
Floyd
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Floyd
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44
Mojave Mescal
Sleep comes in the desert like a drug, like dazzling images from peyote. Suddenly, the pupils shrink, pulsating blinding white waves smear the spirits of the Mojave into ethereal, shimmering menthols. Your journey has been long. Now, as the axons become roots, there is nothing around you but a glaring canvas. In it, the Joshua tree appears to you like a vaguely indistinct fever dream, lurking in the guise of a Pinyon Pine, casting vague, chirping shadows on the trance-like dancing shaman, who flails with sharp desert herbs to cool you, while at the same time igniting you in flames that shimmer like hot pepper over chaparral, in slow motion smoldering snowflakes, like silky smoke over sacred woods, condensing into milky resins and green glowing in barren soils.
**
Abby Hinsman crafts her botanical fragrances by hand. Most of the materials she uses are either grown by herself or harvested from her two-and-a-half-acre forest in Vermont. Accordingly, both her fragrances and delivery times vary, as she only produces very small batches.
What she has created with "Joshua Tree" comes remarkably close to her own associations of psychedelic cacti, mystical herbs, and terpene highs. On a sharply ethereal green canvas of terpenes, sage, and wild herbs, the needles and woods of the white pine, as well as sweet grass and angelica roots, initially appear diffusely like pulsating images of a peyote or psilocybin high. The sharpness of the spices and herbs sometimes feels burning hot and then again extremely cooling, sometimes it is both at once. I perceive aromas of black pepper, anise, wormwood, and the Californian maquis chaparral alongside sage. Over time, the balsamic notes of frankincense and palo santo provide relief, while the patchouli offers a benzene-like grounding in the green-spicy herbal salve. For a solid, the images are very clear, and the trip lasts surprisingly long.
**
Abby Hinsman crafts her botanical fragrances by hand. Most of the materials she uses are either grown by herself or harvested from her two-and-a-half-acre forest in Vermont. Accordingly, both her fragrances and delivery times vary, as she only produces very small batches.
What she has created with "Joshua Tree" comes remarkably close to her own associations of psychedelic cacti, mystical herbs, and terpene highs. On a sharply ethereal green canvas of terpenes, sage, and wild herbs, the needles and woods of the white pine, as well as sweet grass and angelica roots, initially appear diffusely like pulsating images of a peyote or psilocybin high. The sharpness of the spices and herbs sometimes feels burning hot and then again extremely cooling, sometimes it is both at once. I perceive aromas of black pepper, anise, wormwood, and the Californian maquis chaparral alongside sage. Over time, the balsamic notes of frankincense and palo santo provide relief, while the patchouli offers a benzene-like grounding in the green-spicy herbal salve. For a solid, the images are very clear, and the trip lasts surprisingly long.
Updated on 03/22/2022
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Ambrette seed
Angelica root
Frankincense
Palo Santo
Patchouli
Pinyon pine
Vetiver
White sage
Wild herbs
Woody notes
Gandix
PallasCC
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Seejungfrau





























