Volcano is all I use these days for bud, got a pinnacle pro the other month and that is a good portable vape, good for public places but it can be quite harsh so I don't use it at home.
Going to have to buy this soon it looks crazy
Volcanos >>>>>
The taste is so sweet and the high is nuts
Volcano is all I use these days for bud, got a pinnacle pro the other month and that is a good portable vape, good for public places but it can be quite harsh so I don't use it at home.
Going to have to buy this soon it looks crazy
Got a magic flight box, rinsed it for a couple months thought it was the best all time thing invented by homo sapiens
Until my boy copped the arizer extreme... 200 less than the volcano does exactly the same thing
Ain't nobody got time for all that shit......
'One sheet of the rizla is all I need - break up a little chip of cigarette and mix it all up with the weed'
Truss.
Smoking kills tho lads.
Ain't smoked in well over a year.
If I was to let Mary back into my life it would be only be through a vaporizer.
TIME
Time.com
Recreational Pot Use Harmful to Young People’s Brains
Randye Hoder @ranhoder April 15, 2014
A new study from researchers at Harvard and Northwestern University shows that smoking marijuana even just recreationally can cause abnormalities in areas of the brain that regulate emotion and motivation in 18- to-25-year-olds
For those young people — and their parents — who think that smoking pot in moderation isn’t harmful, it’s time to think again.
A study being released this week by researchers from Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine and Harvard Medical School has found that 18- to 25-year-olds who smoke marijuana only recreationally showed significant abnormalities in the brain.
“There is this general perspective out there that using marijuana recreationally is not a problem — that it is a safe drug,” says Anne Blood, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and the co–senior author of the study, which is being published in the Journal of Neuroscience. “We are seeing that this is not the case.”
The scientists say theirs is the first study to examine the relationship between casual use of marijuana in young people and pot’s effects on two parts of the brain that regulate emotion and motivation. As such, it is sure to challenge many people’s assumptions that smoking a joint or two on the weekends is no big deal.
It has certainly challenged mine. In a piece earlier this year, based on other research from Northwestern on the effects of heavy marijuana use, I suggested that young people should hold off on smoking pot as long as possible because their brains are still developing and the earlier the drug is taken up, the worse the effects. That remains good advice. Yet the truth is, I’ve not only been telling my own 16-year-old son to hold off, I’ve also been counseling him that should he ever decide to use pot, he should do so with temperance.
This “everything in moderation” mantra has always struck me as more realistic than preaching total abstinence. Baked into my message, meanwhile, has been the implicit belief that smoking a little weed on the weekends is no worse than having a few beers — a notion that many Americans apparently share.
A nationwide NBC/Wall Street Journal poll conducted last month found that only 8% of adults think that marijuana is the most harmful substance to a person’s overall health when lined up against tobacco, alcohol and sugar. In contrast, 49% of those surveyed rated tobacco as the most harmful on the list, while 24% mentioned alcohol. Notably, even sugar — at 15% — was considered more harmful than pot.
The new Northwestern-Harvard study punches a hole in this conventional wisdom. Through three different methods of neuroimaging analysis, the scientists examined the brains of 40 young adult students from Boston-area colleges: 20 who smoked marijuana casually — four times a week on average — and 20 who didn’t use pot at all.
Each group consisted of nine males and 11 females. The pot users underwent a psychiatric interview to confirm that they were not heavy or dependent marijuana users.
“We looked specifically at people who have no adverse impacts from marijuana — no problems with work, school, the law, relationships, no addiction issues,” says Hans Breiter, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Feinberg School and co–senior author of the study.
The scientists examined two key parts of the brain — the nucleus accumbens and the amygdala, which together help control whether people judge things to be rewarding or aversive and, in turn, whether they experience pleasure or pain from them. It is the development of these regions of the brain, Breiter says, that allows young people to expand their horizons, helping them appreciate and enjoy new foods, music, books and relationships.
“This is a part of the brain that you absolutely never ever want to touch,” Breiter asserts. “I don’t want to say that these are magical parts of the brain — they are all important. But these are fundamental in terms of what people find pleasurable in the world and assessing that against the bad things.”
Breiter and his colleagues found that among all 20 casual marijuana smokers in their study — even the seven who smoked just one joint per week — the nucleus accumbens and amygdala showed changes in density, volume and shape. The scientists also discovered that the more pot the young people smoked, the greater the abnormalities.
The researchers acknowledge that their sample size was small and their study preliminary. More work, they say, needs to be done to understand the relationship between the changes to the brain they found and their impact on the day-to-day lives of young people who smoke marijuana casually.
“The next important step is to investigate how structural abnormalities relate to functional outcomes,” says Jodi Gilman, an instructor at Harvard Medical School who collaborated on the study.
This is especially important, she and her colleagues add, in light of the growing push to legalize recreational marijuana use across America. “People think a little marijuana shouldn’t cause a problem if someone is doing O.K. with work or school,” Breiter says. “Our data directly says this is not so.”
"The next important step is to investigate how structural abnormalities relate to functional outcomes"
So they have seen changes in brain structure but have no idea weather this leads to a positive or a negative.
Which means they have no idea weather or not it is harmful.
Ain't nobody got time for all that sh*t......
'One sheet of the rizla is all I need - break up a little chip of cigarette and mix it all up with the weed'
lol at mixing with tobacco tho, pure raw king size or nothing.
I think anecdotally most people are know who are weed smokers are mentally abnormal , not saying this is good or bad but now at least my anecdotes have certi harvard /northwestern university academican studies to back it up .
Midlands here.
I overheard a bloke saying in a pub the other night that it's about £230 an ounce for Northern Lights x Super Silver Haze. I think he said he buys two for £410.
cw i actually like ur tunes
but swear uve been rocking that gucci beanie for at least 4 years now
I saw the vids and clocked his hat but lol at thinking anyone could seriously keep one in that condition for that long.
/
Tunes are nice and I don't even blaze.
Hyde park 2moro lads, dabs all day
/
Mixtape out 2moro as well, new vid
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them pens dont get hot enough to vape bud, they just carbonise it.
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curtis warren2
Vapin dry herbs get a volcanoe the pens are for oil really
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Ari Gold
Anyone got a magic flight?
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