Pubdate: Mon, 16 Jan 2006
Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
Copyright: 2006 Guardian Newspapers Limited
Contact:  http://www.smh.com.au/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/441
Author: David McCandless, The Guardian (UK)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?228 (Paraphernalia)

LEGALLY STONED

Business Is Booming For The Retailers Of Substances That Promise 
Euphoric Sensations Without The Worry Of A Jail Term, Writes David McCandless.

POCKET bongs, digital scales, herb grinders and exotic shamanic 
plants. The shelves of King Bong in Bournemouth, southern England, 
are packed with all the discerning drug user could possibly want. 
There are brightly packaged pills such as "Yellow Veg-E's", 
"vegetarian blissed-out dance capsules", and the citrus-flavoured 
Lime-Fantazias which promise "euphoric sensations" all night. And all 
of it entirely legal.

Most major towns and cities now have a resident drug emporium, 
selling raver toys, cannabis accessories, and a selection of legal, 
mind-altering drugs. Along with several large-scale websites, they 
form a lucrative "legal highs" industry which markets exotic 
mind-changing plants and chemicals to a growing audience of drug 
users looking for alternatives to illegal substances.

Demand has never been higher. "Business is on the up," says King 
Bong's owner, Tony Rotherham, who has run headshops for 12 years. 
"We're getting all sorts in here. Hippies, clubbers, students, 
housewives, even slimmers looking for appetite suppressants."

It was the boom in sales of magic mushrooms that kickstarted the 
industry. A legal loophole led to a proliferation of vendors. The 
mushrooms' reliable and mostly benevolent psychedelic effects changed 
public perception of legal highs. "Mushrooms opened people's mind to 
the possibility you could go into a shop and get a legal high that 
had an effect," he says.

When the loophole closed in July, vendors filled the void. "We've got 
a lot of new good products coming in," Rotherham says. Some 20 new, 
effective drugs have emerged in the last year.

A hotchpotch of shamanic plants, synthetic stimulants and psychedelic 
cacti, most imported from the Netherlands, New Zealand and India, are 
repackaged and sold across Britain. An plant from Thailand called 
kratom is a big seller and dubbed the "herbal speedball" due its 
apparent euphoric effects. Also selling well are ecstasy-like drugs, 
sold as "p.e.p pills". They contain piperazines, stimulant chemicals 
from the same chemical family as Viagra.

Magic mushroom sellers have switched to selling another mushroom, not 
yet outlawed: the red-and-white spotted Fly Agaric toadstool, which 
contains the psychoactive chemicals muscimol and ibotenic acid which 
can trigger delirious, dream-like states.

Thanks to the effectiveness of these legal highs and the large 
customer base created by the mushroom boom, the trade is booming too 
in shops and online, with shoppers exploiting secure credit card 
orders and 24-hour websites.

"Loads of people are getting into it," says Mark Evans, the owner of 
EveryOneDoesIt.com, Britain's biggest online headshop. "At the click 
of a button you can have whatever you want next day, at your home or 
in your office."

His site boasts more than 5000 products and many types of drugs: 
stimulant, visionary, relaxant, aphrodisiac. Customers can give star 
ratings and post reviews. Highs that don't work or have negative side 
effects quickly disappear from sale. It is a lucrative international 
business. "We're selling to thousands of customers a week all over 
Europe and North America," Evans says. His company claims a UKP2 
million ($4.6 million) a year turnover, with the estimated worth of 
the British industry put at UKP10 million.

While most of the new drugs remain unscheduled under the Misuse of 
Drugs Act, retailers are careful not to encourage any illegal 
activity or promote products as drugs. Cannabis seeds are often sold 
as "souvenirs". Bottles of inhalant amyl nitrite or "poppers" are 
advertised as "room odourisers". Bongs (a water pipe used for smoking 
cannabis) are labelled for "legal smoking mixes only". However, some 
of the plant-based highs have a quasi-legal status because they 
contain naturally occurring illegal drugs. The San Pedro cactus 
contains the outlawed psychedelic substance mescaline.

Says Katy Swaine, the head of legal services at the drugs advice 
charity Release: "The circumstances in which it is illegal to possess 
or supply the plant are ambiguous." But the authorities seem 
unconcerned. "We've only had the police in here once in 12 years," 
says Rotherham. "The local beat officer came in after someone from a 
local mental health institute bought some herbal highs. He asked us 
not to sell to anyone from there. So we didn't."

Retailers say legal highs are safer than illicit drugs, which are 
often either adulterated or dangerously powerful. In contrast, many 
legal highs have a history of human use dating back thousands of 
years. Plant preparations such as the psychedelic Amazonian brew, 
ayahuasca, or yopo seeds, which contain the hallucinogen DMT 
(dimethyltryptamine), are used in shamanic ceremonies, with vomiting 
and loss of bowel control common.

Some authorities have moved to ban some legal highs as use has 
increased, creating a patchwork of inconsistent legislation. The 
potent psychedelic herb Salvia divinorum is banned in Australia and 
Italy but is legal elsewhere. "Governments tend to respond to very 
visible problems or public health scares," says Swaine. "If there was 
an explosion in the use or supply of a particular substance, as with 
magic mushroom, they might take steps."

Mark Evans, of EveryOneDoesIt.com, says: "The Government know we're 
here. We pay 40 per cent tax plus 1 per cent for national insurance . 
I'm sure they do very well out of the headshop industry."

"Loads of people are getting into it," says Mark Evans, the owner of 
EveryOneDoesIt.com, Britain's biggest online headshop. "At the click 
of a button you can have whatever you want next day, at your home or 
in your office."

His site boasts more than 5000 products and many types of drugs: 
stimulant, visionary, relaxant, aphrodisiac. Customers can give star 
ratings and post reviews. Highs that don't work or have negative side 
effects quickly disappear from sale. It is a lucrative international 
business. "We're selling to thousands of customers a week all over 
Europe and North America," Evans says. His company claims a UKP2 
million ($4.6 million) a year turnover, with the estimated worth of 
the British industry put at UKP10 million.

While most of the new drugs remain unscheduled under the Misuse of 
Drugs Act, retailers are careful not to encourage any illegal 
activity or promote products as drugs. Cannabis seeds are often sold 
as "souvenirs". Bottles of inhalant amyl nitrite or "poppers" are 
advertised as "room odourisers". Bongs (a water pipe used for smoking 
cannabis) are labelled for "legal smoking mixes only". However, some 
of the plant-based highs have a quasi-legal status because they 
contain naturally occurring illegal drugs. The San Pedro cactus 
contains the outlawed psychedelic substance mescaline.

Says Katy Swaine, the head of legal services at the drugs advice 
charity Release: "The circumstances in which it is illegal to possess 
or supply the plant are ambiguous." But the authorities seem 
unconcerned. "We've only had the police in here once in 12 years," 
says Rotherham. "The local beat officer came in after someone from a 
local mental health institute bought some herbal highs. He asked us 
not to sell to anyone from there. So we didn't."

Retailers say legal highs are safer than illicit drugs, which are 
often either adulterated or dangerously powerful. In contrast, many 
legal highs have a history of human use dating back thousands of 
years. Plant preparations such as the psychedelic Amazonian brew, 
ayahuasca, or yopo seeds, which contain the hallucinogen DMT 
(dimethyltryptamine), are used in shamanic ceremonies, with vomiting 
and loss of bowel control common.

Some authorities have moved to ban some legal highs as use has 
increased, creating a patchwork of inconsistent legislation. The 
potent psychedelic herb Salvia divinorum is banned in Australia and 
Italy but is legal elsewhere. "Governments tend to respond to very 
visible problems or public health scares," says Swaine. "If there was 
an explosion in the use or supply of a particular substance, as with 
magic mushroom, they might take steps."

Mark Evans, of EveryOneDoesIt.com, says: "The Government know we're 
here. We pay 40 per cent tax plus 1 per cent for national insurance . 
I'm sure they do very well out of the headshop industry."

The Guardian
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom