Welcome to Ayahuasca Info
This website is dedicated to a magical potion from the Amazone basin which is known as ayahuasca. Here you can find information on the different ingredients that are used to make this brew, the way it's used by indigenous people, and what you can expect when you take it yourself.
Traditionally this beverage contained a combination of the bark of the Banisteriopsis caapi vine and the leaves of the Psychotria viridis (or alternatively the Diplopterys cabrerana). It has now been determined what the active components of these ingredients are, and some people have used plants from other parts of the world to make similar herbal potions. You can read about this in the botany and chemistry pages.
The most important active component in ayahuasca as far as its visionary qualities are concerned is a substance called DMT (dimethyltryptamine). DMT has a powerful effect on consciousness that is difficult to describe in words. It's described by many as "spiritual", and is characterized by detailed, very bright and colourful visions. Indigenous people say that during their trance, which lasts approximately four hours, they enter the world of the spirits and communicate with them, while psychologists consider DMT to be one of the hallucinogens, or psychedelics: "substances which make the soul visible."
We invite you to explore this site, read the interviews and prepare yourself well before you decide to try this powerful potion yourself. In case you are completely new to ayahuasca, we recommend you start by reading the introduction.
News
September 29, 2008 - New book about ayahuasca: "The Jaguar that Roams the Mind"
Robert Tindall new book, "The Jaguar that Roams the Mind", is available as of today on Amazon.com!
Many of you know that Robert worked for 4 years on this project about his year-long stay in the Peruvian jungle.
Visit the Inner Traditions' website for Robert Tindall's biography and a description of his book, or check out www.roamingthemind.com.
To read previous articles on ayahuasca go to the news page.