• Pantherina@feddit.de
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    9
    ·
    1 year ago

    In Siberia they actually traditionally dried fly agaric (amanita muscaria) mushrooms. Flying reindeers are a thing, they always ate the mushrooms and got high af, but without any headaches the next day.

    Vodka replaced the mushrooms, as its easy to store I guess. It was sold to them.

      • Pantherina@feddit.de
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        6
        arrow-down
        1
        ·
        1 year ago

        The santa claus story is veeery random. Like flying reindeers just like that, a dude in red-white clothes, a pine tree with red balls on it.

        People dried fly agaric mushrooms on pine trees, they are red. Sibirian shamans dressed like a fly agaric mushroom and went from house to house to gift them to people and make them less depressed, because they are said to help with that

        Its pretty funny and makes a lot of sense

      • Tlaloc_Temporal
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        6
        arrow-down
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        Mushrooms -> magical woodland animals -> mythology

        Where’s the confusion?

      • Tlaloc_Temporal
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        arrow-down
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        Mushrooms -> magical woodland animals -> mythology

        Where’s the confusion?

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      1 year ago

      It’s a little more disgusting than you’ve mentioned here.

      There was one aspect of Siberian mushroom intoxication, reported even in the earliest sources, that must have seemed singularly shocking to one who encountered it for the first time—the drinking of the urine of a bemushroomed person, and also the urine of reindeer that had browsed—as reindeer apparently like to do—on the fly-agaric.

      By no means all the tribes that used Amanita muscaria also drank fly-agaric urine, but the custom was sufficiently well-developed and widespread to have drawn the attention of almost every observer—from Count Filip Johann von Strahlenberg, a Swedish colonel who spent a dozen years in Siberia as a prisoner of war and reported on his observations in the early eighteenth century, to the trained ethnographers of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when the Europeanization of Siberia, which had begun in the seventeenth century, was well underway, but before traditional tribal life began to be radically transformed even in the remoter hinterlands in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution.

      https://www.drugtimes.org/hallucinogens-culture/the-flyagaric-and-the-intoxicating-urine.html

      • Pantherina@feddit.de
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        Wanted to skip that part haha, but yeah santa claus got high on reindeer-purified mushroom urine.