About: Baybean   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Baybean (Canavalia Maritima or Canavalia rosea) is a plant that has very little effect on its own. It may be an ingredient Spice. It is extremely good for mixing with other herbs, notably spice alternatives like fusion most of which are assumed to contain JWH-018. It also seemingly quadruples the effects of salvia and Diviner's Three (a blend whose base is salvia). All these reports must be taken with a grain of salt, because for a long time an interaction between Baybean and another herb was thought to be the reason for Spice's intense cannabis-like high, not the unreported cannabinoid agonist it contained.

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rdfs:label
  • Baybean
rdfs:comment
  • Baybean (Canavalia Maritima or Canavalia rosea) is a plant that has very little effect on its own. It may be an ingredient Spice. It is extremely good for mixing with other herbs, notably spice alternatives like fusion most of which are assumed to contain JWH-018. It also seemingly quadruples the effects of salvia and Diviner's Three (a blend whose base is salvia). All these reports must be taken with a grain of salt, because for a long time an interaction between Baybean and another herb was thought to be the reason for Spice's intense cannabis-like high, not the unreported cannabinoid agonist it contained.
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • Baybean (Canavalia Maritima or Canavalia rosea) is a plant that has very little effect on its own. It may be an ingredient Spice. It is extremely good for mixing with other herbs, notably spice alternatives like fusion most of which are assumed to contain JWH-018. It also seemingly quadruples the effects of salvia and Diviner's Three (a blend whose base is salvia). All these reports must be taken with a grain of salt, because for a long time an interaction between Baybean and another herb was thought to be the reason for Spice's intense cannabis-like high, not the unreported cannabinoid agonist it contained. Historically it has been used for many years, but not for intoxication. An infusion can be made with the crushed roots and rubbed over the skin for rheumatism, general pain, skin disorders, and colds. The beans produced by the bay bean are edible if the outer skin is removed from them and they are softened by boiling, although it is unknown and unlikely that eating them will have psychoactive effects.
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