Yes, When I discovered the "online world" of kava I was quite intrigued by this mysterious "two-day kava". I was only familiar with standard, "dairy" (corner shop) kavas sold around NZ or the watery stuff I had in Tonga and a few other places in Polynesia. The "two day kava" sounded like a very potent version of those kavas. In fact, it was advertised as "specialty" kava for "real connoisseurs". Definitely "not for beginners", which made me initially believe that it must have been indeed simply a much stronger/better version of the normal stuff. I too wondered why on Earth anyone would actually purchase the weaker stuff if there is some kava that makes one "relaxed" for two days. Thank God I did my research first and quickly learned that the term refers more to the hangover rather than the relaxation. One paper from a few years ago actually uses the terms "two day hangover kava" and "hangover kava" to describe it. I then learned about flavokavains, chemotypes etc and became even more perplexed that some people were drinking that stuff. After a while one of the vendors here sold me a tudei-spiked kava (could have actually been wild kava judging by the later acetone test results). I got physically sick from it. I can still remember its taste, I can still remember the next day sickness, the diarrhea, the lethargy. It was fucking vile. I also remember that the vendor claimed it was simply "a stronger batch!". Thank God for
@Deleted User , kava testing and the new vendors. I am also glad that that particular vendor has apparently cleaned up his act.
I think I've read quite a lot about kava and I've met quite a lot of drinkers (hundreds?). So far, the only people who have used tudei deliberately I've heard of or met are a handful of people on this forum, women who have experienced miscarriage in Vanuatu and mourners in PNG. Apparently there are places in PNG where people drink buckets of wild kava during or after funerals. It is meant to make them suffer, make them "stunned", sedated and in the state of lethargy and apathy. In other words, it's meant to be used as a "mourning kava". I think Lebot was describing those practices in on of his earlier articles, but I could be mistaken. Perhaps it was Huffman.