Clavo Huasca is an indigenous vine that grows and thrives in the Amazon rainforest. This relatively obscure plant has been used extensively in traditional Amazon medicine and is starting to be recognized for its health benefits. The bark of clavo huasca vines is brewed for an alkaloid phytonutrient named tinatina. It contains constituents such as essential oils, tannic acids and eugenol. Read about Clavo Huasca For Skin, Hair And Health
Clavo huasca gets its name from the fact that the roots and the bark of the vine carry a whiff of cloves, despite the fact that both species are completely unrelated. When the plant is cross sectioned, a heraldic Maltese cross is seen which is why it has been long revered by Catholic individuals who have knowledge of medicinal plants. In the native areas of the Amazon along with parts of Peru and South America, the herb has been used to treat a variety of ailments.

Sapo/Kambo Sticks
Tampelandia (High Hawaiians)
Yopo snuffYopo Activated Rapé, Anadenanthera PeregrinaYopo Seeds as know as Anadenanthera Peregrina, the genus Anadenanthera, a member of the leguminosae family, has been used for its psychoactive effects for approximetaly 4,500 years. Anadenanthera Colubrina (Yopo) was traditionally used in shamanism by the Indians of the Southern region of the Andes.The seeds were made into a snuff called Cebil or Vilca.Anadenanthera peregrina is used throughout South America. It is used in the Orinoco basin, where it must be cultivated by shamans because it is not native to this area.. It is made into a snuff, under the name Yopo. The Yanomano and Waika tribes use it in Epena, a snuff containing A.Peregrina seeds, Plant Ashes, and other substances. It was traditionally used in the West Indies as a snuff called Cohoba, though this use was irradicated. 


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