DC
Banned
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
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- 23,064
Is it true that an ounce of weed lasts people a month?
only a short month of 14 days or so
Is it true that an ounce of weed lasts people a month?
LOL at your assertion that HID lights put out more lumens than sunlight!
If there are new, 'sooper-seekrit', 'sooper potent' strains out there, then seeds from those will not take long to become relatively easy to obtain when legal barriers to cultivation are removed. Seeds, much like secrets, never seem to stay contained for very long.
Also, most "dispensaries" in the Greater Tacoma/Olympia/Seattle area have indoor plants (According to this article) So..eh?More importantly, should the patient choose not to grow the marijuana themselves - usually because they're too sick or don't live in a situation conducive to cultivating marijuana (it's not easy) - the law provides absolutely no legal avenue for them to acquire it.
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quadraginta - Despite the misnomer cannabis isn't a herb nor does it grow like one.
a plant that is valued for flavor, scent, medicinal or other qualities other than its food value.[1]
And if we are using other commercial crops as an analogy, think about tomatoes, not many people grow there own tomatoes and when they are on sale in the supermarket most people I know pay a premium for hydroponic tomatoes because, except for a month or two of the year when tomatoes are in season, the quality of the tomatoes is much, much higher. There's no reason a marijuana consumer wouldn't do the same thing.
Pedantry is rarely a useful rhetorical tool, unless it is used for humor. "Herb" is a well known pseudonym for cannabis, and I quite clearly used it as such. The convergence of that nickname with the point I was making (one which apparently escaped you) is an entertaining aspect of language.
Pedantry is even less useful as a rhetorical tool when you are just simply wrong.
If you were trying to make a botanical distinction between basil and marijuana as herbaceous plants, I think you will find that both conform to the scientific definition equally well. If you were somehow trying to find fault with the more conventional meaning then I'll leave it to you to explain why
We were not using tomatoes as an analogy. You were. I merely pointed out the flaws in your analogy. You are to be congratulated, however. I think it is surprisingly cogent of you to discover that hothouse tomatoes are available even out of the growing season.
Dried herbs are also available out of the growing season. Unlike fresh fruit, though, they are equally available to the home grower as a result of their own harvest, for reasons which I hope you will be able to puzzle out on your own.
True, basil requires far more maintenance. You have to pick those leaves every day...I was just pointing out that it isn't basil, it doesn't grow like basil
This holds true only for a certain price point. So long as peppers are $0.69/lb, no problem for most people buying them rather than growing their own.Yet, everyday, millions upon millions of people pay consumer goods they could otherwise grow themselves. It's called value-added, not everybody has the time or the inclination to spend months and months cultivating something that they could just as easily pop down to the shops to buy and are prepared to pay a premium for the convenience of not doing it themselves.
True, basil requires far more maintenance. You have to pick those leaves every day...
This holds true only for a certain price point. So long as peppers are $0.69/lb, no problem for most people buying them rather than growing their own.
Now, if the premium for store-bought peppers was $100/lb I suspect store sales would plummet and many more people would plant pepper gardens.
What premium do you think people will pay for a product they could grow just as well at home?
I have much experience in this type of agriculture, and WildCat's comments seem pretty accurate to me.
If you say so.
It's odd that in every one of these conversations some Furry Freak Brothers stoner seems to be under the impression that their weed is the only weed worth smoking, and everything else is ditch weed. It's not a contest, bit_pattern. It's reality, with consumer trends, cultural attitudes, and economic models that are fairly well established with other recreational intoxicants and self medication.
I find it strange that we can't have a discussion about something as straight forward as growing weed without the barrage of insults
It is a statement of fact that larger plants put more energy into plant growth that could otherwise have been put into flower growth and cannibinol production
You've never actually cultivated marijuana outdoors in the USA Midwest, have you? If you did, and if it took three to five months longer than what you grow in your basement, you did it wrong.
You have a 4 month growing season in the Midwest? yeah, right![]()
You can certainly approach that in Alaska where, by the way, some of the finest pot is grown indoors or out. But the point is, your Beevis and Butt-Head attitude, that there is some kind of optimum weed and everything else is crap, is your own subjective opinion, which you are certainly entitled to, and is objectively wrong.
No, I am not wrong in the slightest. The level of environmental control available to indoor growers has created a revolution in selective breeding. And I am willing to bet my left teste that the VAST majority of quality strains being grown in America were developed by Dutch and Canadian growers working indoors.
In your unsubstantiated opinion. And when you eliminate the legal ramifications of prohibition, that will also eliminate by far the greatest risk that concerns growers and smokers in the USA.
No. Go and research Sensi or Dutch Passion, these are the pioneers that made marijuana what it is today.
When people aren't risking the confiscation of their homes and property for growing a few plants outdoors along the fence row, outdoor grown marijuana, of a quality acceptable to the vast majority of users and competitive with indoor grown pot, will be as ubiquitous as home grown tomatoes or cucumbers.
Last time I checked we still have commercial tomato and cucumber markets. So what is your point exactly?
That indoor grown marijuana sure is easier to hide from the law, isn't it? When that becomes a non-issue, when prohibition isn't a factor, and if a tax rate is applied that makes it uncomfortable for people to just buy it at the pharmacy or liquor store, people will grow pot in their back yards, tons of it. There aren't just two kinds of pot, the primo that gets you and your pals all googly eyed, and ditch weed. Quality is a continuum. There are lots of flavors. There is a variety of types of buzzes.
You overestimate the motivational levels of your average stoner. I'm a busy professional and live in apartment, even if I could grow outdoors I couldn't be arsed spending 6-8 months nurturing plants and would happily pay a premium for quality-controlled, legal product, as would many, many other people. Just like I'm willing to pay the tax for a few cartons of beer than spending weeks brewing my own at home. There will always be a market out there.
When commercial marijuana production and home grown pot becomes legal, the trend in choices will likely be similar to how we choose tobacco and beer. Billions of cigarettes are sold every year with names like Marlboro, Winston, Camel, and Pall Mall, and millions upon millions of gallons of beer get sold with names like Budweiser, Miller Lite, and Milwaukee’s Best. And although there are arguably more potent, better tasting beers and tobaccos, it only matters to a tiny fraction of consumers. And only a tiny fraction of marijuana smokers will care to emulate Beevis and Butt-Head and smoke until they puke. Understand that not everyone has your very narrow and subjective opinion on what is acceptable quality in marijuana, bit_pattern.
That is your own subjective opinion, which you are certainly entitled to, and is objectively wrong.
And if we are using other commercial crops as an analogy, think about tomatoes, not many people grow there own tomatoes and when they are on sale in the supermarket most people I know pay a premium for hydroponic tomatoes because, except for a month or two of the year when tomatoes are in season, the quality of the tomatoes is much, much higher. There's no reason a marijuana consumer wouldn't do the same thing.
I was just pointing out that it isn't basil, it doesn't grow like basil and it isn't as easy to cultivate as basil
Um, I said we are talking about commercial crops, not tomatoes, speaking of pedantry![]()
Yet, everyday, millions upon millions of people pay consumer goods they could otherwise grow themselves. It's called value-added, not everybody has the time or the inclination to spend months and months cultivating something that they could just as easily pop down to the shops to buy and are prepared to pay a premium for the convenience of not doing it themselves.
I've told you no such thing.As you've already told us, you've never actually grown pot and have no idea about what goes into cultivation.
Marijuana isn't legal in California without a prescription. And even then you are violating federal law.People already pay a premium in places like California where it is perfectly legal to grow plants, up to $700 an oz for some strains, or so I'm lead to believe (not that I'd ever pay that much in a pink fit, but obviously some consumers are prepared to). And what if a consumer wants access to hundreds of different strains, they aren't going to go out and grow those hundreds of strains themselves because that really would be well into the realm of a commercial operation that would require a commercial level of labor intensity (strains, I might add, that can't be grown outdoors because they have been bred to thrive under indoor conditions). People are always going to be prepared to pay for such services.
Doubtful you could do that in the US. Distilling liquor is illegal because stills can explode. There's no public safety issue with growing marijuana.Anyway, if the state wanted to maintain the integrity of their tax income in the event that the market reacts in the way you predict, it could easily make cultivation without a license illegal in the same way that distilling your own liquor is illegal or growing tobacco is illegal in places like Australia.
I've told you no such thing.
Marijuana isn't legal in California without a prescription. And even then you are violating federal law.
Let me know how your theory holds up when it's actually legal.
Doubtful you could do that in the US. Distilling liquor is illegal because stills can explode. There's no public safety issue with growing marijuana.
Link?Yes you did, I asked whether you'd actually ever grown pot and your response was 'no'.
Dude, the market is illegal.The police don't prosecute for personal amounts, it virtually is legal as far as market conditions are concerned.
I've seen no legalized marijuana proposal, such as the one up for referendum in CA, that prohibits growing your own.It is also illegal because it protects tax revenue. There is nothing in the constitution that stops the regulation of such things, is there? If so, it can be done, and as I've pointed out it HAS been done in other jurisdictions.
Link?
Dude, the market is illegal.
I've seen no legalized marijuana proposal, such as the one up for referendum in CA, that prohibits growing your own.
The "no" was to your ditch weed claim.You're unbelievable, I'm starting to think this ignorance isn't feigned at all. Post #97 ON THIS PAGE.
No, it doesn't. It's not legal, people get arrested and go to jail for growing and distributing pot in California.Yet it virtually operates as a legal market, especially when it comes to growing a personal supply, especially somewhere like Oakland.
It's extremely unlikely this would happen.So? That doesn't mean it couldn't happen if, as you contend, government tax revenue was going to be threatened by hordes of people choosing to grow their own rather than purchasing it.
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Really, it is such a ridiculous argument, only people who'd never had much to do with growing pot would possibly try and argue that growing outdoors was more efficient than growing indoors.
It would be if that was the argument being made, but I think that misrepresents (or misunderstands) the actual dissent.
Leaving aside the problematic issue of what is meant exactly by "efficient", growing outdoors is just easier.
I am more than willing to concede that the very pinnacle of outstanding and righteous herb is likely best pursued under carefully controlled conditions, and indoors may be the best way to achieve them, but the wide spectrum of good enough is very easily achieved outdoors.
I can cultivate, harvest, and cure a plant (Which, lets face it, really almost needs to be discouraged from growing in most climates. It's no coincidence that one of the nicknames is "weed".) with a tool set that fits in a child's sandbox bucket and a trivial investment of time, and still end up with a result which is good enough.