Quote:
Originally posted by budville
everybody must get stoned..dylan told me that, a long time ago...
And I've been respecting the man's wishes for a long time!!
* This post has been modified
: 19 years ago
Quote:
Originally posted by budville
everybody must get stoned..dylan told me that, a long time ago...
Quote:
Originally posted by Kainabyss
[reply=pigeontamertoo]
When I went to college in Maine(USA) there was "drought", so we were not able to get any weed way up north. Canada was less then one mile away, and soon we found a good hash supplier. We used to drive across the border, buy it, stop at a chinese restaurant( to make the car smell like food, as there was no similar restaurant on the US side for 100 miles and the border guards would think we just went over for the food), and cross back over to the US.
To smoke it we used a good technique called "hot knifeing". We would stick two metal butter knives under the burners of our electric stove, and get them literally RED hot. While they were heating we would roll the hash up into very tiny balls, and then put the balls on a dry plate spaced several inches apart. We then would cut a two liter soda bottle in half. When the knives were hot we would pick up a piece of the balled hash( simply by touching a knife to it), the smoker would put the bottle opening in his mouth, then the hash and knife were placed underneath the bottle opening, and then the other knife was touched to the other knife.The person with the cut bottle would then suck up all the smoke. We found this to be the most effective way to get the most smoke quickly, and there was no waste, only left behind ash.
I always found the effects of hash to be more physical then that of strait weed. Sometimes it was so intense that I would feel cold, or suddenly hot.
If I still smoked, I would choose weed.
A question about blotter acid. It was always stated that the sheets were dipped into the acid, "We just dipped these last night"... Is that really how it was made? It seems like that would be a tough way to produce a uniformed product.