Salvia extracts is a mix of dry smashed Salvia Divinorum leaves mixed with a concentrated amount of Salvinorin-A, depending on the amount of Salvinorin-A you put on a gram of smashed dry leaves, it's the strength you get (5X 10X etc.)
Depends on the vendor, between 20 and 30 dollars.
No. It takes many times more salvia leaves to produce the effect that an extract would.
smoke it
nope nor the seeds
Yes It does, the higher the extract the higher it will get you
It is a plant extract from the common wild flower Salvia Divinorium.
You don't need to intensify salvia, and if you did for some reason want to then just buy stronger salvia. I've had 10x extract and regular old 40x the 10x extract had me tripping hard. I became a car and was driving through some old scenic road out west. The regular 40x i had a bad trip. However, smoking salvia while you're drunk does intensify the journey.
Dried foliage of Salvia divinorum has only a subtle odor (much less noticeable than that of cannabis), although it produces a distinctive aroma when burned. Even when burned, the scent is typically less evident than that of marijuana.
Salvia divinorum is the only species in the genus Salvia which contains salvinorins, the active compounds that produce a hallucinogenic effect. The leaves of S. divinorum could be used to trip, although one would need to use a much larger quantity than for the extract. The extract is simply the isolated and concentrated salvinorins (along with other compounds). Because the extract is more potent, it is generally much easier to get an effect from the extract, although it is certainly possible with simply the leaves (for example, a large quantity of leaves chewed as a quid).
wrap it up in a napkin and leave it somewhere for a couple days, the moisture will extract leaving it dry.
The drug commonly known as "salvia" is made from the (usually dried) foliage of the plant Salvia divinorum, a member of the sage family. Sometimes, the active substances of the plant (Salvinorins, particularly Salvinorin A), are extracted and reapplied to another batch of leaves, creating a concentrated form of the drug. These are commonly referred to as extracts.
Salvia divinorum does not often produce seeds (and almost never produces viable ones). Also, the seeds are quite small and contain little Salvinorin A. Therefore, the foliage of S. divinorum is the part of the plant smoked for psychotropic effects, not the seeds.