Psilocybe Azurescens Mushrooms For Sale
Psilocybe Azurescens mushrooms are golden mushrooms found across the Pacific Northwest. The concentration of the psychoactive biochemicals psilocybin and psilocin is higher here than in any other mushrooms like Psilocybe Cubensis and Psilocybe cyanescens.
Psilocybe azurescens mushrooms, is by far the strongest magic mushroom species. It can grow from the southern Santa Cruz, California, which tends to be a rare occurrence. It is most common in the Astoria, Oregon area, but has spread more do to outdoor cultivation.
Psilocybe Azurescens Mushrooms, is also known as Flying Saucer Mushroom, Blue Angels, Azzies, or Indigo Psilocybe
Description About Psilocybe Azurescens
- Pileas: The cap (pileus) of Psilocybe azurescens is 30–100 mm in diameter, conic to convex, expanding to broadly convex and eventually flattening with age with a pronounced, persistent broad umbo; surface smooth, viscous when moist, covered by a separable gelatinous pellicle; chestnut to ochraceous brown to caramel in color, often becoming pitted with dark blue or bluish black zones, hygrophanous, fading to light straw color in drying, strongly bruising blue when damaged; margin even, sometimes irregular and eroded at maturity, slightly incurved at first, soon decurved, flattening with maturity, translucent striate and often leaving a fibrillose annular zone in the upper regions of the stipe.
- Gills: The lamellae are ascending, sinuate to adnate, brown, often stained into black where injured, close, with two tiers of lamellulae, mottled, edges whitish.
- Spore Print: The spore print is a dark purplish brown to purplish black in mass.
- Stipe: The stipe is 90–200 mm in length and 3–6 mm thick, silky white, dingy brown from the base or in age, hollow at maturity, and composed of twisted, cartilaginous tissue. The base of the stipe thickens downwards, is often curved, and is characterized by coarse white aerial tufts of mycelium, often with azure tones. The mycelium surrounding the stipe base is densely rhizomorphic (i.e., root-like), silky white, tenaciously holding the wood-chips together.
- Taste: extremely bitter
- Odor: odorless to farinaceous
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.