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  • Has anyone ever tryed Opium? What was it like? Has anyone ever seen it in the UK? Its one iv always been curious about.

    I have friends from bulgaria who smoked opium, and know of people using it when traveling to the far east, but usually it’s heroin rather than pure opium in the uk

    Quote:
    What Is Opium?

    Opium is the crudest form and also the least potent of the Opiates. Opium is the milky latex fluid contained in the un-ripened seed pod of the opium poppy. As the fluid is exposed to air, it hardens and turns black in color. This dried form is typically smoked, but can also be eaten. Opium is grown mainly in Myanmar (formerly Burma) and Afghanistan

    Today opium is sold on the street as a powder or dark brown solid and is smoked, eaten, or injected.

    Opium is highly addictive. Tolerance (the need for higher and higher doses to maintain the same effect) and physical and psychological dependence develop quickly. Withdrawal from opium causes nausea, tearing, yawning, chills, and sweating.

    As long ago as 100 AD, opium had been used as a folk medicine, taken with a beverage or swallowed as a solid. Only toward the middle of the 17th century, when opium smoking was introduced into China, did any serious addiction problems arise. In the 18th century opium addiction was so serious there that the Chinese made many attempts to prohibit opium cultivation and opium trade with Western countries. At the same time opium made its way to Europe and North America, where addiction grew out of its prevalent use as a painkiller.

    Opium Street Names

    Skee, joy plant, pen yan

    History of Opium

    Excavations of the remains of neolithic settlements in Switzerland (the Cortaillod culture, 3200 – 2600 B.C.), have shown that Papaver was already being cultivated then; perhaps for the food value in the seeds (45% oil), which we know as poppy seeds. The slightly narcotic property of this plant was undoubtedly already known then.


    The milky fluid extracted from the plant’s ovary is highly narcotic after drying. This is then opium. The writings of Theophrastus (3rd century B.C.) are the first known written source mentioning opium. The word opium derives from the Greek word for juice of a plant, after all, opium is prepared from the juice of Papaver somniferum.


    The Arabic doctors were well aware of the beneficial effects of opium and Arabic traders introduced it to the Far East. In Europe it was reintroduced by Paracelsus and in 1680 the English doctor Sydenham could write:


    ‘Among the remedies which it has pleased Almighty God to give to man to relieve his sufferings, none is so universal and so efficacious as opium.’

    In the eighteenth century opium smoking was popular in the Far East and the opium trade was a very important source of income for the colonial rulers the English, the Dutch, with even the Spanish getting their share in the Philippines. Although opium was readily available in Europe at that time, its use was not problematical.



    Opium contains a considerable number of different substances, and in the nineteenth century these were isolated. In 1806 Friedrich Serturner was the first to extract one of these substances in its pure form. He called morphine after Morpheus, the Greek god of sleep. Codeine (Robiquet, 1832) and papaverine (Merck, 1848) followed. These pure substances supplanted the use of raw opium for medical purposes. Like opium they were frequently used as painkillers and against diarrhea. The invention of the hypodermic in the midnineteenth century lead to widespread use of morphine intravenously as a painkiller.


    In the United States opiate use rose greatly in the last century, partly because of the opiumsmoking Chinese immigrants, and partly because many of those wounded in the Civil War were given it intravenously. In addition many ‘patent medicines’ contained opium extract: laudanum, paregoric, etc. It was partly due to this that morphine also became fashionable as a ‘remedy’ for opium addiction; for if the doctor gave an opium addict morphine, he was no longer interested in opium so he was cured.


    This was also the case in Europe and although its use was at that time much more widespread than is now regarded as acceptable for medical purposes, it led to few problems.


    At the end of the last century, the United States started to try to curb the nonmedical use of opium, especially in China, and later tried to prohibit it. American interest here was twofold: they wanted an economically strong China as a market for their own products, and the moral element played a major role. As a result of the Spanish American War, the Philippines became American and the new rulers were confronted with a widespread problem.The American bishop of the Philippines, Charles Henry Brent, carried on a moral crusade in the US against the opium trade and opium addiction, and found widespread support. And not only because he was riding on the waves of Prohibition, for as we have already seen, unlike the European countries, the US also had a domestic opium problem.
    Quote:

    Heroin’s long journey to America’s streets begins with the planting of the seed of an opium poppy. The flower’s botanical name is papaver somniferum. The Sumerians called it Hul Gil, the ‘flower of joy.’ The flower is grown mainly by impoverished farmers on small plots in remote regions of the world. It flourishes in dry, warm climates and the vast majority of opium poppies are grown in a narrow, 4,500-mile stretch of mountains extending across southern Asia from Turkey through Pakistan and Laos. Heroin is also increasingly becoming an export from Latin America, notably Colombia.
    About three months after the poppy seeds are planted, brightly-colored flowers bloom at the tips of greenish, tubular stems. As the petals fall away, they expose an egg-shaped seed pod. Inside the pod is an opaque, milky sap. This is opium in its crudest form.

    The sap is extracted by slitting the pod vertically in parallel strokes with a special curved knife. As the sap oozes out, it turns darker and thicker, forming a brownish-black gum. A farmer collects the gum with a scraping knife, bundles it into bricks, cakes or balls and wraps them in a simple material such as plastic or leaves. Then the opium enters the black market. A merchant or broker buys the packages for transport to a morphine refinery. “Most traffickers do their morphine refining close to the poppy fields, since compact morphine bricks are much easier to smuggle than bundles of pungent, jelly-like opium,” writes Alfred W. McCoy in The Politics of Heroin.
    At the refinery, which may be little more than a rickety laboratory equipped with oil drums and shrouded in a jungle thicket, the opium is mixed with lime in boiling water. A precipitate of organic waste sinks to the bottom. On the surface a white band of morphine forms. This is drawn off, reheated with ammonia, filtered and boiled again until it is reduced to a brown paste.

    Poured into molds and dried in the sun, it is now morphine base, which has the consistency of dense modeling clay. Morphine base is smokable in a pipe – a practice introduced by the Dutch in the 17th century – or ready for further processing into heroin. The first to process heroin was C.R. Wright, an English researcher who unwittingly synthesized heroin (diacetylmorphine) in 1874 when he boiled morphine and a common chemical, acetic anhydride, over a stove for several hours. The modern technique entails a complicated series of steps in a good laboratory.
    In his book, Opium A History, Martin Booth describes the process: “First, equal quantities of morphine and acetic anhydride are heated in a glass or enamel-lined container for six hours at 85ÉC. The morphine and the acid combine to form impure diacetylmorphine. Second, water and chloroform are added to the solution to precipitate impurities. The solution is drained and sodium carbonate added to make the heroin solidify and sink. Third, the heroin is filtered out of the sodium carbonate solution with activated charcoal and purified with alcohol. [Fourth,] this solution is gently heated to evaporate the alcohol and leave heroin, which may be purified further …”

    Purification in the fourth stage, involving ether and hydrochloric acid, is notoriously risky. “In the hands of a careless chemist the volatile ether gas may ignite and produce a violent explosion that can level a clandestine laboratory,” writes McCoy. The final product is a fluffy, white powder known in the trade as number four heroin. When the heroin emerges from laboratories in places such as Bangkok or Hong Kong, it enters a multi-layered chain of distribution. Top brokers usually deal in bulk shipments of 20 to 100 kilos. A broker in New York might divide a bulk shipment into wholesale lots of 1 to 10 kilos for sale to underlings. A kilo of Southeast Asian heroin in 1997 costs $100,000 to $120,000, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration.
    Oddly, for a shadowy commerce, the one-kilo bricks are brightly packaged and imprinted with brands worthy of Madison Avenue. Heroin originating in Burma’s Shan State, for example, sports a red-lettered logo, “Double UO Globe Brand”, framed by a pair of lions.
    By the time heroin is peddled on city streets in small “bags” at $5 to $100, its value has ballooned more than ten- fold since its arrival in the United States.
    Not many years ago virtually all the heroin sold on America’s streets was so heavily diluted that it was rarely more than 10 percent pure. Purity has risen sharply in the mid-’90’s – routinely hitting 50 to 60 percent – as dealers have tried to expand their market beyond those addicts who inject heroin into their veins with hypodermic needles. Higher purity means “you can inhale it, you can smoke it, you can get high without the threat of AIDS or those nasty intravenous needles.” says DEA administrator Thomas Constantine, in a recent Washington Post story.
    Greater purity also reflects a relatively high level of worldwide production. Last year the illicit output of raw opium amounted to a record 4,300 tons, an increase of almost 1000 tons since 1992, according to U.S. estimates. Burma’s 1996 share of more than 2500 tons made it, far and away, the world leader.
    By an age-old rule of thumb, every 10 tons of raw opium reduces to one ton of heroin. In other words, the worldwide opium output in 1996 translates into 430 tons of heroin. About half of that is destined for the United States.

    does’nt really appeal to me. I personally would’ny want to start getting into opiates of any variety.

    me nither!

    had raw opium in the 90s once (the real easten stuff) it was good. Had my own manufactured stuff cut n procesed myself from papava somniforum poppys that grow here a few times its ok but you need loads.

    just had an image of my front (and only) lawn converted into a small poppy field lol

    I spent all night lying on the floor of a hut in northern Thailand smoking opium with a tribeswoman. It was a very pleasant experience. A few weeks later I was in Laos, in the towns there the elderly women sell at the markets. I bought some and then whilst on a very uncomfortable journey necked a pea sized amount, it was well cool. Was crunched up in the back of a Toyota pick up with my shades on, walkman blasting moving thru a surreal landscape. Highly recommended.

    I gave the rest away to a lad I became friends with. Dude had not done heroin in 5 years and then went on a 6 week binge in Thailand. He was in need of the opium to help out with the heroin withdrawal.

    I didnt touch any drugs in Thailand iv read too much about the numbers of toursts they lock up for a large number of years, but im crap at takeing risks lol

    Sounds like a very interesting experance though! *is jelious*

    I know someone who managed to carry a small ammount of opium through Cambodia customs without realising, scary!!

    i smoked something called ayauasca at boom, when ur actually sposed to eat it, gave a feeling i thought would be like a “opium feeling” extremely relaxed and almost dreamlike world

    We´ve had Opium sometimes in Reading and London and Bristol (the main trade routes).

    When a pure batch or problem batch of smack /Heroin comes in you will always notice it starts off at the ports, goes north towards Andover and then you have problems in Reading, Bristol, Oxford, London etc.

    Not sure about the north.

    You normally get this type of pure /Raw opium when there is little of the brown powder type of drug.

    It´s more warming and dreamy in my eyes and certainly sticky and dark. Sometimes when i used to by stuff I often thought I got ripped off and well, lets just say i was pleasently surprised about the strength compared to the usual brown smoking powder that often comes from Afghanistan.

    In my opinion, don´t start, curiosity killed the cat and so will smack.

    a m8 of mine tried opium once .. was sent to some one on the back of a stamp :laugh_at: .. made his very sick after smoking it lol:yakk:

    I’ve done heroin….felt TOO good. VERY dangerous stuff – sent my ex on a spate of crime! It went from liking it to loving it to HAVING TO HAVE IT! Very sad. He also tried some actual pharm. morphine once…..me too, only it was when I was in the ER with a gallbladder full of stones! 😥

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