Thanks to daylight and all the others who helped put this list together!
@baj i didint think this should go in the salvia forum because it says "salvia divinorum" and not just salvia. ill let you decide.
Quote:
Salvia aegyptiaca: Extracts have antinociceptive effects in animals
Salvia aethiopis: Aethiopinone isolated from roots has antinociceptive effects in animals
Salvia africana-lutea: Water extract has antinociceptive effects in animals
Salvia argentia: Reported to be similar in activity to Salvia splendens
Salvia coccinea: Smoking 1/2 gram of leaves was reported to be "calming"
Salvia divinorum: Active
Salvia Dorrii: Reported to have been smoked by Native Americans and in particular the Ute Tribe for their mildly hallucinogenic effects. Also known as Tobacco Sage.
Salvia dorisiana: Leaves were described as "edible", suggestive oral inactivity.
Salvia elegans:
Reported as orally inactive. Conflicting reports have been made at The ********** forum of oral and smoked activty. There has also been a study done in Chile that reports anxiolytic- and antidepressant-like effects in rats from a hydroalcoholic extract.
i never noticed any effect from smoking it, the smoke does not taste like pineapple nor did the leaves when i ate them. - daylight
Salvia farinacea: Seems active but uninteresting. Smoking it didnt do anything special for me. Just a bit of relaxing activity. - daylight
Salvia greggii: Reported to be active
Salvia guaranitica:
Sedative and hypnotic due to its content of cirsiliol.
Smoking 1/2 dried leaf (leaves are very big) in a bong did not produce significant effects, just a placebo-like relaxation. - unsigned_char72 Salvia haematodes: Sedative, possible antinociceptive effects in animals
Salvia hormium: Leaves and seeds make liquor more inebriating, and powdered leaves make a good snuff
Salvia lavandulaefolie: Extracts inhibit acetylcholinesterase and improve memory and cognition
Salvia leriifolia: Leaf extract sedative, hypnotic, relaxant and antinociceptive in animals
Salvia leucantha:
Smoking the leaves is reported to increase the length of dreams - unsigned_char72
Smoking 200mg of plain leaf didn't seem to have any effect, but I usually don't recall dreams - entheodelic
No effect, but habitual cannabis use rules out dreams for the most part - daylight Salvia longispicata x farinacea (Mystic Spires): Smoked leaves are reported to be speedy, analgesic and aphrodisiac - zombiesoul
Salvia melissodora: reported to be active
S. mellifera (Black Sage): No effects when smoked as plain leaf - daylight
Salvia mexicana: no effects from quid of 2 leaves.
Salvia miltiorrhiza (dan shen): Roots and leaves are anxiolytic and sedative due to its content of miltirone. Seeds reported to be stimulating.
Salvia nemorosa:
Leaves and especially flowers of the Caradonna and Superba varieties (sometimes reported as its own species) are analgesic and produce vivid dreams when taken orally - zombiesoul
analgesic (but does not alter dreams) when smoked - daylight
The roots are also active - sputnik3
the May Night variety was reported to be weak - ref?
Five grams of superba (19 fresh leaves) or snow hill (33 fresh leaves) variety had no effect when quidded and swallowed. 22 grams (9 spires) of Pink Friesland shredded in hot water, strained and drunk had no effect. - entheodelic
I chewed a quid of one spire and two big leaves (quite a bit of plant matter in my mouth) and felt nothing. Been smoking increasingly larger amounts of flowers with nothing yet - Bum
smoked 1 bowl of just flowers, with a bit of my usual dried greens smoke blend. nothing to note first round. but it wasnt a large amount. didn't weigh it either. - teeko
"Blue Hills": Smoked about .3g dried material, mostly leaves, a few
small flower pieces. Slight heart effects, "rushing" sensation, relaxation and trippy feel, opiate-like euphoria, potentiation of hydrocodone. - ethnophile7
S. nemorosa: 60-80% relief from 500-700mg/day morphine habit - Lemmiwinks
"May Night": Mild - Zombiesoul
Salvia officinalis: Leaves mildly stimulating when eaten or smoked due to their content of thujone. Greatly intensifies/alters the effects of edit.
Salvia sclarea: essential oil is sedative and anticonvulsant
Salvia spathacea:
Gives a high extremely similar to S. nemorosa at 0.3g of plain leaf. Leaves very similar in appearance to nemorosa, they also share a purpling reaction when the leaves are dried out. - daylight
Smoked flowers were awarded the two middle finger (top) award by Zombiesoul Salvia splendens:
Leaves and flowers reported to be anxiolytic or mild intoxicant when smoked. Although a study by Daniel Siebert seemed to show these effects to be placebo, it seems that some varieties ('Bonfire', 'Blaze of fire') are active and others (the Sizzler series) are not.
Definately active, anxiolytic , sedative, emo-numbing effects from smoking some leaf. Harsh flavor and taste, flowers also active, they burn less but have more unpleasant flavor ~ mutant
Salvia transsylvanica: Reported to have significant analgesic, antipyretic, antiepileptic, antiinflammatory, antiulcerogenic, as well as tranquillizing activities.
Salvia tricolor: Possibly sedative
Salvia virgata: Considered "closely related to S. nemorosa" and possibly the "big leaved" nemorosa that Daylight found similar in effect to S. nemorosas.