Your trusty global companion for spiritual, sensual, and literary journeys with author Lyn Fuchs
Sunday, January 2, 2011
Dopey New Year
Why have New Year's resolutions when you can have New Year's hallucinations? I know I did. Driving over a rocky, twisting road to a Mexican ranch, I glimpsed terra cotta tile roof surrounded by a sea of golden corn rows. Green squash and black beans grew in the field. Pirul trees, some with pale yellow pollen and others with bright orange berries, hung lazily over a small pond, while nopal and maguey dotted nearby hills and distant mountains.
I walked across the rutted cracking earth. A black puppy with white paws cavorted happily before me as a gray burro followed behind and nuzzled me with cautious affection. Such loyal, life-burden-accepting creatures. Red, pitted, volcanic rock jutted diagonally from the soil, where I spotted some peyote underneath.
Journalistic research time. Gently pulling out the pimply blueish top and woody brownish root of the cactus-looking, mushroom-feeling plant, I headed back to the house. The rest of my botanical pilgrimage appears in the upcoming book Fresh Wind & Strange Fire. This travelogue promises to be more than just your average trip.
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is very rare that plant looks like a hallucinogenic mushroom and apparently was a very nice trip hope you can read the next part
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