DJ Young Slade: What Psilocybin Near Water Means for Safety
Posted under: Trip Guides & Preparation

Harm Reduction · Safety · Psilocybin Near Water
In February 2026, Nathan Smith — known as DJ Young Slade and the son of rapper Lil Jon — died after accidentally drowning in a pond near his home in Milton, Georgia. His blood tested positive for psilocybin. The Fulton County Medical Examiner ruled the cause of death as drowning in the context of psilocybin use.
We send our deepest condolences to Lil Jon, Nathan's family, and everyone who loved him. Nathan was 27 years old.
This post is written in his memory — and as a direct reminder that using psilocybin near water is one of the most serious and preventable safety risks in psychedelic use. If it helps even one person make a safer choice, it is worth writing.
Why using psilocybin near water puts you at serious risk
Psilocybin changes the way your brain processes space, depth, movement, and danger. During a trip, you may feel invincible, deeply relaxed, or completely absorbed in your inner world — all while your ability to judge real physical risk has dropped sharply. Using psilocybin near water in that state is a combination that can turn fatal without warning.
It does not have to be a lake or a river. A garden pond, a bathtub, a canal, or even a shallow ditch can be fatal when your reflexes and spatial awareness are altered. Research on drug-related drowning shows that psychoactive substances contribute to a significant number of unintentional drownings — not because the person intended harm, but because the environment was simply not safe for the state they were in.
Key rule: If there is any open water within walking distance — including a bathtub, pond, pool, or canal — make sure the area is physically inaccessible before you start. Using psilocybin near water without a sober person present is a risk not worth taking.
Setting: choosing the right environment for a psilocybin trip
Set and setting is one of the most important concepts in psychedelic safety. Set is your mindset going in. Setting is the physical space around you. Both shape your experience from start to finish — and a setting that feels perfectly safe on a normal day can become dangerous during a trip.
Before you take magic mushrooms, walk through the space with one question in mind: could someone who is disoriented or overwhelmed get hurt here? The presence of water — indoors or outdoors — is the first thing to check and eliminate.

Here is how to make your setting genuinely safe:
Your trip sitter: the most important safety decision you make
A trip sitter is a sober, trusted person who stays with you for the full duration of your experience. Not someone who is "just around." Not someone who takes a small dose themselves. Someone who is completely clear-headed and whose only job is to keep you safe — especially when you are tripping near any potential hazard.

Nathan Smith was alone. That is the part that is hardest to read, and the part most worth talking about. A present, sober sitter is the single most effective safeguard against the dangers of tripping in an uncontrolled environment.
A good trip sitter:
For sitters: The Fireside Project Psychedelic Support Line (call or text 623-473-7433, available daily 11am–11pm PT) offers free peer support not just to people tripping, but also to trip sitters who need guidance in the moment. Save it before you start.
Dosage: a higher dose means a higher environmental risk
The higher the dose, the less connected you are to your immediate physical reality. A light dose might leave you sitting comfortably with a sense of wonder. A strong dose can leave you convinced you are somewhere else entirely — or unable to tell the difference between an inner vision and what is physically in front of you. That disorientation is exactly why tripping at high doses near water, even briefly, is so dangerous.
Our magic mushroom dosage guide explains how to find the right amount for your experience level. Always weigh on a precision scale — never estimate by eye.
Remember: Potency varies between strains, between flushes, and even between different parts of the same mushroom. Always start lower than you think you need to. You can always take more next time — you cannot undo a dose that was too strong.
What to do if someone needs help near water or in a crisis
If you are sitting for someone whose experience becomes overwhelming, stay calm and present. Speak slowly and gently. Move the person to the safest, quietest spot available and stay with them. If there is any risk near water, a balcony, or traffic — act immediately. Get between the person and the danger. Call emergency services (911 in the USA, 112 in Europe) without hesitation if the situation is beyond your ability to manage.
For emotional crises that are not physical emergencies, the Fireside Project offers free, confidential psychedelic peer support by call or text — for the person tripping and for sitters too. Drug Science UK also provides clear, evidence-based safety information about psilocybin for anyone who wants to understand the risks in more detail.
For guidance on what to do when an experience turns difficult, read our bad trip guide.
Psilocybin is safe — but the environment around it must be too
Psilocybin has one of the lowest harm profiles of any psychoactive substance when used responsibly. Research consistently shows very low rates of serious adverse events in controlled settings. But that safety profile depends entirely on the conditions around the experience. Psilocybin near water, without a sober companion, in an unknown environment — these are the conditions that turn a rare risk into a real one.
The death of DJ Young Slade is a tragedy. It is also a clear reminder that harm reduction is not about fear — it is about respect. Respect for the substance, respect for your own mind, and respect for the environment you choose.
If you are planning a trip, read our 9-step guide to a safe magic mushroom trip and our article on the real risks of magic mushrooms and how to avoid them. And if you want to understand what a truly safe space looks like, our guide on the psychedelic safe space is a good place to start.
Need real-time support during or after a psychedelic experience? Fireside Project — call or text 623-473-7433 — is free, confidential, and available every day.

April 7, 2026