Len Goodman
Well-Known Member
But observation is the beauty of it.I like torturing them but leaving a way out. It’s therapeutic for me. Lol
How To Use Progressive Web App aka PWA On 420 Magazine Forum
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
But observation is the beauty of it.I like torturing them but leaving a way out. It’s therapeutic for me. Lol
Or the death of cannibus.
I honestly think it’s the traces of the element burning into the vapor causing this. Do they have an idea of what’s causing it?Well, yeast is not the death of Cannabis. Its the death of Marijuana. Or most Marijuana. Like it or not, altruism or not, some spiritualistic aspect of Cannabis growing or not. Humans are not altruistic. As in the case of most kids these days, they just want to vape. Tobacco or Cannabis, something in vape cartridges is killing them. But they are still vaping. Do people care what is in vape cartridges? Methinks not. They just wanna get high.
Cannabis will still be grown commercially for fiber and seed on a grand global scale. The hemp of old. Some if us will continue with older strains. Personally I think that most strains have been polluted with too much indica. OG Kush is everywhere. Chem and Diesel and OG whatever DOMINATE the markets. IMO the current weed shop inventory is mostly crap as a result. The bag weed days had a better selection. Though it was not always available, and I was spoiled rotten in with cheap high quality weed in NorCal in the 1970s from all over the world. The black market genetics flowed to me, the consumer with cash. In those days the genetics (seeds) were considered trash along with the stems.
Well if evolution is correct the plant should revert to the dominant strain. Unless the hybrid is just a beast and will keep fighting back.
I honestly think it’s the traces of the element burning into the vapor causing this. Do they have an idea of what’s causing it?
Exactly. and maybe a little CBDThey've been producing large-scale batches of cannabinoids in the PRC for years (and a pretty large variety, apparently, since they're chemists instead of gardeners).
Me, I prefer having some cannabis with my cannabinoids .
My thinking exactly. It seems kind of obvious, but maybe not. I love the way you've said this and now I am going to head over to your journals and see what else you are sayingJust my opinion but if you've ever studied ethnopharmacology at any level, the pertinent aspects are the combination of chemicals within the plant as the plant/nature presents it to us. When we start altering the percentages of compounds within a given natural plant material we lose hundreds of thousands of years of nature's work. The shamans and root doctors of the tribes that have used these plant materials are pretty consistent in agreement - and if you think about the old school strains we had available before all these hybrids, you realize pretty fast that something has been bred out of most new strains, and we may never pinpoint exactly what it is we lost. Science hasn't even found everything in Cannabis yet. I also have a very Druidic way of looking at working with plants - I want to know them, thank them, enjoy their lives, appreciate the whole experience. We as humans are part of nature, anything that keeps us grounded there is healthy. I'm thinking growers may be the only ones left with any medicine one day. When everything else collapses at least.
Sounds like a dream come true!Yes, yeast. All this flap about marijuana and Cannabis plant and strain patents and what not. They are passe. The technology is already here to make any cannabinoid, terpenoid and flavonoid that you want in a vat. Just add water, sugar and GMO yeast. Then let it brew and out comes the goods to add to oil for vape pens and pre-rolls, add to beverages, or insert into Rx pills. At a far lower cost. No grow license needed, no plants needed, no sunlight needed, no grand scale grow space needed, no harvest or trimming or extraction processing needed. Just ferment and blend, like wine. Seriously. This is a paradigm buster.
Yeast produce low-cost, high-quality cannabinoids - Berkeley News
Scientists alter yeast metabolism to produce THC, CBD and other cannabis derivativesnews.berkeley.edu