salvia and shrooms are in know way similar at all they have no common anything shrooms are for one pleasurable mush can last 2-8 hours depending on dose salvia last 10 - 15 minutes and u have no control at all
Yes. Salvia and Medical Marijuana are pretty much the only legal drugs here.
The effects are extremely variant, depending on the person involved. Everybody is different, therefore everybody will feel different effects.
Well, this depends on the drug, Salvia and marijuana can be both cooked or chewed, shrooms are eaten and LSD are taken by tab or liquid.
It depends on the shrooms and your personal reaction to them. I know people who say they never do and some who have.
Salvia is undetectable except in military testing but since Salvia is legal at least in most of the US they're unlikely to test for it. Shrooms will show up on a drug test, but it is relatively uncommon to test for. EDIT: Even if one is tested for it, it is believed (though not proven) that it leaves the body within 12 hours. The elimination half-life of salvinorin A is believed short (less than an hour), meaning the detection window for salvinorin A is probably brief. Also, Salvia does not trigger a false positive for any other drugs.
Not sure, I think that as being an hallucinogen, it makes you feel as if you were handsome! Kidding. The reason I get is that it enhances all your sense, and one of your senses is feeling, so if you're in a somewhat hot places, under salvia's effect you would feel hotter.
Yes It does, the higher the extract the higher it will get you
Salvia viridis was created in 1753.
If by Salvia you mean Salvia Divinorum, then the answer is no. Salvia Divinorum is not used in Chinese medicine, as Salvia does not naturally grow in any region of China. Salvia Divinorum is only to be found in Oaxaca, Mexico.
No, Salvia nemorosa does not contain salvinorins, the active components of Salvia divinorum.
Joey Salvia's birth name is Joseph Salvia.
There are different types of salvia plants, some are well-known herbs and spices used in cooking, and some have medicinal properties e.g. different types of sage plants. They are also grown for their attractive flowers as a feature in a garden.Although salvias in general are not known for being deadly toxic, one salvia species (i.e. salvia dininorum) contains powerful substance, known as Salvinorin A, which has hallucinogenic effects on the human brain. Salvia Divinorum has never been linked to any deaths, so the short answer is, "No."