, subellipsoid on 4-spored basidia

Habitat: Bovine, Equine Dung and Enriched Soils

Climate: Subtropical

Strain Origin: Original specimen was collected from buffalo dung in an unplanted rice paddie outside the city of Yangoon, Burma. Original collection supplied via Mushroom John by way of a gift from a Thai student who spent time collecting mushroom samples around Yangoon (formaly Rangoon), Burma (now Myanmar)

Cap: 25-50+ mm in diameter, convex to broadly convex to plane at maturity. Reddish cinnamon brown maturing to golden brown to light yellow with nearly white edges. Surface dry lacking remnants of universal veil on cap (spots). Flesh white soon bruising bluish green.

Stem: 150+ mm in length, yellowish. Flesh bruising bluish green where injured. Persistent membranous annulus (ring) from partial veil that becomes dusted with purple brown spores at maturity.

Gills: Attachment adnate to adnexed. Grayish coloration in young fruit bodies becoming nearly black in maturity.

Spores: Dark purplish brown, subellipsoid on 4-spored basidia

Additional information

Quantity

5 Spores, 6Spores, 8Spores, 10Spores

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