
Stargazer

Treasure Coast
Stargazer vs Treasure Coast: How They Compare
Stargazer is a Potent Psilocybe cubensis. Treasure Coast is a Potent Psilocybe cubensis. Here is how the two differ on potency, effects, dose, and who each one is for.
| Spec | Stargazer | Treasure Coast |
|---|---|---|
| Species | Psilocybe cubensis | Psilocybe cubensis |
| Potency | Potent | Potent |
| Potency rating | 7/10 | 7/10 |
| Onset | 25-50 min | 25-50 min |
| Peak | 1.5-2.5 hr | 1.5-2.5 hr |
| Duration | 5-7 hr | 5-7 hr |
| Grow diff. | Intermediate | Intermediate |
| Microdose | 0.08–0.2g | 0.08–0.2g |
| Low dose | 0.5–1g | 0.5–1g |
| Moderate dose | 1.5–2.5g | 1.5–2.5g |
| High dose | 3–4g | 3–4g |

Stargazer at a glance
A visually striking strain known for its upward-pointing caps that seem to gaze at the sky. Stargazer delivers a celestial, awe-inspiring experience with vivid visuals and a strong sense of cosmic connection.
Best for: Nighttime experiences, Stargazing, Spiritual connection
See full Stargazer profile
Treasure Coast at a glance
Named after Florida's Treasure Coast where it was first found, this strain is known for its sporadic albino mutations and above-average potency. It delivers a deeply visual, contemplative experience with strong closed-eye imagery.
Best for: Visual meditation, Creative visualization, Contemplative journeys
See full Treasure Coast profileWhich one fits which goal?
Stargazer and Treasure Coast overlap most clearly on visual effects. The divergence starts with Stargazer's spiritual, euphoric lean and Treasure Coast's introspective, body profile.
Stargazer and Treasure Coast sit at the same potency rating, so the better beginner fit depends more on setting, dose discipline, and the effect profile you want.
For goals, Stargazer is often framed around nighttime experiences, while Treasure Coast is often framed around visual meditation. Treat those labels as orientation, not a promise of a specific outcome.
Dosage at a glance
Stargazer
Treasure Coast
Dose ranges are educational strain-profile ranges, not medical advice or a recommendation.
Not sure either is right?
Use goals and sensitivity as the starting point, then compare candidates.