Pubdate: Sat, 24 Apr 2004 Source: Halifax Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2004 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Barry Dorey Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) TEENS GETTING HIGH ON FLOWER SEEDS Morning Glory Cocktail Idea Decades Old Parents know what it means to find a mickey bottle of rum or a bag of marijuana stashed in their teenager's room. They might not know that uncovering a pouch of morning glory flower seeds could be a similar red flag for drug use. A Dartmouth store has restricted sales of the seeds because clerks grew suspicious that so many young people were showing up at the garden centre to buy them. It turns out that teens are following decades-old recipes to make teas and other hallucinogenic cocktails. The morning glory flower seeds contain a substance related to LSD, but at about only 10 per cent potency. Al Crewe, general manager of the Canadian Tire store on Tacoma Drive in Dartmouth, said a clerk asked one boy why he so desperately wanted the seeds. The teen's reply was: "Because I'm gonna drink 'em." "Apparently you get deathly sick for 20 minutes or so, and then you get a great high after that," Mr. Crewe said. Morning glory seeds are still available at the store's garden centre. But clerks who suspect the buyer is more intent on eating or drinking them than planting them have been instructed not to sell them. "They are young, 12, 13, up to 16 years old," Mr. Crewe said of the buyers. Flower seed recipes have sprouted up on the Internet. Sites and discussion groups detail how to mix ground-up seeds with alcohol or with over-the-counter motion-sickness drugs. Posts at several discussion groups indicate a person ingesting the cocktail can become violently ill before settling into a euphoric feeling that lasts six to 12 hours. Others indicated their experiment led only to vomiting, diarrhea and headaches. "My auditory imagination was greatly intensified while on them (mostly with cartoon sound-effects), but otherwise the nausea was unbearable - I vomited my taco dinner through my nose," one person wrote. The seeds contain a naturally occurring substance called lysergic acid amide (LSA), a cousin of LSD, the hallucinogenic "acid" of the 1960s. While the morning glory fad appears to be back, a saleswoman at Halifax Seed Co. said the cocktails have been around for decades. "Years ago, they used to take the seeds and steep it and make morning glory tea," Caye Harris-Allum said. "It gives you a bit of a high." She recalls that 1979 and 1980 "seemed to be the hot years, then it died off. It sort of resurfaced again in the early '90s, died off and now it's come back again." Clerks at the north-end store also keep tabs on who is buying seeds and how many. "We don't like to sell any great amount," Caye Harris-Allum said. "We usually start asking questions if people start looking for pounds of it." There are about 15 varieties of morning glory flowers - vine climbers with a brilliant flower about six to eight centimetres in diameter. Two with high lysergic acid content - heavenly blue and pearly gates - are favourites for cocktail-makers. They are also the prettiest varieties, according to Ms. Harris-Allum, for those who actually plant the seeds. While some online sources suggest commercial suppliers of the seeds coat them with a mild poison to discourage recreational drug use, Ms. Harris-Allum said the nausea users experience is a reaction to a naturally occurring substance in the seed. There are serious potential side-effects for anyone taking antidepressant drugs or for pregnant women. LSD can cause the uterus to contract, possibly increasing the risk of miscarriage. The potential for overdose is low, but high doses can result in psychotic reaction, shock or heart failure. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin