please help by filling survey in

For EVERYONE’S Moaning Whining and Whingeing that we should have the 100% Right to Legal Cannabis, Phil Monk and the WTU Team formed to Help, the Frikkin Amazing Work they have done is 2nd to non, a Survey has been Created by All at WTU yet only approx just 10% of WTU Members have sat and gave 10/15mins to fill in the Form, just 10%!!! Thats Shocking, Disgusting just dam right wrong and to top it off UTTERLY SHAMEFUL & DISRESPECTFUL to Phil and the WTU Team.https://www.wtuhq.org/survey-for-case-studies/?fbclid=IwAR2txmMgByy8SpNONXTNXklrDJuhtmVKVzIk4Kj50STC_rNC134trV15Hb8

Thcbd farms is committed to helping people grow their own cannabis products despite offering them ourselves.

We are here for those who cannot maintain their own grow. But if you want to grow the way we did at home, then read through everything because everything is included. to grow 4 plants in a 1m tent. this alone will eventually along with experience be able to generate you 20oz per harvest and for personal consumption, this is a great way to start, add another schedule 2 months into it to reduce harvest times by half. Your first lesson is to respect that there is a number of ways to cultivate cannabis there is no wrong and no right you find something that is suitable for you and then you stick to it with experience you master it. Through this guide, we will be only doing two training techniques. Super Cropping ( snapping of the stem ) and placing each branch and bud site under a netting ( scrogg ).


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Continue reading “Thcbd farms is committed to helping people grow their own cannabis products despite offering them ourselves.”

Curing

if you cure {which you should do }
these work out really cheap .
don’t place tap in just seal the hole up
Curing

Now that you have finished the drying process, you’ll move onto the curing stage. In this stage you’ll place all of your buds into a hermetically sealed jar and stash it in a dark place for a period of ten to fourteen days (minimal). There really isn’t a thing as “over-curing” but there definitely is a thing called “under-curing”.

In this process you’ll have to burp your weed every day for about an hour. To burp your weed, you simply open up the jar, shake the weed around or even spread it over a newspaper for a bit to allow the humidity to escape. This will help mature the cannabinoids and give it a better smell and taste to it and can drastically increase the potency of your stash.

Do this for about two weeks and you should be ready to smoke your first bowl of your newly grown stash.20171006_153802

Spice crisis deepens as 9 kids collapse after taking zombie drug and deaths surge

The Spice crisis is deepening as deaths involving the zombie drugs surge and nine kids collapsed after taking it in recent months.

The synthetic cannabis, previously a legal high, featured on 60 death certificates in England and Wales last year.

This was up from 24 a year earlier – and none in 2013.

And it comes as possession cases rose from 71 in 2017 to 281 in 2018. In the same period, just 18 dealers were convicted.

The Mirror was told dealers now make a version laced with nail varnish and cleaning chemicals they call “Street Spice”.
A Liverpool user said: “It’s now seen as a mainstream drug.” He said street users have “puked up blood”, adding: “It has killed homeless people. They’re being found dead on park benches.”

The nine kids collapsed in the North West after inhaling Spice, thinking it was a natural cannabis-based vaping liquid.

Cheryl Howe, 37, of Morecambe, Lancs, whose daughter Sharon nearly died at 15 from a spiked cigarette, wants dealers targeted. She said: “It’s everywhere and parents have to pick up the pieces.”

A Spice epidemic in jails is also blamed for a three-fold rise in “non-natural” inmate deaths. It became a Class B drug in 2016 but there are calls for it to be made Class A – like heroin.

Well put Neil Jones

Anyone happen to know different?

The only way the government can issue a licence to grow a schedule 1 drug is for research purposes only!
Have GW pharmaceuticals been purely researching cannabis, a schedule 1 drug with no known therapeutic value, or have they been engaged in and profiteering from a commercial enterprise based on the therapeutic effects of a supposedly non therapeutic drug?

If the government admit they recognised the therapeutic value of cannabis since 1998 when they first started issuing licenses to grow it for that purpose, then it could not also be classed as, or prosecuted as a schedule 1 class B drug.
Therefore they would have to squash the convictions of everyone ever arrested for personal possession as per Class C guidelines since that time. And they’d have to retry everyone else who got caught for cultivation and supply of cannabis as they’d be entitled to a potential reduced sentence under a lesser classification at the very least.

The only way to avoid having to do all the above, would be for the government to lie and claim cannabis has no known therapeutic value and therefore it’s always been properly categorised as a restricted schedule 1 class B drug.
In which case I await the police arrest and potential incarceration of up to 14yrs each for all the UK drugs ministers since 1998. Including the husband of, and current UK drugs minister MP Victoria Atkins, the board of GW pharmaceuticals and anyone else who’ve issued or used a null and void licence for the illegal cultivation and supply of a Schedule 1 class B drug;
Swiftly followed by the seizure of all their assets under the Proceeds of Crime Act as they’d do to the rest of us!

Traumatic brain injury accounts for approximately 10 million deaths and/or hospitalizations annually in the world

approximately 1.5 million annual emergency room visits and hospitalizations in the US (Langlois et al., 2006). Young men are consistently over-represented as being at greatest risk for TBI (Langlois et al., 2006). While half of all traumatic deaths in the USA are due to brain injury (Mayer and Badjatia, 2010), the majority of head injuries are considered mild and often never receive medical treatment (Corrigan et al., 2010).