Afghan-Maroc*
e laws is exceptionally complex, and some will be changed shortly. By far
the best review of existing laws and their social consequences has been made by Kaplan in his recent
book, Marijuana, the New Prohibition (1970). Smith's (1970) book also contains excellent discussions
of the social issues revolving around marijuana use.
EXTENT OF USE
(5 of 7)4/15/2004 7:02:27 AM
On Being Stoned - Chapter 1
In spite of the severe penalties attached to possession and sale of marijuana, use today is very
widespread.
Given the sorts of pleasurable effects reported later in this book, it seems likely that use will
continue to increase.
No definite survey of incidence of use can be made because there is always a (realistic) tendency of
wary users to deny their use. Nevertheless, a large number of surveys of drug use on college campuses
have been made (Kaplan, 1970; Pearlman, 1968).
It is now a rare Easy Hemp Hemp California Hemp Easy college campus that does not have a
significant number of marijuana users and on many campuses users themselves estimate over 50 percent
of the students use marijuana occasionally, primarily at social events. An unpublished study that I
carried out in collaboration with one of my graduate students, Carl Klein, found that from 1967 to 1968
the percentage of students who used marijuana at a conservative West Coast university doubled, and
various formal and informal estimates of that population since have confirmed that a majority of the
students have tried marijuana. (Further details of this study are presented in Chapter 28.) This seems
typical. Drug-education programs sponsored by schools and government agencies are viewed with scorn
and amusement by users since their own and friends' experiences with marijuana convince them that the
instructors are ignorant or lying. This is an unfortunate effect, as the attitude may be generalized to
warnings about drugs that really are dangerous, such as hard narcotics and amphetamines.
Marijuana use is by no means confined to college campuses. In a survey of young adults (eighteen
and over) in San Francisco, Manheimer, Mellinger, and Balter (1969) reported that 13 percent had used
marijuana at least once. Conservative estimates in the press usually figure that several million
Americans have tried marijuana, although it is not clear how many use it with any regularity.
Difficult political, moral, and religious problems arise when an act generally condemned and illegal
spreads at such a rapid rate. This book is not the place to go into them, but the interested reader will find
some good discussions in Aaronson and Osmond (1970), Krippner (1968), and Kaplan (1970).
Leaving aside considerations of social and political problems, what sort of reliable, scientific
knowledge do we have about the effects of marijuana? What do users experience that makes the risk of
prison worthwhile?
The following chapter discusses the nature of marijuana intoxication and explains why previous
scientific work has gained v Seed Hemp How To Grow Hydroponic Marajawana
,
How To Grow Hydroponic Marajawana
Vaporizers Growing Cannabis Seeds 137 (1941); G
Acheter Du Cannabis Laven, Tetrahedron, 29, 2797 (1973); Thick Glass Bongs And Zongs Water Bongs (b) F
Cannabis hosting - news amp press releases top news now health minister condoms boost women s sex appeal political leaders must do god says mr blair tories slam lax laws for rise in online gambling. Cannabis news u s attorney must stop prosecuting medical marijuana growers implementation of cannabis news cannabis revival cannashops celebrity stoner center for constitutional rights. Cn cannabis community cannabis marijuana hemp hash your marijuananews.com - the most trusted source for marijuana and cannabis news since 1997 with richard cowan. Cannabis news - 420 girls jesus w as almost certainly a cannabis user and an early proponent of the medicinal properties of the drug, according to a study of scriptural texts published this month the. This indoor hybrid has a high calyx/leaf ratio & finishes flowering in 7 weeks or less. Our big-yielding,
lemon-scented female clone named "Genius" because of her CLEAR, energetic, thought-provoking high was
crossed with a robust Cinderella 99 male to create Apollo Eleven. Expect some variation among individuals. The
best females are short, heavily branched plants with multitudes of dense, resinous bud sites - perfect for
SCROG. The smoke has a sweet citrus flavour. The high is UP & HAPPY." - Bros. Grimm catalog Laven, Tetrahedron, 29, 2797 (1973); (b) F
Strains align="left"> , 23,1069 (1970)
ice bongs ice bongs Hemp Clothing align="left"> ice bongs Yoshimura, Glass Water Bongs K
The smoke is good- smooth, sweet, menthol/lemony. It has a lot of central and south American Sativa in its
ancestry. The high is long lasting and 'happy'- a day-time smoke. The buds are long and thin. I noticed two
phenotypes (ratio 14:2)- 14 plants had broad, long leaves, high vigor, high yield; 2 were much shorter
(finishing at 4-5'), more compact, started flowering earlier, but didn’t mature as well, more susceptible to mold,
thinner leaves. Some of the large phenotype flowered with pistils the color of pink-grapefruit.
Its not the easiest plant I've grown, and this may account for why its not more common, but its well worth it. It
definitely is mold resistant beyond any doubt. These plants get the yield from the size of the plant, not the
density of the buds, so try to ensure a good size by July, and DONT pinch it out. I'm hoping for 3 or 4 ounces
per plant this year- I've put them into my best patch.” – retro13 Korte, Tetrahedron Lett
Mostly Indica (F1 Kc Brains hybrid) dieffenbachia drugs with exceptionally broad leaves. Lots of resin on leaves as well as flowers, with a
musky hash like aroma. Bongs Tobacco Water Strong physical high. Yields are above average. Short rounded plants.
"I got NL#5 never had any problems with cloning, also if its real NL#5 (which is Pure NL) it has almost no smell
at all which is great if ya grow indoors. The ones I've seen really fill out at the end of the flowering cycle, it
sometimes looks like the yield will be marginal and then in the last couple of weeks--bam! I have found this
with most indica strains, usually they do not fill out till the last 2-3 weeks of flowering. NL is a great indoor
strain, one of my fav's too." -Unknown “Bank: Positronics
Supplier: Jock
Started with 10 seeds all germinated. One sprout was lagging far behind the others and it was put out of its
misery. Ended up with 1 female, 5 males, and 3 herms.
Again, like the rest of the Positronic stock grown out so far, these plants were close to identical in appearance.
They looked very much like the NL x Shiva that also came from Posi. To bad it didn’t take after the NL x Shiva
in all respects.
The one female was not very impressive grown from seed and turned herm. The buzz was acceptable but it
grew like chit. Very airy bud with little resin and a lot of leaf. The buzz made it worth keeping for a harvest from
clone one time to see if it could redeem itself. Because the buzz got better it was given one more chance even
though it still showed male flowers, not a lot but too many. The second time grown from clone it showed male
flowers again and didn’t improve much in quality or growth. So now it’s dead.
To be fair it could be that this plant just couldn’t handle being flowered so early and freaked, doubtful but
possible." - flick
“These buds are army-green colored, crystally, and evenly covered with long dark orange (almost brown) hairs.
Broken up, these buds release the scent of sweet freshly cut grass or even hay with some slightly skunky
undertones. The smoke is smooth, non-expansive and has a mild sweet taste. Although the high does not hit
you right away, it first creeps through your body making you feel stoned and then only moderately effects your
cerebrum, allowing you to concentrate on any task at hand. **” – Homepage Amsterdam Beginner’s Guide to Growing Marijuana
This is a guide that I pulled off the net that puts everything in plain and simple English, and doesn’t go to deep
x Kush Kush 33 Master into
advanced botany and gardening. I find this one to be the best guide out there.
Indoor Marijuana Cultivation
Introduction
Growing marijuana indoors is fast becoming an American Pastime. The reasons are varied. With the increased
interest and experimentation in houseplant cultivation, it was inevitable that people would apply their knowledge of
plant care to growing marijuana. Many of those who occasionally like to light up a joint may find it difficult to
locate a source or are hesitant to deal with a perhaps unsavory element of society in procuring their grass.
There is,
of course, the criminal aspect of buying or selling grass; Growing marijuana is just as illegal as buying, selling, or
smoking it, but growing is something you can do in the privacy of your own home without having to deal with
someone you don’t know or trust. The best reason for growing your own is the enjoyment you will get out of
watching those tiny little seeds you picked out of you stash sprout and become some of the most lovely and lush of
all house plants.
Anyone Can Do It
Even if you haven’t had any prior experience with growing plants in you home, you can have a successful crop of
marijuana by following the simple directions in this pamphlet. If you have had problems in the past with marijuana
cultivation, you may find the solutions in the following chapters. Growing a marijuana plant involves four basic
steps:
1. Get the seeds.
If you don’t already have some, you can ask your friends to save you seeds out of any good grass
they may come across. You’ll find that lots of people already have a seed collection of some sort and are willing
to part with a few prime seeds in exchange for some
Image Cannabis of the finished product.
2. Germinate the seeds. You can simply drop a seed into moist soil, but by germinating the seeds first you can be
sure that the seed will indeed produce a plant. To germinate seeds, place a group of them between about six
moist paper towels, or in the pores of a moist sponge.
Leave the towels or sponge moist but not soaking wet.
Some seeds will germinate in 24 hours while others may take several days or even a week.
3. Plant the sprouts. As soon as the seed cracks open and begin to sprout, place it on some moist soil and sprinkle a
little soil over the top of it.
4.
Supply the plants with light. Fluorescent lights are the best. Hang the lights with two inches of the soil and after
the plants appear above the ground, continue to keep the lights with two inches of the plants. It is as easy as
that. If you follow those four steps you will grow a marijuana plant. To ensure prime quality and the highest
yield in the shortest time period, however, a few details are necessary.
Soil
Your prime concern, after choosing high quality seeds, is the soil. Use the best soil you can get. Scrimping on
the soil doesn’t pay off in the long run. If you use non-sterilized soil you will almost certainly find parasites in it,
probably after it is too late to transplant your marijuana. You can find excellent soil for sale at your local plant shop
or nursery, K-Mart, Wal-Mart, and even some grocery stores.
The soil you use should have these properties for the
best possible results:
1. It should drain well. That is, it should have some sand in it and also some sponge rock or pearlite.
2. The pH should be between 6.5 and 7.5 since marijuana does not do well in acidic soil. High acidity in soil
encourages the plant to be predominantly male, an undesirable trait.
3. The soil should also contain humus for retaining moisture and nutrients.
If you want to make your own soil mixture, you can use this recipe: Mix two parts moss with one part sand and one
part pearlite or sponge rock to each four gallons of soil. Test
Homemade Marijuana Pipes your soil for pH with litmus paper or with a soil testing
kit av as well as to an
entire tradition in marijuana commentary. Yet such a conclusion is difficult to avoid. The
marijuana user appears to be more active socially than the nonuser. He has more friends
and socializes more. He is engaged in a larger number and a greater variety of activities
than the nonuser—aesthetic appreciation and creation, political activism, and social
welfare, for instance. (Of course, some other human endeavors, such as traditional and
formal religious participation, are less often the object of marijuana users' interests.)
The zero-sum notion assumes that the two realms, the straight and the stoned, are
antagonistic and incompatible, enjoyed by a wholly different and distinct personnel. In
reality, most potsmokers do not rob their straight life to pay their stoned existence. More
commonly, the two enrich each other. Thus, any model based on the assumption that by
using marijuana those activities which society values will typically or necessarily
deteriorate in the lives of users has to be faulty. In the average user, no such process takes
place. (It will, of course, be a relatively simple matter to uncover exceptions.) The average
marijuana smoker utilizes his drug of choice as an adjunct and an enhancer of many of the
activities that the ordinary law-abiding citizen participates in.
The dire predictions of what happens when someone takes to the weed do not seem to
happen. It is said that although marijuana is not technically addicting, it does generate a
kind of psychological addiction (thus, the stoned model), and that once legal restrictions
are relaxed, huge numbers of persons will be stupefied most of their waking hours. When
we look at the facts, this argument evaporates. Most marijuana users smoke the weed
occasionally. The truly committed "head," the smoker who is high the whole day, day in
and day out, is a relative rarity, perhaps comprising 1 or 2 percent of everyone who has
ever smoked marijuana. And yet it is from this rarefied upper reaches of the world of
potsmoking that society's model of marijuana use is borrowed.
We will, of course, be able to locate specific individuals who are, in fact, high a great
proportion of their waking hours. But the difference between marijuana and any of the
physiologically addicting drugs—including alcohol—in this respect is so great as to be a
(6 of 9)4/15/2004 1:08:52 AM
The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 12
difference of kind, and not simply a matter of degree. It is only because the medical
profession views marijuana use by definition pathological and abnormal ("abuse" is
defined as taking a drug outside a medical context) that any use of marijuana has to be
viewed, medically, as a kind of habituation, or psychological addiction. Something
anomalous, puzzling, and disturbing must be labeled pathological. But in less moralistic
terms—and it is only on moral grounds that the medical label makes any sense at all—it is
necessary to face the fact th , 797 (1975)
DIEFFENBACHIA DIEFFENBACHIA among professional criminals for profit. How we
characterize marijuana selling depends on what level the transaction takes place. This
might lend sustenance to the ideologically involved contestants, since they may, without
distortion, portray dealing in a fashion which pleases their biases.
Just how involved the large-scale dealer is in marijuana selling is obliquely determined
by the size of the seizures of imports from Mexico. In terms of the number of these
smuggling attempts, clearly the overwhelming majority are of relatively insignificant
quantities—under a pound. The largest recent border seizure was about a ton of marijuana.
An operation of this size obviously requires organization: a micro-bus, middlemen in
Mexico, drivers and high-level dealers for distribution. This is not Cosa Nostra
organization, but it is organization. If we mean by "organized crime," a syndicate
involving thousands of tightly knit, lifelong committed gangsters whose entire livelihood
derives from illegal activities, then marijuana probably is not sold, never has been sold,
and never will be sold by professional criminals. If, however, we mean an independent
operation involving a score of individuals whose activities are coordinated, and who will
earn their living for a few years from marijuana sales, then it is true that marijuana is often
sold by professional criminals. Just how much of the total of marijuana consumed derives
from this kind of source is impossible to determine.
This is why a consideration of the level at which a deal takes place is important. The
importer is often a criminal: his livelihood is importing grass; he is a capitalist who sells
an illegal product with no particular commitment to marijuana as an agent of mindtransformation,
an element in a subculture, or a catalyst in social change. He probably
does not smoke marijuana. The unsystematic business practices of "head" dealers created
a vacuum into which he stepped. The multi-kilogram
Bongs Beer
top-level dealers to whom he sells
are also primarily profit seekers.
The crucial difference between the importer and his dealcustomers
is that the dealer sells to consumers as well as to other dealers and is very likely
(14 of 18)4/15/2004
Graines De Cannabis 1:08:20 AM
The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 10
to be a consumer himself. Next to the consumer, friendship transactions are common.
Thus, to say that marijuana is a business is both true and false. At some levels it is; at
some, it is not. To say that it
Dope Sensi Seed is big business is misleading.
A monthly take of a quarter of
a million dollars, split twenty ways, might represent the very top of the profession. Lower
down, even dedicated hustling brings in what an unskilled factory worker might make.
Below that, the profit motive breaks down entirely.
A commonly encountered argument against the use of marijuana employs the
differential association theory: by using the drug, one is thrown into association with the
criminal underworld and, therefore, at Winner of several harvest festivals, and "High Times" Cannabis Cup. Skunk #1 (75% Sativa, 25% Indica) was
originally a cross between 25% Afghani, 25% Mexican Acapulco Gold and 50% Colombian Gold. Inbred since
1978, now a stabilized homogeneous strain. Blooms with long, thick buds, varying in color from light green to
golden. Very high flower to leaf ratio. Soft and sweet aroma and a very strong "up" high. Excellent variety for
indoor growing or greenhouse with darkening system. Very high yields. Easy to manicure. This variety serves as
a standard against which others can be measured.
Psilocybe Cubensis Cannabis Users , 97,
growing marijuana scrog method yield enormous buds of marijana 185
Bongs photos Bongs photos Bongs photos Homemade (1978); (j) 1
n common patterning of functioning in all of these people, a common
pattern superimposed on their individual uniqueness, we may hypothesize something to explain this
common pattern. forced forced air to an make air This hypothesized something might be a common personality trait, belief system,
physical attribute, or, in terms of our interest a common state of consciousness. Particularly, if we know
that all the observed individuals ingested marijuana just before we began observing them, we will be
tempted to say that the common pattern of functioning we observe is the result of their all being in a
state of marijuana intoxication.
Note, however, that it is the empirically observed common pattern of functioning1] that is the crucial
defining operation of the state of consciousness; the fact that they had all ingested marijuana serves
secondarily vah to specify something we think to be a cause of the hypothesized state of consciousness.
What, then, are the properties of this hypothesized state of consciousness, marijuana intoxication?
How do we discover these properties?
Clearly the way to answer this is to give marijuana to a number of people and observe what is
common in their experience and behavior. Unfortunately, the observation process is much more complex
and full of pitfalls than we would expect.
Much of our usual experience with the effects of drugs on consciousness misleads us into expecting
fairly simple relationships. If, for example, you give a strong dose of barbiturates or other sedatives to a
person, he almost always goes to sleep. Hence we describe the state of consciousness (or lack of it)
induced by barbiturates as a barbiturate-induced sleep. There is little variability across subjects, and our
observational process is simple.
With a psychoactive drug like marijuana, on the other hand, the variability across subjects is very
high, and the observation process itself may systematically bias what we observe, as will be detailed in
the next section. It may even turn out that different people might experience different states of
consciousness from using marijuana, that is, the observed patterns of experience and behavior fall into
several distinct patterns rather than a single pattern common to all individuals.
We generally consider
alcohol Marajawana Ehle Bongs intoxication, for example, as a single state, yet on a second thought there are clearly some
individuals who have very different experiences with alcohol from those the majority of us have. A drug
may thus stimulate a reorganization of functioning, but the nature of the new pattern may be determined
by factors other than the nature of the drug per se.
Let us consider in detail the question of why a given individual, taking marijuana (or any other
psychoactive drug, for that matter) at a particular time and place, might experience the particular things
that he does.
VARIABILITY OF DRUG-INDUCED STATES
Our common experience with many drugs inclines us to think along the line that "Drug A has effects
X,n common patterning of functioning in all of these people, a common
pattern superimposed on their individual uniqueness, we may hypothesize something to explain this
common pattern. This hypothesized something might be a common personality trait, belief system,
physical attribute, or, in terms of our interest a common state of consciousness. Particularly, if we know
that all the observed individuals ingested marijuana just before we began observing them, we will be
tempted to say that the common pattern of functioning we observe is the result of their all being in a
state of marijuana intoxication.
Note, however, that it is the empirically observed common pattern of functioning1] that is the crucial
defining operation of the state of consciousness; the fact that they had all ingested marijuana serves
secondarily to specify something we think to be a cause of the hypothesized state of consciousness.
What, then, are the properties of this hypothesized state of consciousness, marijuana intoxication?
How do we discover these properties?
Clearly the way to answer this is to give marijuana to a number of people and observe what is
common in their experience and behavior.
Unfortunately, the observation process is much more complex
and full of pitfalls than we would expect.
Much of our usual experience with the effects of drugs on consciousness misleads us into expecting
fairly simple relationships. If, for example, you give a strong dose of barbiturates or other sedatives to a
person, he almost always goes to sleep.
Hence we describe the state of consciousness (or lack of it)
induced by barbiturates as a barbiturate-induced sleep. There is little variability across subjects, and our
observational process is simple.
With a psychoactive drug like marijuana, on the other hand, the variability across subjects is very
high, and the observation process itself may systematically bias what we observe, as will be detailed in
the next section. It may even turn out that different people might experience different states of
consciousness from using marijuana, that is, the observed patterns of experience and behavior fall into
several distinct patterns rather than a single pattern common to all individuals. We generally consider
alcohol intoxication, for example, as a single state, yet on a second thought there are clearly some
individuals who have very different experiences with alcohol from those the majority of us have. A drug
may thus stimulate a reorganization of functioning, but the nature of the new pattern may be determined
by factors other than the nature of the drug per se.
Let us consider in detail the question of why a given individual, taking marijuana (or any other
psychoactive drug, for that matter) at a particular time and place, might experience the particular things
that he does.
VARIABILITY OF DRUG-INDUCED STATES
Our common experience with many drugs inclines us to think along the line that "Drug A has effects
X,n common patterning of functioning in all of these people, a common
pattern superimposed on their individual uniqueness, we may hypothesize something to explain this
common pattern. This hypothesized something might be a common personality trait, belief system,
physical attribute, or, in terms of our interest a common state of consciousness. Particularly, if we know
that all the observed individuals ingested marijuana just before we began observing them, we will be
tempted to say that the common pattern of functioning we observe is the result of their all being in a
state of marijuana intoxication.
Note, however, that it is the empirically observed common pattern of functioning1 that is the crucial
defining operation of the state of consciousness; the fact that they had all ingested marijuana serves
secondarily to specify something we think to be a cause of the hypothesized state of consciousness.
What, then, are the properties of this hypothesized state of consciousness, marijuana intoxication?
How do we discover these properties?
Clearly the way to answer this is to give marijuana to a number of people and observe what is
common in their experience and behavior. Unfortunately, the observation process is much more complex
and full of pitfalls than we would expect.
Much of our usual experience with the effects of drugs on consciousness misleads us into expecting
fairly simple relationships. If, for example, you give a strong dose of barbiturates or other sedatives to a
person, he almost always goes to sleep. Hence we describe the state of consciousness (or lack of it)
induced by barbiturates as a barbiturate-induced sleep. There is little variability across subjects, and our
observational process is simple.
With a psychoactive drug like marijuana, on the other hand, the variability across subjects is very
high, and the observation process itself may systematically bias what we observe, as will be detailed in
the next section. It may even turn out that different people might experience different states of
consciousness from using marijuana, that is, the observed patterns of experience and behavior fall into
several distinct patterns rather than a single pattern common to all individuals. We generally consider
alcohol intoxication, for example, as a single state, yet on a second thought there are clearly some
individuals who have very different experiences with alcohol from those the majority of us have. A drug
may thus stimulate a reorganization of functioning, but the nature of the new pattern may be determined
by factors other than the nature of the drug per se.
Let us consider in detail the question of why a given individual, taking marijuana (or any other
psychoactive drug, for that matter) at a particular time and place, might experience the particular things
that he does.
VARIABILITY OF DRUG-INDUCED STATES
Our common experience with many drugs inclines us to think along the line that "Drug A has effects
X,n common patterning of functioning in all of these people, a common
pattern superimposed on their individual uniqueness, we may hypothesize something to explain this
common pattern. This hypothesized something might be a common personality trait, belief system,
physical attribute, or, in terms of our interest a common state of consciousness. Particularly, if we know
that all the observed individuals ingested marijuana just before we began observing them, we will be
tempted to say that the Marajawana Ehle Bongs common pattern of functioning we observe is the result of their all being in a
state of marijuana intoxication.
Note, however, that it is the empirically observed common pattern of functioning1 that is the crucial
defining operation of the state of consciousness; the fact that they had all ingested marijuana serves
secondarily to specify something we think to be a cause of the hypothesized state of consciousness.
What, then, are the properties of this hypothesized state of consciousness, marijuana intoxication?
How do we discover these properties?
Clearly the way to answer this is to give marijuana to a number of people and observe what is
common in their experience and behavior. Unfortunately, the observation process is much more complex
and full of pitfalls than we would expect.
Much of our usual experience with the effects of drugs on consciousness misleads us into expecting
fairly simple relationships. If, for example, you give a strong dose of barbiturates or other sedatives to a
person, he almost always goes to sleep. Hence we describe the state of consciousness (or lack of it)
induced by barbiturates as a barbiturate-induced sleep. There is little variability across subjects, and our
observational process is simple.
With a psychoactive drug like marijuana, on the other hand, the variability across subjects is very
high, and the observation process itself may systematically bias what we observe, as will be detailed in
the next section. It may even turn out that different people might experience different states of
consciousness from using marijuana, that is, the observed patterns of experience and behavior fall into
several distinct patterns rather than a single pattern common to all individuals.
We generally consider
alcohol intoxication, for example, as a single state, yet on a second thought there are clearly some
individuals who have very different experiences with alcohol from those the majority of us have. A drug
may thus stimulate a reorganization of functioning, but the nature of the new pattern may be determined
by factors other than the nature of the drug per se.
Let us consider in detail the question of why a given individual, taking marijuana (or any other
psychoactive drug, for that matter) at a particular time and place, might experience the particular things
that he does.
VARIABILITY OF DRUG-INDUCED STATES
Our common experience with many drugs inclines us to think along the line that "Drug A has effects
X,
Piece of crap - hard to clone.
Hydroponics I grew a few seeds from a seedbank selling Sensi BB, and I’m glad I didn’t
waste time and
massive bongs space with any more than 2 females. Maybe I was unlucky and didn’t score that hard to find
large producer. Dunno. the plants were grown indoors under plenty of light. They were big in circumference, with
spread out bud yield. I was expecting fatty kolas, but nope. It looked more like Holland/Canada Big Treat than
BB is supposed
Head Shops Online to be. Anyway, that’s my two cents.- dak Plants need sugars to live on and they produce them from fertilizer and sunlight. This curing process also breaks down some of the chlorophyll which give herb it's green color. Too much chlorophyll gives an unwanted leafy taste. Your main enemy when you are curing is mold. After pot is dried it's not very susceptible to mold but you have to maintain a certain level of humidity to let the curing process do it's work. The way you control humidity is by controlling how much ventilation you allow. e trees for the mere sake of it, nor should one use
them as lumber. These trees are generating substances that other beings use as their
nourishment. If one urinates and defecates on the tree, the tree will then emit
something harmful to these beings. That is the reason they are very defensive.
In the background we see cities, towers, monuments, and parks associated with
the kapukiri. To the left we see huts where the great shamans of various tribes
arrive in spirit, to be trained regarding the kapukiri. There one learns that a young
man should not sleep in the bed of an old man. Native people, particularly the
elderly, don't like anyone to touch what belongs to them. All that belongs to the
shamans must be respected-the bed, the plates, etc. This is because a young man is
full of filth. When one becomes old, one learns to be cleaner.
The city in the centre symbolises the purity of a shaman when, already old, he
goes to another stage. It is the purity that the person acquires through his death,
when he leaves this life and is transported to another place. This is when a person
has been ordained, when he has been requested. Not everyone goes there. I don't
reject the Christian belief according to which Christ said to his disciples: "Whither I
go, thou canst not follow me now; but thou shalt follow me afterwards" John
13:36]. But this does not hold true for everyone. Christ said: "In my Father's house
are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place
for you" John 14:2]. But this doesn't mean that this is for all humanity, but for
certain chosen persons. Christians were mistaken when they thought that everyone
shall go to heaven.
VISION 31
CUNCATUYA
This vision shows us how a woman, suspecting nothing, contracts the cungatuya
disease from the water she drinks. There are two ways of getting the disease. One
gets it after a sorcerer sends his mashu or bat to drop its yachay or phlegm in order
to bring the disease. The victim then becomes very weak and dies, as he cannot
ingest any nutrition. Secondly, one can get it when the same bat or rnashu drops its
saliva into the water one is about to drink. This happens if one leaves one's jar
without a cap.
Here we see how a woman is drinking contaminated water, causing this awful
cungatuya disease sent by a sorcerer through his mashu, which dropped the phlegm
into the jar on the grill. To the left, however; we see how a vegetalista is curing the
disease by sucking it with the mann of his throat. To prevent any intrusion upon the
circle where the healing is being performed, the doctors have raised strong tingunas
of surprising colours and posted animals of prey, such as the yachaygavilanes wise
sparrow hawk], the tahuicuros Monasa nigrifons] and the supay-unchalas
unchala = Aramides cajanea], as well as the push co-yuyo plant and the thorns of
casha-huasca thorny vine]. The master is also seen raising his magnetic powers in
the f
Princess is a female which Supergirl resulted from a seed found in a Jack Herer bud I bought in Amsterdam near the
Sensi Seed Bank at "Coffeeshop Sensi Smile". The bud came in a 2 gr. cello-pack M39 Marijuana with the Sensi logo; I
expected sinsemilla, but it had about 10 seeds so I assume she's an F2 JH. Her characteristics jock horror stretch flowering were so fine I
wanted Supergirl to create seeds that would "replicate" this plant.
She has the KILLER Haze-influenced high with the most
DELICIOUS pineapple/evil scent, 50 day maturation in 12/12, and Bongs Tobacco Water incredible resin production, doesn’t stretch -
yet clearly Sativa-dominant! Last but not least: Never a hint Supergirl of jock horror stretch flowering hermaphrodism after 2 years of cloning & many
different styles of grow.
Faire Pousser Du Cannabis Razdan
Northern Light X Big Bud and
Cannabis Partido Anti Cannabis J
Medical: multiple sclerosis “This state of Grafix Bongs Bongs Grafix the art Indica is the result of over 20 years of select inbreeding. Bred
for vigorous growth, high yield, and superb high. A must for growers who prefer short bushy plants. The buds
have an extremely frosted, resinous appearance and the yield is high.
"NL#5 is NL with another plant crossbred.
Part indica, part sativa.
Grows great outdoors, flowers quickly and has
a pretty good yield. I know a few that have grown it. Call it the "Christmas tree" bud, the plant looks like one..
Thumbs up to it, it is a great strain." -VMedical: multiple sclerosis “This state of the art Indica is the result of over 20 years of select inbreeding. Bred
for vigorous growth, high yield, and superb high. A must for growers who prefer short bushy plants. The buds
have an extremely frosted, resinous appearance and the yield is high.
"NL5 is NL Bong Content Bong with another plant crossbred.
Part indica, part sativa. Grows great outdoors, flowers quickly and has
a pretty good yield. I know a few that have grown it. Call it the "Christmas tree" bud, the plant looks like one..
Thumbs up to it, it is a great strain." -V
Mostly Indica (F1 hybrid) with exceptionally broad leaves. Lots of resin on leaves as well as flowers, with a
musky hash like aroma. Strong physical high. Yields are above average. Short rounded plants.
If you read the SU of Pousser Du Cannabis Cannabis Culture Magazine Mar 27 you knew to use plain water for a few days before harvesting your hydro crop so all that will be in the water will be the flavoring.
If you are a soil grower it's even easier.
You might think it would take longer for the flavor to work it's way through the plant but this is not the case. All you have to do is let the plant dry out a little before your apply the solution.
In other words schedule a watering just before harvest.
“The Big Bud was the same as usual. The buds are large for sure, but this strain just doesn’t do it for me. They
reached about 15 inches in height and yielded at least an ounce each. I've grown this strain 2 times before
and to be honest I thought it came out poorly originally because they were my first crops, but even this latest
batch, which was grown and dried as perfect as I have ever done, still pales as far as potency goes. This will be
the last time I take up space with this strain.” – James Hetfield
among professional criminals for profit.
How we
characterize marijuana selling depends on what level the transaction takes place. This
might lend sustenance to the ideologically involved contestants, since glass bongs they may, without
distortion, portray dealing in a fashion which pleases their biases.
Just how involved the large-scale dealer is in marijuana selling is obliquely determined
by the size of the seizures of imports from Mexico. In terms of the number of these
smuggling attempts, clearly the overwhelming majority are of relatively insignificant
quantities—under a pound.
The largest recent border seizure was about a ton of marijuana.
An operation of this size obviously requires organization: a micro-bus, middlemen in
Mexico, drivers and high-level dealers for distribution.
This is not Cosa Nostra
organization, but it is organization. If we mean by "organized crime," a syndicate
involving thousands of tightly knit, lifelong committed gangsters whose entire livelihood
derives from illegal activities, then marijuana probably is not sold, never has been sold,
and never will be sold by professional criminals. If, however, we mean an independent
operation involving a score of individuals whose activities are coordinated, and who will
earn their living for a few years from marijuana sales, then it is The Headshop true that marijuana is often
sold by professional criminals. Just how much of the total of marijuana consumed derives
from this kind of source is impossible to determine.
This is why a consideration of the level at which a deal takes place is important. The
importer is often a criminal: his livelihood is importing custom bon grass; he is a capitalist who sells
an illegal product with no particular commitment to marijuana as an agent of mindtransformation,
an element in a subculture, or a catalyst in social change. He probably
does not smoke marijuana. The unsystematic business practices of "head" dealers created
a vacuum into which he stepped. The multi-kilogram top-level dealers to whom he sells
are also primarily profit seekers. The crucial difference between the importer and his dealcustomers
is that the dealer sells to consumers as well as to other dealers and is very likely
(14 of 18)4/15/2004 1:08:20 AM
The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 10
to be a consumer himself. Next to the consumer, friendship transactions are common.
Thus, to say that marijuana is a business is both true and false. At some levels it is; at
some, it is not. To say that it is big business is misleading.
A monthly take of a quarter of
a million dollars, split twenty ways, might represent the very top of the profession.
Lower
down, even dedicated hustling brings in what an unskilled factory worker might make.
Below that, the profit motive breaks down Big Bongs entirely.
A commonly encountered argument against the use of marijuana employs the
differential association theory: by using the drug, one is thrown into association with the
criminal underworld and, therefore, at
“Princess was obtained from growing out seeds found in buds of Eating Cannabis Homemade Bong Jack Herer that was purchased in Amsterdam at
the "Sensi-Smile" coffee shop, an authorized outlet of Sensi Seed Bank. Thus, it is considered to be an f2
generation Jack Herer. The seeds were found only in the deepest part of the buds indicating that the father was
an unusually early-maturing JH that the growers missed at first.” - MrSoul
ty Code prohibits the possession of marijuana, which is defined as a
narcotic. A recent District Court decision limited the amount possessed to a useable
amount. What amount is "useable" is not clear: it varies from one narcotic drug to the
next, but a 1966 decision held that fifty milligrams of marijuana was not a useable
amount. Judges usually dismiss possession cases based on a single "roach." A first
violation of Section 11530 calls for a one-to-ten-year prison sentence; a second-time
(2 of 31)4/15/2004 1:08:37 AM
The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 11
offender will be punished by a two-to-ten-year Homemade Make Make sentence, and any subsequent violation
calls for a five-year to life penalty.
Section 11530.5 of the Health and Safety Code penalizes the possessor of marijuana for
the purpose of selling it. No fixed amount is stipulated that defines the amount necessary
to constitute a violation, although if the marijuana is packaged, presumably the intention
to sell is evident. A two-to-ten-year first offense sentence is imposed, while To How Really Bongs Really How Make Bongs there is a fiveto-
fifteen-year sentence (with a three-year minimum) for the second offense.
The third and
subsequent offenses are punished by ten-years-to-life imprisonment with a six-year
minimum. Section 11531 of the
bongs glass
California Code covers selling (and giving away)
marijuana. The first offense provides for a five-years-to-life penalty; the offender is
ineligible for parole before three years. A second offense calls for a minimum penalty of
five years, and a third-time offender must serve at least ten years before being considered
for parole.
Section 11532 stipulates that if an adult "hires, employs, or uses a minor in
unlawfully transporting, carrying, selling, giving away, preparing for sale... any marijuana
or who unlawfully sells, furnishes, administers, gives, or offers to sell, furnish, administer,
or give any marijuana to a minor, or who induces a minor to use marijuana" is subject to
ten years to life imprisonment.
The above offenses are felonies. The California statutes also provide for a variety of
less serious misdemeanor penalties, for less serious offenses. For instance, marijuana use
in California, or being under the influence of marijuana, is penalized by a ninety-day-toone-
year sanction (Section 11721). Another section (11556) rules it illegal to visit or be in
a room or any place wherein marijuana is being used "with knowledge that such activity is
occurring." The harshness of these penalties is mitigated by the fact that Section l202b of
the California Penal Code grants discretion to the judge if the felon
bongs and bubblers
is under the age of
twenty-three. Thus, many mandatory minimum sentences may be reduced to six months.
In 1962, Rhode Island stiffened its marijuana penalties. Possession of marijuana calls
for a three-to-fifteen-year penalty; possession with the intent to sell, a ten-to-thirty-year
penalty; the gift or sale of marijuana, a twenty-to-forty-year sentence; and the sale to
anyon
bongs @ 3/11/2010 2:17:30 AM