ivapor for sale
Growi

(Big Bud x Skunk #1) 23.25 oz. Cured, VERY well manicured. Also made 2 lb of butter, that turned out way too
strong) and 10 grams of hash. There were 8 1/2 plants grown from clone(one was a complete runt, I don't
know why I even let her live). Plants were vegged in an aeroponic/NFT system for 3 weeks under a 1000MH with
an AgroSun bulb. They were about 18-20 inches tall when switched. Each plant was topped twice. Flowering was
in an NFT system. The first 2 weeks a single 1000MH w/ AgroSun was used. A second identical light was added
at the third week. Flowering took about 70 days. These were the most crystallized plants of this variety that
I've ever grown. Slow cured over 1 1/2 months. First on newspaper, then into paper bags, then into mason jars.
Smell is incredible. High is incredible. Normally I find BB a little less potent that I'd like. This crop just floors
me. High starts out mellow, upbeat, then when you start the second round of bong hits it just hits you like a
wave. Immediate couch melt. Cancel your plans, you're not going anywhere. But it lets your mind stay
somewhat sharp, which is the best thing about it. Overall I was pretty pleased with this harvest. I had a couple
of problems in the early weeks of flowering with mites, and then nearer the end the cold started to set in a bit.
So considering that I was pleased with the yield. Although it did suffer the typical Big Bud problem of slightly
looser buds. I had one plant that was a monster! A good 8 inches taller than all the other plants, I ended up
having to tie her down. 4 huge colas each around 4x11. That plant probably yielded almost 4 ounces alone -
ContentTrippystickcartridges
for
ivapor sale
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]grow-a-weed-plant
how to grow weed
Colombian Widow is a cross of Greenhouse's WW and a skunky two hit Colombian. The Colombian female
was chosen for its robust growth, relatively short flowering time for a tropical, dense buds and stickiness. It is a
two hit lady with a piney aftertaste. She is crossed with a WW male with good branching. The result is a well
branched, sticky Colombian with an intense mind bending high. The plants branch and bud extensively and are
ideal for scrog. In fact have several under the
Cannabisseedspaypal screen now and I would say it is
Vaporizerstickformarijuana great for weaving its numerous
long branches through the screen.
Expect buds to really begin putting on the bulk at about week 6. 8-10 for
finishing.
It can get big so I flower at 12-15" no more. If you are not scrogging then train the plants and you
should easily get multiple colas." - Santa Marta