Agni
(Stranger) 07-30-04 11:29 No 522745 |
camphor tree | |||||||
hi everyone, im moving up from meth to mdma/mda now wooohooo! the main reason being that i believe i have about 5 camphor trees on my property, that are over taking my yard! they look very much like all the picture of camphor trees i have seen, but im not positive. here are some pictures of one of my trees. i would greatly apreciate it if you bees could help me out by (positivly) identifying this tree. thanks so much! |
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methyl_ethyl (Guardian) 07-30-04 14:29 No 522765 |
Olfactory Identification | |||||||
Take a few leaves and crush them up in your hand, does it smell like camphor? The pictures although fairly blurry, look like it may be Cinnammomum camphora regards, m_e Unipolar Mania, It's good for life... |
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MargaretThatcher (Stranger) 07-30-04 16:20 No 522791 |
Looks like it | |||||||
Certainly looks like a laurel. Trunk picture is too blurred to make out texture properly, but looks like a camphor laurel as do the leaves. (Köhler's Medizinal Pflanzen) |
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homeslice (Hive Bee) 07-30-04 17:13 No 522799 |
location of tree | |||||||
Is the camphor tree located in the NE US at all? It looks awfully familiar. EDIT: Maybe i was wrong. http://plants.usda.gov/cgi_bin/plant_pro "Drugs and akahol have ruiinnned my life..." -Tyrone Biggums |
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telemetric (Stranger) 08-01-04 02:36 No 523061 |
maybe | |||||||
the leaves look like leaves ive seen but the overall structure of the tree soesnt match what i know, thouhg it appears to be cultivated not grown wild so i guess thats why it might look so straight and narrow. do the leaf crush, it should smell really aromatic, quite distinct. but there are also alot of different species asking where you live seems irrelevant as it not wild but what country are you in? |
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r2e3 (Newbee) 08-02-04 15:22 No 523284 |
nice in theory | |||||||
but you do relise that it is bark and roots you are after.. also - the camphora genus - unless refined, provide a low yield of safrole <10% so just do some basic calculations.. i admire the organic theme - would love to try it but you gonna have some heavy steam distillation outback progress report would be amazing |
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MargaretThatcher (Stranger) 08-02-04 16:34 No 523292 |
Not so | |||||||
Safrole is found in the wood also. Concentration depends on the variety. http://www.margaretthatcher.com/ |
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r2e3 (Hive Bee) 08-03-04 13:52 No 523450 |
true | |||||||
i stand corrected - happily i might add as i have 1l of C. camphora and was under the impression it wasn't worth refining - so thanks in a kinda indirect way :-) My reference was: ../rhodium /safrole Quote: CAMPHOR OIL is obtained by steam distillation of the wood of the camphor tree Cinnamonum camphora Sieb. (Lauraceae) growing in China, Taiwan, Japan [and Australia, where it is classed as a noxious weed]. The main constituent of the crude oil is camphor (ca. 50%) which can be separated by cooling and centrifugation. Fractionation of the mother liquor gives two oils: 1) White camphor oil is the first distillation fraction (ca 20% of the crude camphor oil). It is a colourless or nearly colourless liquid with a cineole-like odour. 2) Brown Oil of camphor is a fraction with a boiling point higher than that of camphor (ca. 20%) It is a pale yellow to brown liquid with the odour of sassafras oil. Density 1.064-1.075; Optical rotation [ND20] 1.51 - 1.55 [alpha]d 0 to +3°. Flash point 6°C. Solubility 1 vol in 2 vols of 90% ethanol. The oil contains more than 80% safrole and, like Brazilian sassafras oil, is therefore used as raw material for the production of piperonal via isosafrole. Camphor oils with a high safrole content can also be obtained by steam distillation of the wood of Cinnamonum parthenoxylon Nees. Three Varieties of camphor oils are produced. +--------------------------------------- | Formosan Camphor oils | camphor-linalool and camphor-safrole types. | | Japanese Camphor oils | camphor-safrole types. | | Chinese Camphor oils | cineole-terpineol-camphor (Apopin Oil) type. | +--------------------------------------- Camphor oil "true" is produced by the steam distillation of the wood, rootstumps and branches of the type of Cinnamonum Camphora known as Hon-Sho, which grows in Formosa and Japan. [Ed Note: Hon-Sho oil holds 18.1% safrole) Along with the crude oil comes a solid, partly crystalline mass of crude camphor. The oil is separated from the crude camphor by filterpressing. This yields crude camphor oil. The crude oil is subsequently fractionally distilled under vacuum, and yeilds another 50% of crude camphor. The remaining 50% of filterpressed crude camphor oil is now free of camphor. It contains light terpenes, cineole, safrole, terpineol, sesquiterpenes, and sesquiterpene alcohols. These are separated into various fractions known as: +--------------------------------------- | White Camphor oil | The light fraction, containing cineole and | | | monoterpenes. | |-------------------+------------------- | Brown Camphor oil | The medium heavy fraction containing up to 80% | | | of safrole and some terpineol. | +--------------------------------------- [Extended Monograph] Brown oil of camphor is the medium heavy fraction from vacuum distillation of the camphor-free oil (aka white oil, filterpressed and camphor-free). Brown camphor oil amounts to 6 or 7 percent of the total oil, or 20-22% of the decamphorised oil. Brown oil is produced almost entirely in Formosa and Japan, from the Hon-Sho type of cinnamomum camphora, the camphor tree. This fraction is most interesting from the perfumer's point of view. Its main constituent is safrole, and the redistilled brown camphor can be used directly in soaps for its magnificent masking effect. The safrole can be isolated from the oil and used as a starting material for heliotropine, vanillin and other perfume materials. Terpineol is also separated during the safrole-isolation and serves as is or may be transformed into terpinyl esters. An artificial sassafras oil, "Oil Camphor Sassafrassy" is also produced from the brown oil by rectification and adjustment of the content of safrole, terpenes, etc. The extended monograph seems to be where i got things confused - on reinspection - looks like I may only get 20-22% safrole out.. Oh well still worth it. as for the trees, hacking them down seems a little extreme to me |
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paranoid (Hive Addict) 08-03-04 20:44 No 523534 |
Holy crap. I remember making Camphor oil in... | |||||||
Holy crap. I remember making Camphor oil in organic chem many years back. Little did I realise the significance at the time. I'll have to dig out my old lab book some time and see exactly what it was we did. My ideal vacation - Juxtaposed along the precipice intersecting reality and fantasy (i.e. wanking). |
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r2e3 (Hive Bee) 08-04-04 17:18 No 523704 |
yeah | |||||||
but camphor is only good for vicks vapour rub - all the goodness (safrole - dimethoxy) is somewhat more complicated |
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Agni (Stranger) 08-09-04 20:22 No 524547 |
im back.. | |||||||
thanks for the input everyone, sorry i was gone for a little bit i couldnt respond.. As for where this picture is from, swim lives in northern california (usa). ill get better pictures up soon as i can, my camera batterys are charging.. has anyone here ever distilled safrole from a camphor tree succesfuly? the whole natural route to mdma sounds so, well natural. i really like the idea. besides camphor trees, and sassafras has anyone made there own essential oils from other plants? |
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ApprenticeCook (Hive Bee) 08-09-04 23:24 No 524581 |
has anyone here ever distilled safrole from a... | |||||||
has anyone here ever distilled safrole from a camphor tree succesfuly? Myself, no, but i know another non-hive bee who has. Refer to rhodiums site for safrole content: ../rhodium /safrole So by all means give it a go, but read the extended into below the table to give you a little more info on how to go about it... -AC Its just my opinion, but no-one listens to me anyway, and rightly so... |
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