![golden teacher primordia golden teacher primordia](https://soonyata.home.xs4all.nl/GT/monotub.jpg)
The lamellae are adnate, and light brown to dark purple brown in maturity, with lighter gill edges. Most parts of the mushroom, including the cap and Lamellae (gills, underneath the cap) can stain blue when touched or otherwise disturbed, probably due to the oxidation of psilocin. The color of the pileus is rarely seen in mushrooms outside of the P.
![golden teacher primordia golden teacher primordia](https://i1.sndcdn.com/avatars-000661613507-fcq963-t500x500.jpg)
Caps generally measure from 1.5–5 cm (½" to 2") across, and are normally distinctly wavy in maturity. Psilocybe cyanescens has a hygrophanous pileus (cap) that is caramel to chestnut-brown when moist, fading to pale buff or slightly yellowish when dried.
#GOLDEN TEACHER PRIMORDIA PATCH#
Psilocybe cyanescens can sometimes fruit in colossal quantity more than 100,000 mushrooms were found growing in a single patch at a racetrack in England. However, since most people find them overly bitter and they are too small to have great nutritive value, this is not frequently done. cyanescens are water-soluble, the fruiting bodies can be rendered non-psychoactive through parboiling, allowing their culinary use. Since all the psychoactive compounds in P. The mushroom is not generally regarded as being physically dangerous to adults. She had begun collecting the species as early as 1910. A formal description of the species was published by Elsie Wakefield in 1946 in the Transactions of the British Mycological Society, based on a specimen she had recently collected at Kew Gardens.
![golden teacher primordia golden teacher primordia](https://a2.sporestore.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/jamaican_sporesyringes_01.jpg)
It belongs to the family Hymenogastraceae. The main compounds responsible for its psychedelic effects are psilocybin and psilocin. Psilocybe cyanescens (sometimes referred to as wavy caps or as the potent Psilocybe ) is a species of potent psychedelic mushroom.