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Tuesday
May072019

A Growing Push To Loosen Laws Around Psilocybin, Treat Mushrooms As Medicine

"Douglas rattles around a collection of glass jars in the storage closet of his Denver apartment. They're filled with sterilized rye grains, covered in a soft white fungus — a mushroom spawn. Soon, he'll transplant it in large plastic bins filled nutrients like dried manure and coconut fiber."

"Over the course of two weeks, a crop of mushrooms that naturally contain psilocybin, a psychoactive ingredient, will sprout. The species he grows include psilocybe cubensis."

"'I mean it's a relatively quiet thing to do. There's just lots of waiting,' says Douglas, which is his middle name. He didn't want to be identified because this is an illegal grow-and-sell operation; psychedelic mushrooms were federally banned in 1970, along with several other hallucinogens."

"'Mushrooms are really easy going, especially psilocybin,' he says. 'They kind of just grow themselves.'"

"Denver is at the forefront of a national movement that seeks to access these mushrooms, largely for medicinal use. On Tuesday, voters are weighing in on a ballot measure to decriminalize them. And while that may sound ambitious, a campaign in Oregon is gathering signatures for a ballot measure in the 2020 election and seeks to legalize mushrooms with a medical prescription for use in approved clinics."

 

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