Seeds Seeds
Marijuana
marijuana seeds in

Strong compact plant, very high. This homogenous Sativa type weed originates from Nepal and contains a
high level of THC. Grow it from fertile soil and add nursery supplements to the water. This excellent quality
strain grows up to 1,75 meter and is especially loved by musicians around the world. 100%Sativa,a hard plant
to grow but famous for its special qualities.A classic Sativa high,and good results for those who do not mind to
wait a little longer. Strong, compact plant, mellow.Original lambsbreath from Jamaica. Pure Sativa with light
Skunk crossing. Flowering time 10 or 12 weeks. (1st two weeks 14 hours of light / 8 weeks 12 hours of light /
last 2 weeks 10 hours of light). Has Narrow leaves, a Plant with yellow-whitish long buds.Shishkaberryseedsforsale
Ivapor Stick
On Shishkeberry: I Trippystickcartridgesonline just finished up the Shiskaberry and I have a few notes on it, if anyone is interested. A
friend made my seeds; parents were Breeder Steve’s seeds. The notes below are only from one of the
Shiskaberrys that I have tested.
With further testing I will find the definitive Shiska mum.
Aroma -
trippy stick los angeles The smell put a smile on
trippy stick los angeles a friends face tonight when I pulled out da' sample. But kaka has yet to
smell a thing. Allergies are a killin' and ka ain't a smellin'. A bunch of Shisks are drying and Marijuana Seeds Online I can’t smell
them.
cannabis-sativa
ivapor trippy stick
The Assassins killed out of fanatical religious
devotion—hashish or no hashish—and the American Indian did not become peaceful as a
result of smoking marijuana in his pipe, a myth which the procannabis side propagates to
demonstrate the weed's pacific properties; the Indian had no marijuana to put in his pipe.
"The American Indians never used it in their peace pipes," writes Richard Evans Schultes,
one of the world's experts on ethnobotany; the "American Indian... did not anywhere have
Cannabis sativa at his disposal in pre-Colombian times," agrees Michael Harner, an
anthropologist who studies the use of psychoactive substances among Indians. Were
Malayan tribesmen who ran amok high on marijuana? Were Patrice Lumumba's followers
under the influence of cannabis when they displayed "orgiastic frenzy and homicidal
ferocity" in battle?1] Was Victor Licata intoxicated by marijuana when, on October 17,
1933, in Tampa, Florida, he hacked his entire family (father, mother, and three brothers)
to death with an axe?2] Have India's holy men been inspired by the cannabis high?
Answers to these questions depend more on what we think of marijuana than what
actually happened historically. Recorded history is largely myth-making, an effort to align
supposed events with our own ideology.
Marijuana has played a medicinal role in every area in which it was grown, including
the United States where from colonial days until well into the twentieth century it was
used to cure a variety of ills: acute depression, tetanus, gonorrhea, insomnia, malaria,
insanity, stuttering, migraine headaches, flatulence, epilepsy, delirium tremens, asthma,
cancer, and chronic itching—with understandably mixed results. Until 1937, when federal
law outlawed its possession and sale, marijuana was a staple in many patent medicine
catalogues.3] Today, of course, very few physicians take marijuana's therapeutic role
seriously; in fact, physicians usually define drug abuse as the use of a drug outside a
medical context. That marijuana use is invariably abuse is deduced from the fact that
marijuana has no legitimate medical treatment function whatsoever; any use, in the
medical view, is by definition misuse or abuse. Although the therapeutic argument for
marijuana will occasionally be invoked by users and pro-pot propagandists, in general,
most do not take it any more seriously than the physicians do; they are content with the
argument that the drug is simply harmless and does not cause or compound any medical
problems.
The use of marijuana, or Indian hemp, for medical purposes considerably predates its
use for psychoactive purposes. Its origins as a medicinal herb are, of course, lost in primal
obscurity. Norman Taylor, a botanist, writes that mention of hemp may be found in a
pharmacy manual from 2737 B.C., supposedly written by a Chinese emperor, Shen Nung.
4] This story found its way into a vast number of essays on marijuana,5] mincluding my
own.6]