[AGL] Peyote en Catorce

Igor Loving lovingigor at hotmail.com
Mon Oct 24 10:13:10 EDT 2005


I read the article and thought it was pretty lame.



Charlie Loving



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From:  <i>Harry Edwards &lt;laughingwolf at ev1.net&gt;</i><br>Reply-To:  
<i>survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s 
&lt;austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net&gt;</i><br>To:  <i>ghetto survivors 
&lt;austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net&gt;</i><br>Subject:  <i>[AGL] Peyote en 
Catorce</i><br>Date:  <i>Sun, 23 Oct 2005 19:24:10 
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Sun, 23 Oct 2005 20:28:57 -0500</i><br>&gt; Peyote intrigues many in 
Mexico<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Desert drug remains a small-town attraction amid 
Mexico's raging <br>&gt;drug war.<br>&gt;<br><p>><< image_1884724.jpg >>
<p>&gt;Ricardo Sandoval/FOR COX NEWSPAPERS<br>&gt;(enlarge 
photo)<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Huichol Indian Martina de la Cruz and her 
granddaughter sell crafts <br>&gt;sporting symbols of peyote in downtown 
Real de Catorce. The <br>&gt;hallucinogenic drug holds great importance to 
the Mexican tribe.<br>&gt;<br><p>><< image_1884733.jpg >>
<p>&gt;Ricardo Sandocal/FOR COX NEWSPAPERS<br>&gt;(enlarge 
photo)<br>&gt;<br>&gt;The button-shaped cacti, which are eaten or drunk, can 
produce <br>&gt;visions as well as a heightened sense of energy and 
perception.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;By Susan Ferriss<br>&gt;MEXICO CITY 
BUREAU<br>&gt;Sunday, October 23, 2005<br>&gt;<br>&gt;REAL DE CATORCE, San 
Luis Potos — The fleshy, button-shaped plants <br>&gt;barely peek from the 
desert floor, but Enrico Baldella knew how to <br>&gt;scout for them. 
Walking gingerly through waist-high cacti and mean <br>&gt;thorns, he 
quickly spied a cluster of peyote, a hallucinogenic plant <br>&gt;considered 
sacred by some Mexican Indian tribes.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;&quot;There's a colony 
of them,&quot; said Baldella, an Italian expatriate who <br>&gt;has lived in 
Mexico for years. He knelt and sliced an inch-high, <br>&gt;palm-size button 
carefully from its long subterranean root. It may <br>&gt;have taken a 
decade for it to reach this size.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Before leaving, Baldella 
built a small fire and coaxed smoke toward <br>&gt;the remaining colony, 
bowing his head and murmuring prayers he <br>&gt;learned from Mexican Indian 
and American Indian acquaintances.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Peyote (pronounced 
pay-O-tay) is an attraction for Mexican, American <br>&gt;and European 
tourists in Mexico's San Luis Potosí state, on the <br>&gt;southern edge of 
the vast Chihuahua Desert.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Not everyone who visits Real de 
Catorce, an old mining and tourist <br>&gt;town, is looking to get high. But 
the little mountaintop town has a <br>&gt;reputation for being a place where 
one can readily — albeit <br>&gt;illegally — seek peyote to eat fresh, dried 
or mixed into a drink. <br>&gt;Under the watch of guides such as Baldella, 
tourists can descend to <br>&gt;the desert valley below, harvest and chew 
the plant, and contemplate <br>&gt;their surroundings for hours in an 
altered state of consciousness.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;The tolerance for peyote 
experimentation is an odd juxtaposition to <br>&gt;Mexico's violent drug 
cartel wars. Peyote, which is also found in <br>&gt;the deserts of Texas, 
grows naturally. It isn't of interest to <br>&gt;traffickers because, police 
say, there is no big money in it.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;In contrast, more than 900 
people have been killed this year alone <br>&gt;as organized crime cartels 
battle over the lucrative trafficking of <br>&gt;cocaine, heroin, 
methamphetamine and marijuana into the United 
<br>&gt;States.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Mexico's Huichol (wee-CHOL) Indians have 
consumed peyote for <br>&gt;millennia as part of a traditional spiritual 
pilgrimage they make <br>&gt;from Mexico's Pacific coast to San Luis Potosí. 
Mexican law permits <br>&gt;the use, an exemption that allows the Indians to 
collect and consume <br>&gt;the cactus as long as they don't possess 
substantial amounts for the <br>&gt;purposes of 
trafficking.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;In theory, non-Indians are prohibited from 
possessing any peyote and <br>&gt;can face stiff sentences if convicted of 
trafficking large <br>&gt;quantities. But the law doesn't seem to deter 
on-the-spot <br>&gt;experimentation.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Residents of Real de 
Catorce complain that local police sometimes <br>&gt;extort money from 
tourists if they discover the outsiders have a few <br>&gt;buttons in their 
pockets.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Environmentalists, though, seem more concerned that 
peyote tourism <br>&gt;is endangering the slow-growing 
plant.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;&quot;In general, there's always been quite a bit of 
tolerance when it <br>&gt;comes to peyote,&quot; said Pedro Medellin, a 
professor at the University <br>&gt;of San Luis Potosí who in 1994, as a 
state ecology coordinator, <br>&gt;helped turn a swath of peyote-laden 
desert here into a state <br>&gt;protected area.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Communities 
allow outsiders to enter the protected zone as long as <br>&gt;they present 
identification and submit to a search when they leave <br>&gt;to make sure 
they haven't loaded up their cars with peyote.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;On highways 
here, soldiers regularly search vehicles at roadblocks <br>&gt;for weapons 
and drugs. In the past three months, only one person has <br>&gt;been 
detained, for possessing about 30 buttons of peyote, enough to 
<br>&gt;trigger an accusation of suspected trafficking, said Enrique 
<br>&gt;Buendia, the San Luis Potosí representative of the federal attorney 
<br>&gt;general's office.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;The accused could face a minimum 
sentence of 10 years or up to 25 <br>&gt;years in prison, Buendia 
said.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Officials in the U.S. Consulate in Monterrey declined 
to respond to <br>&gt;requests for information about American citizens 
arrested for peyote <br>&gt;possession.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;&quot;It's a small 
number of people who do this,&quot; Buendia added, denying <br>&gt;that 
peyote is the main draw in the area.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;&quot;It's a great place 
to come to just rest, to get away from the <br>&gt;summer heat,&quot; said 
Natalie Lake, a midwife from Austin who has close <br>&gt;friends who live 
in the town.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Hotel owner Humberto Fernandez, a fountain of 
knowledge about Real <br>&gt;de Catorce, said that, on occasion, he's had to 
deal with youths who <br>&gt;got high, regretted it and wandered back to his 
hotel to request <br>&gt;help.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;&quot;Once, a big blond guy 
came and said he wanted to search for the <br>&gt;plant by himself. He would 
come back every night, sunburned and <br>&gt;disappointed,&quot; said 
Fernandez, who has been invited to peyote <br>&gt;ceremonies with the 
Huichol.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;&quot;Some people think they can do it on their 
own,&quot; the hotel owner <br>&gt;said with a shake of his 
head.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Huichol Indian Martina de la Cruz, 51, sells beaded 
jewelry and <br>&gt;boxes emblazoned with peyote designs. She smiled at 
inquiries about <br>&gt;the plant. She's heard the questions 
before.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;&quot;Where do you think we get the design ideas for 
the things we make?&quot; <br>&gt;she said. &quot;We all consume 
it.&quot;<br>&gt;<br>&gt; <br><p></font></BLOCKQUOTE>




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