Thanks to Psychedelic Spotlight for this:

Mad honey is known for its uses throughout history (been used since 2100 BC), but little information exists about the trade and effects of this obscure intoxicant, until now

Recently, an adorable little bear was found slumped over blankly staring at a mossy hillside in the Düzce National Park before Turkish officials placed her in a pickup truck and took her to the vet. There, vets confirmed she was stoned on deli bal, or “mad honey,” an intoxicating viscous goo made when bees pollinate on Rhododendron flowers. The bear fully recovered within three days and returned to the wild with more clout than most humans will gain in a lifetime. Her trip even earned her the nickname “Balkiz,” which means “honey girl” or “honey daughter” in Turkish.

Mad honey isn’t illegal in the US or most of the world (save for South Korea), despite its concentration of the psychoactive compound grayanotoxin. So it’s not subject to the same complexities as Schedule I drugs, such as scarcity and risk, changing the dynamics of buying and selling psychoactive substances altogether.

Real Mad Honey is a company based in Amsterdam that sells the trippy bee goo in minimalistic wooden jars with ’Real Mad Honey“ etched on the sides. Nick, the owner, said he became fascinated with the honey after watching Vice’s famed mini-documentary episode about the honey hunters of Nepal. In it, journalist and producer Abdullah Saeed travels to a remote village deep in Nepal’s Annapurna Massif, an area situated at the foothills of the Himalayas, to harvest mad honey with the Gurung, a community Indigenous to the mountains and hills of the region.

Honey hunting is an ancient tradition for them, one that’s been passed down in their culture for hundreds, possibly thousands, of years.

Turkish bear tripping on “Mad Honey” an obscure hallucinogenic nectar found in Rhododendron plants

What’s the Difference Between Turkish and Himalayan Mad Honey?

The Himalayan mountains of Nepal and the Black Sea region of Turkey are the only places in the world where the phenomenon of mad honey occurs. Although, both countries have vastly different harvesting traditions. Beekeepers collect the honey in Turkey. They employ traditional beekeeping practices and use man-made hives, known as Langstroth hives, to create apiaries near Rhododendron fields, according to Archer, the owner of Himalayan Honey.

Conversely, harvesting Nepali bee nectar involves scaling daunting Himalayan cliff faces up to 9,800 feet using only a rope ladder. The Gurung honey hunters wear bee suits for protection while climbing, but their hands remain exposed to maintain the dexterity required to grip a long bamboo stick and pry a crescent-shaped hive off a cliff. While one person whacks a hive, a second climber catches it with a basket, dangling thousands of feet in the air and getting their hands relentlessly stung by livid bees. Consequently, mad honey from the Himalayas can be three times more expensive than Turkish mad honey.

Mad Honey from Nepal

Despite where the honey originates, one thing is sure: A confluence of natural elements must occur for mad honey to emerge. The first is specific wildflowers. Nepal and Turkey are home to a seldomly occurring species of RhododendronsRhododendron luteum and Rhododendron ponticum —containing grayanotoxin, the neurotoxin in mad honey that makes people loopy.

Süleyman Türedi, a doctor who studies deli bal at the Karadeniz Technical University School of Medicine in Trabzon, Turkey, told Modern Farmer there are over 700 different species of Rhododendron flowers in the world. “To our knowledge, there are just 2-3 that include [significant amounts of] grayanotoxin in their nectars,” she said. And they just so happen to bloom in Turkey and Nepal.

The second thing you need to make mad honey is rare bees. The species of bee responsible for mad honey in Turkey is known as Apis mellifera caucasiaor the Caucasian honey bee, according to Archer. The species of bee in Nepal is known as Apis dorsata laboriosa. They’re the biggest honey bee in the world, coming in at roughly 2-3cm long. (For comparison, North American honey bees range in size from 9mm to 18mm in length, depending on species.)

“Mad honey from Nepal comes from wild beehives and has a higher moisture concentration, which makes the consistency of the honey thinner,” said Archer, who added that the tastes and textures of both are much different. “Problems we face with Himalayan honey is fermentation from the high moisture content. We’ve been working on trying new ways to reduce the moisture.”

The third requirement is season. The primary honey-hunting season roughly occurs between March and June. Ordering honey during the spring is said to be the wisest time to make a purchase. “Mad honey in both Nepal and Turkey is only harvested once a year in spring when the Rhododendron flowers bloom,” Archer said. Reports say Nepal sometimes has another harvest in the fall, but it’s usually not as notable. “This is when the honey will be fresh and most potent.”

Where is Mad Honey Available Online?

At least 98 percent of the brands selling mad honey online are based in Europe, Nepal, or Turkey —except one. I randomly discovered a group of crypto dudes from Oklahoma who do mad honey giveaways on Twitter to hype their NFT project, PsychoNaut Anonymous. The CEO of PsychoNaut Anonymous Inc. goes by the Web3 name, “Stoner Degenerate.” He’s about to launch a mad honey business in roughly two weeks. His brand is one of (if not the) only US-based company selling Nepali mad honey from America that isn’t a warehouse (or Amazon) facilitating orders from abroad. “The whole goal of our NFT project is [creating access to] alternative cannabinoids and alternative wellness products, like delta-8, THC-P, THC-O, and honey, at a discount.”

He gets kilos of honey from a distributor in Nepal who gets product from villagers in the Himalayas. “There are really only a couple key players [distributing honey], honestly,” Stoner Degenerate said. “It’s a really tight-knit group, and there is only so much honey every year.”

Nick from Real Mad Honey works with two suppliers. One is a distributor who works with beekeepers from the Black Sea region in Turkey, and the other is a distributor in Nepal who gets honey from villagers in the Himalayas. Offering an authentic product from these native honey regions is vital for Nick because many people get ripped off with low-quality and counterfeit products.

[Mad honey] is not cheap, it’s expensive, so I before I bought it for the first time, I wanted to find nice reviews showing that it was the real deal,” he said. “I saw some really, really bad reviews, saying that products were fake or diluted with water. That was a big reason why I started this company. We want to give people the real deal, not fake shit.”

Is Mad Honey a Psychedelic?

Referring to it as a “psychedelic” is a misnomer because it doesn’t make you trip or hallucinate the way LSD or DMT does. It’s more of a deliriant, which can cause you to trip if you ingest ample amounts. Realistically, you can trip on almost any psychoactive substance if you consume enough, but that doesn’t mean you should. Rhododendron honey is technically a neurotoxin and can make you wretch your guts out if you overindulge. Some reports state grayanotoxin can be lethal in high enough doses, though “no deaths have been reported in recent literature.” Still, most of the experts in this story say to start with one teaspoon of honey and evaluate from there.

Nick described the feeling of honey as an edible or similar to getting a bit dizzy from alcohol. Most reviews confirm these sensations, while some compare the feeling to mini-dosing mushrooms. Most of the positive online reports mention feeling drunk or euphoric, less anxious, giggling, or wanting to go to sleep. None of the reviews cite seeing tracers or meeting deities or having visual hallucinations of any kind.

[The honey] is not psychedelic; that’s actually a misconception because of the Vice documentary,” Nick said. I made multiple attempts to contact Abdullah Saeed for a comment but was met with no response. However, he doesn’t specifically say he trips or hallucinates in the doc. Although, the title of the Vice episode refers to the honey as hallucinogenic. “It doesn’t make you hallucinate. That is clickbait. Maybe if you take a very high dose of it, you can hallucinate, but that is very dangerous, and you can get very sick. I do not recommend anyone to do so.”

Which Country Orders the Most Mad Honey?

The United States orders the highest volume of mad honey, according to Nick and Archer. Both of them cite Japan as a significant purchaser, too. Nick adds that Real Mad Honey also gets customers from Dubai and Saudi Arabia. A Vice Magazine story from 2017 (that also states the honey is psychedelic) reports that a “large market for the nectar has opened up throughout northeastern Asia.”

“I think we get many orders from these areas, like the Middle East and India and Japan, because there are very strict anti-drug laws in those countries, and this is a perfectly legal alternative for them,” Nick said. “I think for the people in those countries they can’t get any other stuff or they are afraid to do [anything else] because of the very strict laws, and since mad honey is legal in every country except South Korea, it’s a perfect solution for them.”

Buy Mad Honey (Netherlands)

https://www.realmadhoney.com/

Psychonaut Anonymous (Oklahoma)

https://psychoanon.com/shop/

Leave a ReplyCancel reply