
2025 Garden States Presentations
More to be announced soon!
From Clinics to Community: Exploring the Spectrum of Psychedelic-Assisted Psychotherapy in Australia
Petra Skeffington and Dr Stephen Bright
This presentation will explore what we have learned through the lived experiences of individuals undergoing Psychedelic Assisted Psychotherapy about the suitability of these treatments in a range of different clinical and non-clinical settings. Our aim is not to advocate for one approach over the other, but to clarify the different roles that these therapies can play in healing, depending on the individual and their circumstances.
Australian Psilocybe and their Ecology
Caine Barlow
The past decade has seen a significant turnaround in our understanding of the genus Psilocybe in Australia, with passionate citizen scientists contributing to a deepening understanding of ecology and distribution of many species.
This talk examines both well known species of Psilocybe, reviewing what we know, and discussing new species being found which have contributed to a dynamic picture of species over space and time.
Global Mushroom Magic: Current Legal Models of Access to Psilocybin Around the World
Martin Williams
Psilocybin is a Schedule 1 Prohibited Substance in most parts of the world, but various jurisdictions are enabling access to psilocybin by one (or both) of two pathways: decriminalisation and legalisation. This talk will provide an overview of the current legal status and models of access to psilocybin in various countries, and the way forward in medical and non-clinical contexts.
A Critical Feminist Perspective on Historic and Contemporary Clinical Psychedelic Use in Australia
Kayla Greenstien
Current psychedelic training and practice in Australia are shaped by transpersonal and spiritual frameworks that carry long-standing ethical concerns. This talk takes a critical feminist approach to understanding how these frameworks became uncritically embedded in clinical practice, and why this is a problem.
Fruiting Bodies, Political Depression and Composting the Psychedelic Dream
Samuel Douglas
What happens after the dream dies? After it’s co-opted, diluted, and sold back to us in government-approved doses for those who can afford it, while those who can’t risk their freedom for a glimpse of transcendence? This talk is for those sitting with the weight of these questions.
Acacia Crossroads
Nen
This talk will look at some of the lesser-known but fairly common medicinal and psychoactive compounds in Acacia sensu lato (worldwide) which have important applications, barely yet explored by the scientific world. Also, we will look at the profound cultural/spiritual significance of these trees, which sets them apart from other kinds of healing or sacred plants.
Wood-lover paralysis: what we know so far
Caine Barlow and Dr Simon Beck
Caine Barlow and Dr Simon Beck ran a citizen-science survey aiming to provide the first systematic description of the “wood-lover paralysis” phenomenon and try to identify any clear factors that might predict or explain the seemingly random nature of its occurrence. Join them to learn about the findings, their thoughts on several theories about the phenomenon, their experience of trying to undertake the research, observations on the spread of (mis)information and their harm reduction advice.
Determination of Psychoactive Alkaloids in Psilocybe subaeruginosa of Victoria by HPLC-PDA
Mohammad Reza Mirzadeh
Psilocin, psilocybin and the associated tryptamines are psychoactive alkaloids which are naturally synthesised by Psilocybe (Fr.) P.Kumm. fungi, commonly referred to as magic mushrooms. These psychoactive fungi were and may still be used in traditional healing rituals, particularly by certain ethnic groups for mental healing, influencing modern psychedelic studies. Since these substances are intermittently determined in analytical laboratories, validated methods for fast, accurate and reliable analysis are in demand.
Psychedelic Embodiment
Nick Sun
Many Indigenous ways of knowing are based in whole-body perception, while the modern West is primarily a mind-centred culture. The consequences of living in a mind-centred culture are evident in the many crises we are going through at the moment, as the product of the mind as a primary navigation tool is to separate and divide you from both a holistic sense of beingness within the world and the present moment. This fundamental disconnection is what lies at the root of the environmental crisis, the mental health crisis and many of the other situations we currently find ourselves in.
Psychoactive Plants of the ‘Middle East’
Snu Voogelbreinder
The region known today as the Middle East has a rich history, birthing streams of culture, religion and civilization that have helped form the modern world, and psychoactive plants have played a large role in the background.
Discussions around the use of psychoactive plants in the region are usually historical and focused mainly on their relation to Judaeo-Christian scriptures and traditions. In this presentation we will go further and explore other uses of plants and fungi amongst the diverse cultures of the region, both historic and contemporary.
Iboga Healing: A Real-life Story
Vanessa Kelly
In the deep Gabonese Jungle, on the central west coast of Africa, exists a trib of people known as Missoko Bwiti. They are most well known for their use of the Iboga root bark for healing, ceremony and Shamanistic practices.