Clone name: Vin Ayautla
Collected in the Sierra Mazateca from the garden of a lesser-known traditional healer. The curandero stated that this plant was of his own provenance and had never previously been shared or taken beyond his garden. With his permission, it was later brought to the United States by Bob Otis Stanley.
The curandero’s garden is described as hidden, extensive, and carefully tended, consisting primarily of local plants that he had known, cultivated, and stewarded over many years.
Clone name: Wasson and Hofmann
Also known as Bunnell, this was the first Salvia divinorum clone brought back to the United States and subsequently distributed worldwide. It was gifted to ecologist and psychologist Sterling Bunnell in 1962 by a curandero in Oaxaca, Mexico. The name Wasson and Hofmann was later applied to this clone in 1992 by the now-defunct ethnobotanical company Of The Jungle. They used this name to distinguish it from another clone they introduced that same year, Blosser. This clone is noted for being more vigorous in growth than many other classic Salvia divinorum clones.


