Panaeolus Cinctulus
Legal Psychedelic Shop is one of the most reputable and reliable online vendor. We bring you the best psychedelic and research chemicals. We rate our products 99.95% top purity, which is very good for consumption and research chemical purposes. Panaeolus cinctulus, syn. Panaeolus subbalteatus, commonly known as the banded mottlegill, weed Panaeolus or subbs is a very common, widely distributed psilocybin mushroom. According to American naturalist and mycologist David Arora, Panaeolus cinctulus is the most common psilocybin mushroom in California.
During the early 1900s, we referred these species to as the “weed Panaeolus” because something commonly found them in beds of the commercially grown, grocery-store mushroom Agaricus bisporus. Mushroom farmers had to weed it out from the edible mushrooms because of its hallucinogenic properties.
Cap: (1.5)2 — 5(5.5) cm (0.59–2.17 in), hemispherical to convex when young to broadly umbonate or plane in age, smooth, hygrophanous, striking cinnamon-brown when moist, soot-black when wet which disappears as the mushroom completely dries out. The flesh is cinnamon-brown to cream-colored and thin.
Gills: Close, adnate to adnexed, cream-colored when young, later mottled dingy brown then to soot-black. Gill edges white and slightly fringed, but turn blackish when fully mature.panaeolus subbalteatus
Spore Print: Jet Black
Spores: 12 x 8 µm, smooth, ellipitic-citriform, thick-walled.
Stipe: (2)3.5 — 8(10) cm long, (2)3 — 7(9) mm thick, equal or tapered at the ends, reddish brown to whitish, pruinose, hollow, no veil remnants, longitudinally white-fibrillose and white-powdered, striate at the apex or twisting vertically down the entire length of the stipe, Stem base and mycelium occasionally staining blue.
Taste: Farinaceous (like flour) when fresh, saliferous (salty) when dried.
Odor: Slightly farinaceous.
Microscopic features: Spores 11 – 14 (16) x 7.5 – 10 x (6) 7 – 8 (9) µm, smooth, elliptical to rhomboid in face view, elliptical in side view.
Morphologically, Panaeolus cinctulus can be easily confused with other species of psilocybin mushrooms. They have a resemblance to Panaeolus fimicola, and prefer the same habitats, but the latter species has sulphidia on the gill faces.
The legal status of psilocybin mushrooms varies worldwide. They list psilocybin and psilocin as Class A (United Kingdom) or Schedule I (US) drugs under the United Nations’ 1971 Convention on Psychotropic Substances.The possession and use of psilocybin mushrooms, including P. cinctulus, is therefore prohibited by extension. However, in many national, state, and provincial drug laws, there is a great deal of ambiguity about the legal status of psilocybin mushrooms and the spores of these mushrooms. For more details on the legal status of psilocybin mushrooms and Panaeolus spores, see: Legal status of psilocybin mushrooms. Panaeolus cinctulus has a long shelf life compared to other magic mushrooms, as it contains little psilocin, is non-poisonous, and the psycho-activity comes mainly from psilocybin and its analogues.
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