|      Gisele Beker,    a 26-year-old Argentinian, trudged for hours in scorching sun to the    sprawling Wirikuta desert, craving peyote, the cactus hallucinogen locals in Mexico    deem sacred. Joined by three Mexican    friends, Beker was living her dream as part of a new wave of tourists taking    a trip for a trip -- in this case to see where "lophophora    williamsii" takes her. "Did you strike gold    yet?" she asks her Mexican friends anxiously -- after a 700-kilometre    (435-mile) hitch-hike -- as they search the desert floor for the small,    spineless cactus full of psychoactive alkaloids, particularly mescaline. The drug is technically    illegal but for centuries it has played a role in indigenous culture in    northern Mexico and Texas, where it is part of transcendence and meditation    for cultures such as the Wixarika, or Huicholes in Spanish. So much so, that this    remote corner of San Luis Potosi state has become a bit of a promised land    for those who have trekked here to try peyote, despite the logistical    challenges, since the 1960s. The tourists just keep    trickling in. They have not been    deterred by the difficult topography, and there is no indication they have    paid any heed to rusty, metal signs announcing regularly that    "HARVESTING AND SELLING PEYOTE IS A FEDERAL CRIME." Nor has the legal    background done anything to change the availability of local guides who, when    they hear the magic words from tourists -- "We want to go out to the    desert" -- sidle up and quietly offer their services. Cesar, one of Gisele's    friends who wanted to keep his last name private, recalls his favorite    saying: "You do not find peyote. It finds you." When the group locates    what they have come for, the rituals start in earnest. Typically, people ask    permission from the Wirikuta desert where the indigenous people believe the    universe was created. Then an offering is made    to the plant and people are careful not to uproot it. The peyote is splashed    with water and its small button-shaped fleshy parts are eaten. "It is like a fruit,    fleshy but very bitter," says Gisele. The native people see the    plant as the symbolic heart of the deer god, as well as their communications    hotline with the gods. Every year, the local    community treks to Quemado hill led by a shaman who gives blessings and makes    offerings to the peyote. Soaking up the mystical    feel of the place, Mexican Eliana bites on her peyote. "It's like going    inside your own spirit," she says. "When I finish, I am going to    think some more and then I am leaving." Many people experience    heightened senses, synesthesia, vomiting and other effects while on the drug. Chris Biddle, a    32-year-old South African, said he and his girlfriend felt connected to    nature, but that the experience "is not for everybody." Local expert Jose Luis    Bustos, 67, underscored that people trying to treat peyote without respect    would perhaps pay a price. "Peyote is not a    drug," he said. "It is a sacred plant. And it must be treated with    great respect, because if someone does something bad, the plant just may    punish him, treat him badly." Other locals also have    voiced concern at cases of foreigners who came from around the world only to    die alone in the desert, or wind up in local psychiatric facilities. Mayor Hector Moreno    warned: "Peyote is exclusively for (indigenous) Huichol culture. The    rest of us are only supposed to promote its preservation and respect for    it."  |    
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