• Select Your Topic Then Scroll Down
    Alcohol Bupe Benzos
    Cocaine Heroin Opioids
    RCs Stimulants Misc
    Harm Reduction All Topics Gabapentinoids
    Tired of your habit? Struggling to cope?
    Want to regain control or get sober?
    Visit our Recovery Support Forums

Opioids 4 Quick Questions - Poppy Seed Tea

BitFisher

Greenlighter
Joined
Jun 27, 2012
Messages
2
Hello all,

Quick synopsis: 2 liter bottle, fill with 250 mg of poppy seeds, fill with room temp tap water until about an inch above seed line, shake vigorously for 2 min, open cap a bit and drink the cloudy yellow water. Has given a slight mind numbing effect, a little sleepiness, but nothing I would call euphoric. Found a bulk dealer and giving it another go, questions to improve:

1. Is 1/2 lb poppy seeds for a 250lb non-first time user safe?
Hydrocodone cough syrup prescription couple of times. Had 3 refills, at most 75mg of syrup in a sitting toward the end, been 2 months since last had it.

2. Is the water best warm or cold? Tap water okay?
Been using room temperature tap water. Is cold better?

3. What is the best pH level for the water? (use juice/add lemon juice/plain water)
Been adding a 2-3 second squirt of lemon juice to water before shaking because I hear a lower pH level helps. However, people saying using juice instead of water doesn't. I know enough to make a certain pH level solution if it helps, is there a legit basis for this?

4. Shake vigorously once for 1-2 minutes, or 1-2 minutes and let sit for 5 min / repeat?

Thanks,
BitFisher
 
1. Totally depends on the potency of the seeds, which is highly variable. It's best to start out with a small amount to test the potency every time you have a new batch.

2. Room temp is fine.

3. Not sure about this one. Altering the pH might help remove the latex from the seeds, but it might also make it harder for your stomach to absorb the alkaloids once you drink it.

4. Shake vigorously, pour off the liquid into a container, add new water, repeat. If you let it sit, the seeds will start reabsorbing the liquid.
 
Top