Licensed But Unregulated Harvesting
All states have hunting limits designed to preserve the health and future of game species, considered as a resource to be properly managed, but often allow unlimited bagging of species considered invasive or otherwise undesirable. Whether inadvertently or by design, peyote is essentially treated as an invasive or undesirable species. It is indiscriminately destroyed with no established limits to protect it from over harvesting or eradication. Over fifty years of licensed but unregulated harvesting has resulted in far less peyote, and far less available for sale to NAC members. Without active conservation measures today, it is uncertain where tomorrow’s medicine will come from and at what cost.
If peyote plants are allowed to reach mature size AND are carefully cut, eventually the remaining tap root will produce even more “buttons”. Improper harvesting of mature plants while also uprooting small ones kills them all. Unfortunately this is the common practice that currently serves as the supply chain for NAC ceremonies. Just as unregulated, free-for-all hunting of any game would, this open season on every peyote plant in sight invites the downfall of the species as a whole.
The much more plentiful populations of twenty years and more ago might once have justified ignoring the problem. Now, with decades of abuse to the landscape, the “supply system” of this sacred medicine has become a purely extractive and destructive process. This is no longer an honorable means of procuring sacrament for prayer.