cannibus seeds for sale in los angeles, ca
Cannabis Shop Auckland
Cannabis Shop Auckland
Sweet, earthy taste, rare to find. Resinous large Bong buds with few sucker leaves to cull. - Wild Rose Seeds
Cuttings of this strain can be brought to maturity in 65-75 days of flowering immediately after
rooting. Seedlings need to veg for 35-40 days. Flowering time 65-75 days
Cannabis Shop Auckland
Actually, the emperor turns out to be mythological; Shen is a component of
Chinese folk religion, creator of agriculture, and one of the gods most widely worshipped
(8 of 19)4/15/2004 1:03:03 AM
The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 1
in pre-Revolutionary China, with his own altar, hsiennung t'an.7] The Treatise on
Medicine attributed to Shen was "compiled by an early Han dynasty writer, whose sources
go back only as far as the fourth century B.C." 8] Marijuana's recorded history, then,
stretches back at the very least two and a half millennia; archaeological evidence of its
cultivation and use may be placed something like five thousand years in the past. Its
functions have been almost as diverse as the cultures which have employed it. It would be
impossible to discuss its patterns of use in every country at all of its periods of history,
even were such documentation available. This overview, Bong then, will serve as a backdrop for
our more detailed discussions of its use in contemporary America.
In the United States, the most common slang words for marijuana are pot, grass, tea,
weed, and smoke, in decreasing order of frequency. The derivation of all of these terms is
obvious, except for pot. One etymologist has claimed that the word pot comes from a
South American drink which contained, among other things, marijuana seeds soaked in
guava wine or brandy, known as potacion de guaya, or potaguaya.9] Marijuana is very
occasionally called "shit" in America, a term usually reserved for heroin. The obvious
import of this designation should delight the psychoanalytically inclined. It ties in with
toilet training—especially in view of its conjunction with pot (i.e., the children's pottie or
chamber pot)—as well as filth, in view of the disorganized, casual and even squalid way
of life of a few conspicuous marijuana users, and its symbolization as a rebellion against
traditional mores and most users' middle-class upbringing, and an effort to shock
conventional relatives, neighbors, former friends, and other authority-figure observers.
[10] The term "reefer" is often used among urban blacks to mean the marijuana itself;
reefer can occasionally mean a marijuana cigarette, although this term is used much less
today than it was a generation ago. The cigarette butt is known as a "roach," supposedly
because it looks something like a small cockroach. (Such derivations are always
problematic, often more fantasy than fact.) Also, conjecturally, because of the Mexican
song, "La Cucaracha," in which a cockroach couldn't walk until it had its marijuana.11]
Today's terms will probably go out of style, as have countless other terms used a decade
or a generation ago. The word "viper," for instance, for marijuana smoker, has been
replaced by the broader term "head," meaning the user (more or less regularly) of any
drug, usually non-narcotic. Viper is used by no one today. Common terms for marijuana
up until the late 1950s and early 1960s we Actually, the emperor turns out to be mythological; Shen is a component of
Chinese folk religion, creator of agriculture, and one of the gods most widely worshipped
(8 of 19)4/15/2004 1:03:03 AM
The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 1
in pre-Revolutionary China, with his own altar, hsiennung t'an.7] The Treatise on
Medicine attributed to Shen was "compiled by an early Han dynasty writer, whose sources
go back only as far as the fourth century B.C." 8] Marijuana's recorded history, then,
stretches back at the very least two and a half millennia; archaeological evidence of its
cultivation and use may be placed something like five thousand years in the past. Its
functions have been almost as diverse as the cultures which have employed it. It would be
impossible to discuss its patterns of use in every country at all of its periods of history,
even were such documentation available. This overview, then, will serve as a backdrop for
our more detailed discussions of its use in contemporary America.
In the United States, the most common slang words for marijuana are pot, grass, tea,
weed, and smoke, in decreasing order of frequency. The derivation of all of these terms is
obvious, except for pot. One etymologist has claimed that the word pot comes from a
South American drink which contained, among other things, marijuana seeds soaked in
guava wine or brandy, known as potacion de guaya, or potaguaya.9] Marijuana is very
occasionally called "shit" in America, a term usually reserved for heroin. The obvious
import of this designation should delight the psychoanalytically inclined.
It ties in with
toilet training—especially in view of its conjunction with pot (i.
e.
, the children's pottie or
chamber pot)—as well as filth, in view of the disorganized, casual and even squalid way
of life of a few conspicuous marijuana users, and its symbolization as a rebellion against
traditional mores and most users' middle-class upbringing, and an effort to shock
conventional relatives, neighbors, former friends, and other authority-figure observers.
10] The term "reefer" is often used among urban blacks to mean the marijuana itself;
reefer can occasionally mean a marijuana cigarette, although this term is used much less
today than it was a generation ago. The cigarette butt is known as a "roach," supposedly
because it looks something like a small cockroach. (Such derivations are always
problematic, often more fantasy than fact.) Also, conjecturally, because of the Mexican
song, "La Cucaracha," in which a cockroach couldn't walk until it had its marijuana.11]
Today's terms will probably go out of style, as have countless other terms used a decade
or a generation ago. The word "viper," for instance, for marijuana smoker, has been
replaced by the broader term "head," meaning the user (more or less regularly) of any
drug, usually non-narcotic. Viper is used by no one today. Common terms for marijuana
up until the late 1950s and early 1960s we Actually, the emperor turns out to be mythological; Shen is a component of
Chinese folk religion, creator of agriculture, and one of the gods most widely worshipped
(8 of 19)4/15/2004 1:03:03 AM
The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 1
in pre-Revolutionary China, with
canabis seed banks in california
his own altar, hsiennung t'an.
7 The Treatise on
Medicine attributed to Shen was "compiled by an early Han dynasty writer, whose sources
go back only as far as the fourth century B.C." [8 Marijuana's recorded history, then,
stretches back at the very least two and a half millennia; archaeological evidence of its
cultivation and use may be placed something like five thousand years in the past. Its
functions have been almost as diverse as the cultures which have employed it. It would be
impossible to discuss its patterns of use in every country at all of its periods of history,
even were such documentation available. This overview, then, will serve as a backdrop for
our more detailed discussions of its use in contemporary America.
In the United States, the most common slang words for marijuana are pot, grass, tea,
weed, and smoke, in decreasing order of frequency. The derivation of all of these terms is
obvious, except for pot. One etymologist has claimed that the word pot comes from a
South American drink which contained, among other things, marijuana seeds soaked in
guava wine or brandy, known as potacion de guaya, or potaguaya.9 Marijuana is very
occasionally called "shit" in America, a term usually reserved for heroin. The obvious
import of this designation should delight the psychoanalytically inclined. It ties in with
toilet training—especially in view of its conjunction with pot (i.
e.
, the children's pottie or
chamber pot)—as well as filth, in view of the disorganized, casual and even squalid way
of life of a few conspicuous marijuana users, and its symbolization as a rebellion against
traditional mores and most users' middle-class upbringing, and an effort to shock
conventional relatives, neighbors, former friends, and other authority-figure observers.
[10 The term "reefer" is often used among urban blacks to mean the marijuana itself;
reefer can occasionally mean a marijuana cigarette, although this term is used much less
today than it was a generation ago. The cigarette butt is known as a "roach," supposedly
because it looks something like a small cockroach. (Such derivations are always
problematic, often more fantasy than fact.) Also, conjecturally, because of the Mexican
song, "La Cucaracha," in which a cockroach couldn't walk until it had its marijuana.[11
Today's terms will probably go out of style, as have countless other terms used a decade
or a generation ago. The word "viper," for instance, for marijuana smoker, has been
replaced by the broader term "head," meaning the user (more or less regularly) of any
drug, usually non-narcotic. Viper is used by no one today. Common terms for marijuana
up until the late 1950s and early 1960s we Actually, the emperor turns out to be mythological; Shen is a component of
Chinese folk religion, creator of agriculture, and one of the gods most widely worshipped
(8 of 19)4/15/2004 1:03:03 AM
The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 1
in pre-Revolutionary China, with his own altar, hsiennung t'an.7 The Treatise on
Medicine attributed to Shen was "compiled by an early Han dynasty writer, whose sources
go back only as far as the fourth century B.C." 8 Marijuana's recorded history, then,
stretches back at the very least two and a half millennia; archaeological evidence of its
cultivation and use may be placed something like five thousand years in the past. Its
functions have been almost as diverse as the cultures which have employed it. It would be
impossible to discuss its patterns of use in every country at all of its periods of history,
even were such documentation available.
This overview, then, will serve as a backdrop for
our more detailed discussions of its use in contemporary America.
In the United States, the most common slang words for marijuana are pot, grass, tea,
weed, and smoke, in decreasing order of frequency. The derivation of all of these terms is
obvious, except for pot. One etymologist has claimed that the word pot comes from a
South American drink which contained, among other things, marijuana seeds soaked in
guava wine or brandy, known as potacion de guaya, or potaguaya.
9 Marijuana is very
occasionally called "shit" in America, a term usually reserved for heroin. The obvious
import of this designation should delight the psychoanalytically inclined. It ties in with
toilet training—especially in view of its conjunction with pot (i.e., the children's pottie or
chamber pot)—as well as filth, in view of the disorganized, casual and even squalid way
of life of a few conspicuous marijuana users, and its symbolization as a rebellion against
traditional mores and most users' middle-class upbringing, and an effort to shock
conventional relatives, neighbors, former friends, and other authority-figure observers.
10 The term "reefer" is often used among urban blacks to mean the marijuana itself;
reefer can occasionally mean a marijuana cigarette, although this term is used much less
today than it was a generation ago. The cigarette butt is known as a "roach," supposedly
because it looks something like a small cockroach.
(Such derivations are always
problematic, often more fantasy than fact.) Also, conjecturally, because of the Mexican
song, "La Cucaracha," in which a cockroach couldn't walk until it had its marijuana.11
Today's terms will probably go out of style, as have countless other terms used a decade
or a generation ago. The word "viper," for instance, for marijuana smoker, has been
replaced by the broader term "head," meaning the user (more or less regularly) of any
drug, usually non-narcotic.
Viper is used by no one today. Common terms for marijuana
up until the late 1950s and early 1960s we Cannabis Shop Auckland