Amanita: Difference between revisions
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Death caps and destroying angels are, well, deadly. Fly agarics are poisonous, but claims that they are hallucinogenic are probably overrated. | Death caps and destroying angels are, well, deadly. Fly agarics are poisonous, but claims that they are hallucinogenic are probably overrated. | ||
There is a faint, sickly sweet, earthy odor of death at first, and within a few seconds, it undergoes a chemical reaction and burns like a caustic acid in one's nostrils, | There is a faint, sickly sweet, earthy odor of death at first, and within a few seconds, it undergoes a chemical reaction and burns like a caustic acid in one's nostrils, and causes a stomachache similar to cyanide poisoning. | ||
Revision as of 05:23, 27 August 2025
Wherever there is cryptology, there is espionage and there are deadly poisons. Several species of Amanita are to be found in the area. These are naturally present in the boreal forest and tundra, where the mycelia are in symbiosis with rich beds of moss, birches and spruces.
Aerobic exercise and a well-balanced diet of fresh foods are crucial to building up and maintaining the body's resistance and immunity to the toxins in these mushrooms which will inevitably be encountered by accident in minute doses out in the woods.
Death caps and destroying angels are, well, deadly. Fly agarics are poisonous, but claims that they are hallucinogenic are probably overrated.
There is a faint, sickly sweet, earthy odor of death at first, and within a few seconds, it undergoes a chemical reaction and burns like a caustic acid in one's nostrils, and causes a stomachache similar to cyanide poisoning.


