Posts Tagged ‘ayahuasca shipibo’

Doña Ercilia

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

Doña Ercilia by a Lechecaspi teacher tree in Ashi Meraya

Photo Courtesy: Isabel Grau

“Doña Ercilia [...]  is an amazingly powerful shaman who is a constant generator of unconditional love and acceptance.  I felt healed, supported, loved and encouraged.  It was profoundly beautiful! At every moment and in every ceremony Doña Ercilia was an impeccable, wise and powerful shaman.  She is not caught in the “ego trip” so common to medicine men and women of her calibre.  This is simply “her work” and she does it all with love, honour, humility and respect.  I witnessed her create and hold sacred space that was filled with energy and love.  Her ability to cast a shield of protection is beyond compare.  Once inside sacred space with her, she tunes into your journey and your energy.  She knows exactly what you need.  Her icaros are capable of soothing, energizing, transforming, purging or accompanying depending on what you need at the moment she tunes in to your body and spirit.  In an ayahuasca ceremony she also knows when you need help or energy and moves from person to person as required.  I was also able to witness her profound personal healing powers.  I was privileged to observe her conduct two extractions on one of the guests.  No “fan-fair,” no ego, no show. . . just good, clear, amazing healing work.  In our western world it is not every day you see a shaman suck foreign objects out of the human body.  The procedure was successful, simple, and quick; leaving no exit wound.  Ashi Meraya has always attracted the best shaman to work with and it is clear that Doña Ercilia is continuing that tradition of quality and care.  I wish everyone could spend some time with her and experience the true Shipibo healing with love.”

J. P. Fischbach, Shaman, & Film Director, Victoria, AUSTRALIA

Maestra Doña Ercilia preparing a ritual flower bath in Ashi Meraya

Photo Courtesy: Isabel Grau
Doña Ercilia – a most genuine indigenous shaman curandera from the Shipibo-Conibo ethnic group of the Peruvian Amazon rainforest – began her first diet with plant teachers at the age of 10, and has so far accumulated a cumulative work experience of 31 years in the field of Amazonian shamanism. She apprenticed under the tutelage of Shipibo master shaman Don Jorge Ahuanari (her own father) first, then, respectively, with Don Iologio Brito Fasanando (her grandfather) and Don Antonio afterwards.

She committed and distinguished herself in following very disciplined and impeccable long shamanic diets, with dozens and dozens of different teacher plants and trees, including – among many others – Ayahuasca, Azucar Huayo, Aya Uma, Remocaspi and Chullachaqui caspi, as well as different varieties of shamanic perfumes and Fuego de Capirona.

Doña Ercilia burning a virote extracted from a patient in Ashi Meraya

Photo Courtesy: Isabel Grau

Her shamanic specialization – in Shipibo tongue – is oyushun yube tsecati, meaning “extracting virotes“. Virotes are a very mysterious thing, specific of Amazonian shamanism, witchcraft and sorcery. They are magical darts which can take – in the physical world – the form of a black spine, a thorn or a sharp object intended to cause harm on to an intended target. Indeed, guests who attended our retreats and had the privilege of seeing Doña Ercilia in action, have seen with their eyes her shamanic extraction capabilities, and have directly witnessed the extraction of solid objects like small dark/blackish stones, a black dart/thorn – and in one instance – even a whitish worm-like live thing from the body of patients.

She specializes in dealing with *impossible cases*, where sorcery (brujeria), witchcraft (hechiceria) and/or black magic (magia negra) may have been at play in affecting the health of a patient.
Her teachers thought her many healing arts alongside defensas (i.e. warding off malevolent attacks from brujos or hechiceros).

Doña Ercilia is a very traditional and powerful indigenous shamanic healer, who has simply left behind her ego. She had *no previous contacts with Westerns before May 2011*, and we feel very privileged to have established a deep bond of shamanic fellowship with her.

A gem of genuinity coming from the heart, she has a humble, gentle, pragmatic, very down to earth and reserved nature. A true rarity our days…

In line with the Shipibo tradition, Doña Ercilia prepares the Ayahuasca brew employing ayahuasca vine cuts and the leaves of the chacruna bush.

Maestro Heberto (Coshi Niwe)

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

Master shaman Heberto (Shipibo name Coshi Niwe)  belongs to the Shipibo-Conibo ethnic group of the Peruvian Amazon and descends from a lineage of indigenous Shipibo Merayas (the highest level shamans for the Shipibo people) and Onanya (shamans).  A relative of Don Mariano, Don Alfredo and Dona Ercilia, he is the grandson of both Don Leoncio and Don Guillermo Ramirez, one of the last Merayas belonging to the Shipibo culture.

Maestro Heberto (Coshi Niwe) performing the Merayas’ Smoke Medicine Ritual

Photo Courtesy: Isabel Grau


He is native of the community of Maputae (also known as Quebrada con Greda), a place where many Merayas and Onanya gathered to conduct their shamanic rituals and ceremonies. All throughout his childhood Heberto was constantly and directly exposed to the shamanic teachings of his grandpa (Guillermo) and grandma (Lusmilla), who passed on to him their knowledge. Thanks to them he had also the privilege of receiving the Arkanas (spells of protection) and shamanic energies of two elderly Merayas: Don Lucho (Guillermo’s brother) and Bawan Sani (Guillermo’s cousin), in the last stages of their earthly life. Years later, Heberto began his shamanic diets under the guidance of his grandparents and other shamans (from the Shipibo as well as from the Ashaninka and Cacataibo ethnic groups), who transmitted him their shamanic powers.

Shaman of the Wind: The Initiation

It all started very early though, with a storm and the Gods of the Winds stealing his soul, when Heberto was only a two year old infant. One day, whilst his mother, Ines Ramirez, was taking the washing in, a very strong storm arrived suddenly. Heberto ran out crying into the yard, where at that very moment something strange happened: the Gods of the Winds took away his soul.

The Shipibo believe that babies and children must not be left outdoors or be exposed nakedly when strong winds blow. It is said that when storms arrive they bring with them the Gods of the Winds (los dioses de los vientos), who would steal and carry away the souls of defenseless babies or children, should they find them in their path.

When this happens, the soul-less baby or child is destined to die after a short time. Ines brought her child (who had become very weak and emaciated due to constant vomiting and diarrhea) to her curandero uncle, Incan Nima. After having tested the pulse of the baby he declared that he could not save Heberto’s life as he had already lost his soul. Incan Nima, however, recommended bringing the baby to the Meraya Don Lucho, to see if he could help. Ines, in desperation and as last resort, took Heberto to be seen by the Meraya. After making an initial diagnostic assessment he conducted a special ceremony in the afternoon, where he drank his tobacco potion and sat behind a large mosquito net, where entered into a trance. Upon completing the ritual, he related the following to Heberto’s mother:

“The cities of the spirits are similar to the cities of our world: there you have huge houses, buildings, military and civil personnel, amongst other things. In that spirit world dwell ‘storm-men’, ‘lightning-men’ and ‘thunder-men’. I went to the city of the wind gods. I went up and entered the highest storey of the tallest building there, and met some very strange men with large ears and snake-like hair. They were the gods of the winds, seated around in circle. One of them held in his arms your son and was giving him something to drink.”

I then asked:

‘Why did you take my nephew? I came to rescue him, give him back to me!’

And they replied:

‘He will be returned to you but you need to know that we have already given him our magical drink so he may be like one of us. Even if you take him back with you, he will not be any longer a normal baby. From the moment that he drank our magical drink he received our powers and if you will comply with the indications that we will give you, he will be like one of us’ ( a god-like creature or spirit). You’ll need to hide him for three months, so that no one – except you – will see him. Bathe him only with the Niwe Rao and Yoman Rao plants. And give him only vegetables and fruit as food. This will be the pact between you and us. This way he will always be in touch with us!’


The secret held by Don Guillermo, that of being a Meraya, was kept until his last day on earth. He was previously known as a Shipibo writer (specialized in Shipibo culture, legends, myths and shamanism) and a storyteller. It was only after his death, with the discovery of his diary where he had noted all his life achievements as a Meraya, that the different shamanic diets that he did with many different shamans (especially with the Merayas) came to light. Why this secret was kept for all his life remains until now a mystery for both the Shipibo family he belonged to and the Shipibo community in general.

Don Walter

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

Don Walter  (Shipibo name: Chono Tsoma), originally from the native community of Nuevo Loreto, in the Ucayali region of the Peruvian Amazon. He is a Palero Ayahuasquero and a master herbalist (naturista). Don Walter has distinguished himself for doing his work with much love and enthusiasm.

Shipibo master shaman Don Walter (Chono Tsoma), in the jungle surroundings of Ashi Meraya

Photo Credit: Heberto Hiran Garcia Ramirez

Click here for info on the shamanic plant diet with Don Walter

The Ayahuasca brew prepared by Don Walter (Chono Tsoma)

A warm, gentle, humble, patient and compassionate healer – and with wonderful icaros too! – our Shipibo master shaman has his own style of preparing the Ayahuasca brew, which he prepares using Ayahuasca (Banisteriopsis sp.) vine cuts, Chacruna (Psychotria viridis) and Toe’ (Brugmansia suavolensis) leaves, Mapacho (Nicotiana sp., black jungle tobacco), all mixed together with the actual Ayahuasca leaves.

Shipibo master shaman Chono Tsoma cooking the Ayahuasca brew in Ashi Meraya

Photo Credit: Heberto Hiran Garcia Ramirez

The use of Ayahuasca leaves in the making of the Ayahuasca brew is – to the best of our knowledge – a rarity among shamans in the North West Peruvian Amazon. Sometimes, the fresh leaves of the Huambisa (Diplopterys sp.) and Chaliponga (Diplopterys cabrerana) plants are also added to the brew, to make it even more potent.

Ayahuasca cooking in Ashi Meraya

Photo Credit: Heberto Hiran Garcia Ramirez

Interestingly, the names of the Huambisa and Chaliponga plants are sometimes used indistinctly by some botanical sources (as apparently referring to the same plant), but our Shipibo maestro distinguish the two, as part of the same genus, but being two different species altogether.

The Apprenticeship of Shipibo Maestro Chono Tsoma

Don Walter had – as it’s current practice among many native shamans of the Peruvian Amazon – a rather ‘multi-ethnic’ shamanic background, re. his own apprenticeship. His teachers were Don Palomino Estrella (a master shaman of the Cacataibo/Cashibo ethnic group), Don Umberto Shapiama Cruz (an indigenous Cocama shaman)), Don Marcos Ricopa (a Campa-Ashaninka shaman), Don Leoncio Garcia Sampaya (an elderly Shipibo shaman and former maestro at Ashi Meraya) and Doña Lucia Cumapa Ocampo (a Shipibo shamanka).

Click here for info on the shamanic plant diet with Don Walter.

”Ayahuasca: The Magical Brew of Amazonian Shamans”, by Francesco Sammarco

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Shipibo shamans: Don Mariano (left) and Don Alfredo (right) during an Ayahuasca ceremony

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

“Happy is he among men upon earth who has seen these mysteries…”

Homeric Hymn to Demeter

There are many local designations for the visionary and healing brew that goes under the common name of Ayahuasca. Yajé’ or Yage’ (in Colombia), Caapi, Hoasca or Daime (among Brazilian religious adepts), among the Shipibos it’s Oni, among the “Amawaka” (Yora) Indians it’s Oni xuma, the Ashaninka natives call it Kamarampi, whilst the Jibaros call it Natema.

In Peru it is generally known as Ayahuasca – simplified Spanish rendering of the Quechua neologism Ayawaska or Ayawaskha. The word can be translated as “Rope-of-the-Soul”, “Vine-of-the-Spirit”, “Vine-of-the-Ancestor”, or “Vine-of-the-Dead”. It is – at once – the name given to the Banisteriopsis caapi vine and to the magic, mysterious and visionary concoction which has been used ritually – from immemorial time – by the indigenous people of the Amazon basin, specifically for prophecy, divination, telepathy, shape-shifting, cleansing, diagnosis of an illness, and also for healing. A shaman specialized in the use of Ayahuasca is known in Peru as an Ayahuasquero (or Ayahuascero).

We shall use throughout these pages the word ”ayahuasca” (in lower cases) to refer to the actual vine specimen-s, and the word ”Ayahuasca” (in upper cases) when referring to the homonymous brew or concoction prepared by the shamans.

Cielo Ayahuasca vine cuts ready to be prepared

There exist many different varieties of ayahuasca vine, over one hundred have in fact been identified, but the most commonly used in the Northern Peruvian Amazon is the Cielo ayahuasca one, which is reputed to be the most suitable for initiations, can deliver profound visions (and purging!!) and is safe to use.

Trueno Ayahuasca vine (Upper Peruvian Amazon)

Among other varieties – which are for more specialized uses and normally only for very experienced users altogether – we have:

- Trueno ayahuasca (Spanish for “Thunder ayahuasca”);
- Yana ayahuasca (Quechua for “Black ayahuasca”), or ayahuasca negra, in Spanish;
- Puka ayahuasca (Quechua for “Red ayahuasca”);
- Yura ayahuasca (Quechua for “White ayahuasca”);

Allpa Ayahuasca vine growing on a Chonta Quiro tree (Upper Peruvian Amazon)

Photo Credit: Paola Garavaglia

- Allpa ayahuasca (Quechua for “earth ayahuasca”), or “ayahuasca de la tierra” (in Spanish);
- Rayo ayahuasca (Spanish for “ray ayahuasca”, often another name for the “Cielo ayahuasca” variety), and:
- Cascabel ayahuasca (Spanish for “rattle ayahuasca”, possibly the most potent variety known).

Cooking of the Ayahuasca brew in the Amazon

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

The Ayahuasca brew – which has powerful consciousness-expanding properties, has strong antihelmintic effects (kills parasites) and is prepared by boiling for several hours (from six-eight to fourteen, depending on where and by whom it is made) the pounded, scraped stems of the Cielo Ayahuasca (Banisteriopsis caapi) vine, together with the leaves of the Chacruna (Psychotria viridis) green shrub.

At times, many other plant ingredients too are added, the most common of which are usually the black jungle tobacco called Mapacho (Nicotiana tabacum/Nicotiana rustica), the leaves of the shrub Chagropanga (Diplopterys cabrerana), along with few leaves of the powerful Toe’ (Brugmansia suavolens) plant.

Chagropanga – also known by the name of Ojo Yajé - and Huambisa (Diplopterys sp.) may be combined with, as as well as being a substitute of, the Chacruna plant in the making of the Ayahuasca drink.

Toe’ – i.e. Brugmansia suavolens – a powerful plant additive to the Ayahuasca brew

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

Toe’ – i.e. Brugmansia suavolens – a powerful plant additive to the Ayahuasca brew

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

Toe’: a plant of the Solanaceae family, somehow affiliated to the Datura – has beautiful bell-shaped flowers and is always used very sparingly by indigenous and mestizo shamans (vegetalistas) alike. It’s a toxic plant which demands extreme care in preparations. Don Alfredo – being also a Toesero (i.e. a shaman specialized in working with Toe’) – only add two leaves of Toe’ in the Ayahuasca concoction he prepares, although actual quantities employed may vary from shaman to shaman.

Ayahuasca cooking in the Ashi Meraya centre of Traditional Amazonian Medicine

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

Each maestro has his or her own (often jealously and secretly kept) recipe, and hardly exist two which can be considered the same, for ingredients used, and time and way of cooking and preparing the brew. Don Mariano, for instance, interviewed by us on the topic, maintains that Ayahuasca can be prepared also with sugar (!!) or with honey, but that this will make the brew much stronger and more concentrated than normal, will deliver a strong intoxication, and therefore the quantity one would need to drink has to be very very little, almost tiny.

The power of the Ayahuasca medicine emanates from the bubble formations, according to Don Alfredo

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

The Chemistry

The Banisteriopsis caapi vine is a source of various harmala alkaloids (like harmine, harmaline, and others) once called Telepathine and Banisterine – and all of which are monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOI). The low percentage (0.3% to 1.2%) of harmala alkaloids present in the Banisteriopsis vine is not enough – taken on its own – to trigger psychotropic effects, which may otherwise be slightly experienced with the intake of an higher concentration.

The Psychotria viridis – on the other hand – is a botanical source of Dimethyltryptamine (known as well as DMT and N,N-dimethyltryptamine), and is found and produced in small quantities also by our own brain. DMT alone would not work – taken orally – without the intervention of the MAO inhibitors.

The power of the medicine – “el poder de la medicina” – according to Don Alfredo, resides in the bubble formations that are produced – and may be seen – during the brew boiling process.

Shipibo shaman Don Mariano pounding Ayahuasca vine cuts

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

The Brew: Plant Alchemy of the Amazon Basin

Of all identified species of Banisteriopsis in the entire Amazon basin, the most common one used by the shamans and vegetalistas in Peru, is the Cielo ayahuasca variety, believed to induce heavenly visions (cielo means “heaven” in Spanish). It also goes under the name of Ayahuasca amarilla (“yellow ayahuasca”, in Spanish). There is also an immense variety of recipes for the preparation of the brew, which have the purpose of enhancing the experience of taking the Ayahuasca, boosting the mareacion (status of inebriation and intoxication following the drinking of the brew), in either length or quality/intensity, or both. Specifically, the Chagropanga (Diplopterys cabrerana), used more widely in the Colombian Amazon – is a powerful source of 5-MeO-DMT.

Chacruna leaves layer

Pounded ayahuasca vine cuts layer

The essential ingredients of the brew in the Peruvian Amazon remain the ayahuasca vine and the leaves of the chacruna shrub.

The Ayahuasca brew – as prepared by Shipibo master shaman Chono Tsoma, in the Ashi Meraya Centre of Traditional Amazonian Medicine contains these two essential ingredients, with the addition of Toe’, Mapacho (black jungle tobacco) and Ayahuasca (Banisteriopsis caapi) leaves. Chagropanga and Huambisa may also be added at times as a substitute for – or in addition to- the the Chacruna, to enhance the potency of the brew.

Shipibo shaman Don Mariano – being the very cautious and traditional maestro he is – maintains that using too many plant additives in the making of the concoction may not be the correct thing to do, as one would first need to properly diet with each and every one of these other plants, instead than taking them directly through the Ayahuasca brew without previous preparation. Doing otherwise – i.e. taking the shortcut of adding too many plants without “knowing” them first through a proper dieta - could only make the potential side effects of the brew stronger, and may only increase the mareacion (intoxication). Don Mariano contends that there is no intrinsic advantage in using other plants for the making of the brew, without having gone through a proper apprenticeship first, via the shamanic plant diet. However, in special cases, the brew can be made adding Sacha piña (Aechmea sp.) and Azucar huayo (Hymenaea sp.), among other plants.

Don Alfredo attending the preparation of the Ayahuasca medicine

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

A beverage prepared with the Ayahuasca vine cuts alone wouldn’t normally produce visions (just purging), and the same would happen if one was to take a concoction prepared with the chacruna plant on its own. By means of an apparent very simple process – which reveals, however, at close range examination, an utterly sophisticated research and knowledge on side of the indigenous people who made first this discovery – the two plants prepared together work wonderfully in synergy and each one maximize the benefit of the other.

Ayahuasca and chacruna work synergetically not only on the biochemical plane – making possible the assimilation of the alkaloids otherwise attacked by the enzymes present in our digestive system – they are also believed to be, respectively, a “grandfather” and a “grandmother” plant spirit.

One may be blessed by wonderful visions and/or amazing revelations, without ever having hoped to see or know anything, whilst others yet may see nothing at all. Nothing is granted with Ayahuasca. Many factors – visible and invisible, ranging from one’s own attitude, psycho-physical conditions and sensitivity, to the respect of the dietary prescriptions, to climatic conditions, to the icaros sang by the shamans, to changes in the electromagnetic field and even the moon, to quote a few – may contribute in different degrees to the depth of the visionary experience given by the Ayahuasca medicine.

The Ayahuasca concoction almost ready, before being filtered

Ayahuasca & Health Precautions:

Click here and Please Read it Carefully!!

Ayahuasca brew being filtered

The Ayahuasca Diet

The avoiding of sexual intercourse and any form of sexual activity – from three days before, until three to five days after each Ayahuasca ceremony is of paramount importance, especially in light to preserve one’s “distilled” sexual energy during the challenging, magical encounter with the Ayahuasca spirit.

Don Mariano – interviewed by us on this matter – maintained a rather “provocative” position: “la ayahuasca no se dieta antes, si no despues”, that is: the Ayahuasca medicine is not to be dieted before [taking it], but after!

Equally important is refraining from pork meat and derivate (ham, bacon, pepperoni, salami, etc), for 15 days before your first ceremony, until at least 15 days after your last ceremony. You need to arrive at the ceremony in the most possible energetically pure conditions, in order to benefit the most from this experience.

Food to Avoid

Avoid altogether – for at least 12 hours before the Ayahuasca ceremony – any food containing stimulants, caffeine, spices, chili, fats, oil, salt and sugar. And please refrain from having any fermented stuff like Soya sauce/Tamari, Soya beans paste/curd (like Miso or Tofu), beer, vermouth wine, aged/moldy cheese (cheddar, Parmesan, Swiss cheese, blue cheese), yeast and all other food which is a potential source of tyramine, like mature avocados, eggplants, figs, grapes, pineapples, plums, raisins, prunes, broad beans, fava beans, lentils, peanuts, dried milk, sour cream, yogurt, buttermilk, chocolate, Vegemite and sauerkraut. Taking foods containing tyramine in conjunction with monoamine oxidase inhibitors, can trigger hypertensive crisis and migraines.

We recommend to fast on the day of taking Ayahuasca, or else, to only have a light breakfast and a very light lunch, and – by all means – no dinner. It will be also much beneficial to drink plenty of water, on the day of drinking the purge, up until one hour before the ceremony begins. However, no water must be drunk during the Ayahuasca ceremony: doing so will only make the side effects of the medicine last longer, with no visionary effects. Remember that whatever food you may take on the day of the ceremony, will most certainly come out of your body via the “lower” or “upper” ways, after drinking the medicine.

Tatuajes: Transferring Symbols of Power

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

A ritual body painting session where the Shipibo family will draw on you – in the form of an impermanent ‘tattoo’ (lasting about 10-14 days) made using a natural plant dye – the Arkana, or spiritual/energetic protection, laid on you by the shaman, during the Ayahuasca sessions.

Shipibo Ritual Body Painting
Photo Courtesy: Stephen Witte

The Arkana may be an animal, a bird, an insect, a plant or a tree, or else, an inanimated object like a stone or a geometric design. In the Shipibo world these abstract designs are intimately connected with the Shipibo cosmovision and are deeply intertwined with musical patterns: they are effectively musical pathways to the Spirit world.

Ayahuasca Journey

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

Chullachaki caspi “macho” teacher tree in Ashi Meraya

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

Our Ayahuasca retreats are very intensive. You may now opt to have up to FIVE Ayahuasca sessions in your first week of retreat, swapping the Toe’ ritual with an extra Ayahuasca ceremony. Then it’s FOUR Ayahuasca healing and visionary sessions for each week thereafter!!

Learn, assist and join the preparation of the sacred ‘Vine of the Soul” (or ”Vine of the Spirit”, or else more, “Vine of the Dead”). See how it is made into brew, pounding the woody ayahuasca (Banisteriopsis caapi) vine cuts first and then boiling them for long hours together with Chacruna, Chalipongo (Ojo Yagè) and Toè plant additives, over a traditional wood fire.

Ayahuasca ceremony at night

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

Ayahuasca rituals take place in the jungle, at night, around 9 pm, in almost total darkness (exception made for candle or lantern-light, right at the beginning of the ritual). The healing treatments (“curaciónes”) of the shaman-s will take place during the sacred – and magical – time of the ceremony, regardless of whether you would be effectively taking – or not – the Ayahuasca brew. It’s therefore of paramount importance to attend all the sessions – a requirement to all – whilst the taking of the Ayahuasca tea proper is entirely voluntary.

Shamans before the beautiful Remo caspi teacher tree
Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

One of the night rituals with the medicine may be done in the open wilderness, in a special area cleared for the purpose of conducting ceremonies, and protected by the oldest palo maestro (teacher tree) of Ashi Meraya, a massive and beautiful Remo caspi (Aspidosperma excelsum) tree.

Healing may take place in many different fashions whilst one is journeying with the “Vine of the Soul” (or “Rope of the Dead”, as the word Ayawaska may also be rendered in Quechua) and may well take the form of auditory – or even silent – revelations, sudden emotional unblocks, cleansing of negative feelings and – on the material plane – simply the expelling of toxins and/or parasites through bodily purges, and a sense of having been cleansed thoroughly.

Each participant is invited to focus on his/her own healing and/or concentrate on the revelatory and visionary elements that may bestowed upon one when accessing the realms of the “Vine of the Soul”. Don Mariano recommended that one of best ways to go to the appointment with the Ayahuasca is to beg the spirit of the medicine – in total humbleness – to grant you visions.

The Native American Tradition of “crying for a vision” may easily be adopted to the way one should approach the Ayahuasca experience. All will benefit, in one way or another, sooner or later, from this experience. Ayahuasca – when taken properly, under the guidance of a respectable shaman, and when the necessary dietary restrictions are observed – can heal our hyper-loaded neurons, and can give sense, direction and purpose to our lives.

Ayahuasca cooking over traditional wood-fire in Ashi Meraya

Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

The main plant additives employed in the making of the Ayahuasca concoction – as currently prepared in Ashi Meraya – are:

  • the fresh leaves of the Chacruna (Psychotria viridis) green shrub
  • the fresh leaves of the Ayahuasca (Banisteriopsis caapi) vine
  • the fresh leaves of the Toè (Brugmansia suaveolens) plant
  • Mapacho (Nicotiana tabacum/Nicotiana rustica), i.e. organic black jungle tobacco.

At times, the fresh leaves of the Huambisa (Diplopterys sp.) and Chaliponga (Diplopterys cabrerana) plant – also known by the names of Chagropanga and Ojo Yaje’ – are also used in the making of the brew, as alternative (or supplement) to the Chacruna leaves. Depending on the length and nature of your retreat, you may also learn (under supervision) how to prepare the Ayahuasca medicine (this last aspect of the training is, however, more suited to those who will be doing the shamanic plant diet apprenticeship).

Ayahuasca brew cooking in Ashi Meraya
Photo Credit: Francesco Sammarco

The Ayahuasca prepared by our Shipibo shamans is very strong and thick and – under normal circumstances – one should only need a small cup to enter and deeply experience non-ordinary states of consciousness.

You are strongly invited to carefully read all the Guidelines and Health Notes we have provided, and to follow and abide to the required dietary prescriptions, before, during and after taking the powerful Ayahuasca medicine. We always endorse and support safety and responsibility when it comes to journeying with shamanic entheogenic plant medicine. The paradigm within which we operate is and remains shamanistic, not psychedelic. We are firmly committed to the traditional use of entheogenic plant sacraments only and exclusively within the operative ritual framework that has been designed by the Amazonian shamans themselves.