Top products from r/cannabis

We found 11 product mentions on r/cannabis. We ranked the 11 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/cannabis:

u/gaso · 2 pointsr/cannabis

I found interval training worked for me. I also woke up to the fact one day that I was 30 and I wasn't ever going to get healthier, everything was downhill from here on out. I radically revamped my diet to exclude nearly everything which might increase my risk of stroke, heart attack or cancer (I eat what most folks call a vegetarian diet now, but I'm pretty loose...and I'll have a cig or three once a week if I'm at the bar with friends). About six months ago I started working out.

http://www.amazon.com/Jillian-Michaels-30-Day-Shred/dp/B00127RAJY

It's what one would call interval training. Twenty minutes of extremely condensed activity. I like it because in the morning before I have any excuse of anything else I need to do, I can squeeze in an amazing amount of effort before breakfast. My time is precious to me, I really enjoy lazing about (reading your description, I was like "hey, that sounds like me!").

Here's probably the best review on amazon for this DVD. I feel so much healthier now that I am both eating better and getting a real workout 5 days a week:

>I had never purchased a Jillian Michaels DVD before b/c of the hit or miss reviews. So when I heard raves about this one, I decided to give it a shot and I am so glad I did. This is an absolute butt-kicker workout. I am an intermediate/advanced exerciser (I work out 5-6 days a week) so I figured I could see what Level 1 was all about and move onto Level 2 right away. Listen to me folks--these workouts are HARD. Level 2 was VERY difficult--a good difficult though, very challenging. When Jillian tells you to start at level 1, listen to her she knows what she's doing. I've been at this for about 5 days, and I already feel a difference in my body.
Jillian is tough--absolutely NO rest in this workout (not even for a sip of water) but that's what makes it go by so quickly, and it makes your body change, according to Jillian. You're done before you know it--but by the end you've gotten a kick butt workout and feel like you've really done something. She bases her workout on the 3-2-1 method: 3 mins strength, 2 mins cardio, 1 min abs. Her strength circuits remind me of Jari Love--compound exercises that work the upper and lower body simultaneously. The cardio is good as well: a lot of jumping, so watch those knees (she has a modifier for beginner and lower impact) And the abs is straight up ab work--a variety of crunches and twists on the floor.

u/raswert · 1 pointr/cannabis

Yes, I notice you said HPS, and yes, there are specific HPS bulbs for growing plants, for different stages. I use Philips Son T Plus for flowering, and Sunmaster Dual for vegetative (this one is suitable for both stages but the Son T is better for flowering because it's its intended function) I use it with dimmable HPS digital ballasts and adjust-a-wings reflector. If you are really interested maybe I can look up for the datasheets.

About the link for the kit, I'm not really aware of US prices, but where I live, for 68,75 € (87,98 US$) you get:

  • 400W Venture ballast

  • 400W Hortilight HPS bulb

  • Regular open reflector

    I have seen a kit on amazon with digital ballast (way better than the regular ones) for $135.

    Edit: I also love to design and build my own things, or improve what I already have.
u/Cdresden · 1 pointr/cannabis

It's super fun. A year ago or so a Redditor offered her cookbook ebook for free for a couple of days, and I picked it up. Most of the recipes are based on her infused coconut oil, which is similar to cannabutter.

I understand the excitement of chefs and small start ups bringing their edibles to market. Who doesn't smile at rice krispy treats made with fruity pebbles?

u/TheEntosaur · 3 pointsr/cannabis

This has been one of my favorites so far. Filled with good knowledge and lots of pretty pictures.

/r/microgrowery is also filled with knowledgeable people.

u/Shaku · 3 pointsr/cannabis

Thank you. I have been told that this is also very good. Have you read or used it as well?

u/stillbatting1000 · 1 pointr/cannabis

I've been researching this stuff for several years and given a few small lectures at colleges on the history of Cannabis/Hemp/Marijuana.

When I speak about this issue I always like to ask, "When do you think Cannabis, the plant in its entirety, was first made illegal?" People give a few different answers, usually the 50's or 60's. Actually, it was October 1st, 1937 by means of the Marihuana Tax Act.

I then like to mention that the earliest laws regarding Cannabis in the US and Great Britain actually required farmers to use a certain percentage of their land for growing hemp, or pay a tax with which the government would then use to buy hemp from other nations.

In Kentucky, hemp was a major industry through the 19th and early 20th centuries. A book covering this in excellent detail is James F. Hopkins "A History of the Hemp Industry in Kentucky."

In Jack Herer's "The Emperor Wears No Clothes," the major reason for the timing of its criminalization is explained. For thousands of years, although industrial hemp was extremely important and valuable, actually harvesting the hemp was among the most difficult, strenuous, and labor-intensive work known. Even at the height of US slavery it was nearly cost-prohibitive, hence the laws requiring some parcel of land being used for its production. Numerous machines were developed to mechanize the work, which are generally called "decorticators," and the most popular one discussed is German engineer George W. Schlichten's model from the late 1910's. From my research, it seems to be the one that practically perfected the process; a device that was all set to revolutionize hemp production. With this device, hemp went from the most labor intensive crop to the easiest.

Popular Mechanics even ran an article announcing that due to the new machinery that been developed to mechanize its production, Cannabis was about to become the largest cash crop, by far, that any US farmer could grow. Unfortunately, the new law made sure that didn't happen.

A few years prior to Cannabis' criminalization, the petroleum and petrochemical industry was just emerging. Petroleum oil could be used to make plastics, (which is toxic and does not bio-degrade) turn trees into paper, (which destroys forests and dumps toxic chemicals into rivers and streams) synthesize all sorts of herbicides and pesticides (which are toxic for humans and animals too) and burn for energy (pumping toxins into the air), etc. etc. Hemp on the other hand, could be used for making plastics which are biodegradable, make better paper without chemicals, and hemp does not require pesticides or herbicides. Cotton, which makes an inferior fiber to hemp, is grown on about 1% of US agricultural land, but consumes nearly 50% of the petrochemicals! Hemp requires none. Biodiesel made from corn consumes more energy than it produces. Biodiesel and ethanol made from hemp is more than viable. One acre of hemp makes 300 gallons of biodiesel with nearly no energy input except the sun and a tractor. Hemp can be grown in all 50 States, does not need to be transported around the world, and does not require pesky things like wars and such over it.

What is most interesting is that Cannabis/Hemp was never referred to as "marijuana or pot or gateway drug" or anything like that before the mid-1930's. There is not even a recorded use of the word "marijuana" before the mid-1930's when it was used in fear-mongering newspaper articles. There was never a fear, hostility, negative attitude or whatever else towards the medicinal or recreational use of Cannabis until a massive propaganda campaign began to convince Americans that this plant that was used and prized for thousands of years was now a major public menace, and by cleverly renaming the plant people didn't know what was really happening. The people were told the plant was suddenly criminal for bogus excuses of morality and fear, the hidden reason was to eliminate competition to toxic industries.

By keeping Cannabis illegal, industries that are destructive and toxic have removed their competition. That's it. Instead of the wealth going to American farmers and the American people, it's going to industries that benefit from removing forests, pumping toxins into the air, land, and sea, profiting from oil wars, etc.

The reason that Cannabis was made illegal in the first place was a fraud. A deception. And after all these decades, the toxic and destructive industries that benefit from eliminating the natural and organic alternative are still trying to convince people they should be afraid. Afraid of what? The best thing that could possibly happen to the US economy!

Currently, Cannabis/Hemp can be grown in a few nations, such as Canada. The US is the biggest consumer of hemp products in the world yet is one few industrialized nations that may not grow it. (Yes, a few states allow marijuana production, but not hemp)

Forget marijuana for a minute, if HEMP was legalized, we could say goodbye to countless environmental and economic problems. Hemp could be the greatest economic boom in history and it could all be grown on American soil.

Oh, and hemp seed is one the healthiest foods on Earth. Seriously.

TL;DR: Wow, I wrote a lot. I even left quite a bit out. I hope some of this info helps. Shoot me any questions you may have. Good luck. ; )

u/rAxxt · 2 pointsr/cannabis

Also, stopthedrugwar.org is offering a free copy of "The Marijuana Conviction" with donations of $25 or more. I'm reading my copy this afternoon!

u/grandaddypurple · 3 pointsr/cannabis
  • Pay is dependent on what your duties are as the work put in differs. I am primarily a delivery driver. I would rather not divulge my current pay but at my first dispensary job, I was making $15 an hour. But I will say that I'm making more at this job.

  • You do not need to attend Oaksterdam U but you do need to pass a test for employment and it covers many aspects of the medicinal benefits of cannabis and even a breakdown of all the chemicals and how they work. We were all required to read this book, from which the test is based upon.

  • I am sorry but I do not deal with growers directly and have no insight as to the going rate/lb. Growing good stuff is very difficult (I know from experience)

  • There is no delivery fee for orders of 1/4 oz. or more ($90). Anything less has a $10 delivery fee.

  • Yes but I generally refrain from doing so.
u/ShockaJesus · 2 pointsr/cannabis

You're in luck!

tight underwear or the boxer briefs that run down your legs 6-8 inches preventing anything from falling out. buy an extra pack of hand warmers read the instructions on how to get them to warm reliably. Either preheat the urineluck in a microwave with the cap off in ten second increments (two should be max needed) or set it in a ziplock bag in a cup under hot water for five minutes to raise it up to temp. I let mine stay above temp and then drop it down to the right temp just outside the test clinic (two heaters will do this well) remove one heat pad and head in. Before I drop it in their cup I make sure its below 100 (some can measure initial too hotness) but above 90. Having it not be warm enough is the big risk.

If you get screwed like that a last ditch effort is to rub your thumb on your jeans until its real hot and then touch the temp strip till it hits 96 or so (risky)

Fuck Ronald Regan he was a B movie president and his workplace drug laws are a joke. A MAJORITY or near majority of people here in WA actually smoke pot regularly and fake it like this or in a similar fashion.

u/VaginaDentata · 8 pointsr/cannabis

Since you mentioned the name I'll go ahead and mention his book. Anyone interested in this subject should read Why Our Drug Laws Have Failed and What We Can Do About It: A Judicial Indictment of the War on Drugs - Judge James P. Gray.