This was originally just an oral cannabis thread, but I've decided to expand it. I know many people here appreciate their herbal medicine, and thought it might be interesting to make a thread talking about preferred methods of ingestion, but more specifically how best to use cannabis to mimimize the unhealthy effects of smoking as well as to get the most benefit from the smallest amount of herb.
SmokingBy far the most popular method of ingestion, cannabis is smoked in a pipe made of glass or less commonly metal, or rolled in cigarette paper or the leaf from a cigar which has had the tobacco removed. Many smokers prefer to use a waterpipe to cool and filter the smoke, and it is widely held that smoking this way is healthier. However, NORML and MAPS conducted a study (
Link) that showed strong evidence that bongs were actually counterproductive. The study acknowledges that their focus was specifically on the ratio of tar:THC, and there may be other, non-particulate contaminates in smoke that are more effectively filtered by water.
MAPS Study wrote:Surprisingly, the unfiltered joint outperformed all devices except the vaporizers, with a ratio of about 1 part cannabinoids to 13 parts tar. This disturbingly poor ratio may be explained by the low potency of the NIDA-supplied marijuana used in the study, which was around 2.3%.
Disappointingly, waterpipes performed uniformly worse than the unfiltered joint. The least bad waterpipe, the bong, produced 30% more tar per cannabinoids than the unfiltered joint. Ironically, the pipe with the electric mixer scored by far the worst of any device. This suggests that water filtration is actually counterproductive, apparently because water tends to absorb THC more readily than noxious tars. Like the waterpipes, the cigarette filter also performed worse than the unfiltered joint, by about 30%. Researchers speculate this is because cannabinoids are exceptionally sticky and adhere to other solids. Hence, any filtration system that picks up particulates is likely also to screen out cannabinoids.
This seems to show that the recent trend of attaching carbon filters to high-end glass bongs may be extremely counterproductive in making the smoke less harmful, since the user may end up just having to smoke more.
MAPS Study wrote:In the meantime, the easiest way for most smokers to avoid harmful smoke toxins may be simply to smoke stronger marijuana. This strategy is apt to be more effective than any smoke filtration device. By simply replacing the low, 2.3% potency NIDA marijuana used in this study with high-quality 12%-sinsemilla, smokers could presumably reduce their tar intake by a factor of five while still achieving the same effect. Further improvements could be had by using pure THC or hash oil, which has been tested at potencies of 60%
Of course, a vaporizer is the best way to 'smoke' cannabis, since the cannabinoids are more efficiently delivered to the lungs without having to burn the plant matter and release tars, etc. Cheap conduction vapes function essentially like a soldering iron with a bowl that is enclosed in a glass dome, and nicer convection vapes like the Volcano work by moving hot air through ground herbs. Convection vapes are more efficient and less likely to burn the herbs, but can be costly if they contain a mechanical fan. Some units such as the Vapor Bros rely on lung power to draw air past the heating element through the herbs, and as a result are much cheaper and less noisy.
ExtractsPurified cannabinoid extracts have obvious advantages over smoking buds. The user must ingest much less material, resulting in less strain on the lungs or easier oral dosing, whichever the case may be. There are several methods for extracting cannabinoids from herb, which fall into two distinct types. Extracts are often made from stems and trim from grows that would otherwise be unpleasant to smoke, but when extracted provide a potent oil from what was essentially waste product.
-Solvent extractions rely on alcohol, butane, acetone, or other nonpolar chemicals to dissolve the cannabinoids. The plant matter is filtered out, and the solvent is evaporated to provide an oil of varying potency.
--Butane Honey Oil (BHO) is the preferred method for many smokers and growers. A tube constructed of glass, metal, or plastic is filled with plant material, and a filter is placed at the bottom. Butane is introduced via a small opening in the top of the tube, and extracts the cannabinoids as it makes its way down into a collecting dish. The advantages of this tek are that the butane is selective, meaning it will pull more cannabinoids and less chlorophyll, plant waxes, and other things that can give hash oil a bad taste or texture. The butane evaporates extremely quickly, which can save time but is also the main danger of this method. Butane is obviously extremely flammable, and people have been seriously injured trying to attempt this without proper precautions. An improperly constructed extraction tube can burst under pressure, fumes can combust, etc. This should obviously never be done indoors or around any source of heat or ignition such as a lit joint.
--Quick Wash Iso (QWISO) involves placing cannabis in a jar of some sort, covering with just enough 90+% isopropyl alcohol (or acetone), and shaking for about a minute. The mixture is then strained through a filter and evaporated. The same precautions as with butane should be taken with this method, as these solvents are also flammable and the fumes can be toxic and irritating. It is often helpful to filter through a loose metal screen and then a coffee filter to cut down on waiting time, since a coffee filter alone will tend to get clogged up. Often, the plant matter and solvent are placed in the freezer before extracting to reduce the amount of impurities picked up by the solvent. A short extraction time (shaking only for a minute) is also helpful in keeping the amount of contaminates to a minimum, and many people will do a second extraction on the same material into another collection vessel, resulting in a batch of very pure oil and a second batch of less pure oil that may be used for baking or making tinctures.
-Mechanical separation methods involve physically removing the THC resin from the plant material. The cannabis is often frozen to help break off the cannabinoid resin heads.
--Dry sieving is the most common of these techniques, and consists of placing the plant matter on a fine screen (such as a silk screen used to print t-shirts) and shaking, tapping, and moving the material around to allow the small resin heads to pass through the screen, leaving the bulk of the plant matter behind. This can be done manually, although recently there have been products released which allow the herbs to be placed on a cylindrical screen that is rotated by electric motor.
--"Bubble Bags" are a relatively new product. These involve a series of nylon bags with a screen at the bottom. The bags are arranged from loosest to tightest screen and placed in a bucket. Ice water is added with cannabis material, and mixed violently. As the bags are removed, each screen will retain a progressively smaller series of particulate matter. So the first bag will pull out most of the plant material, while the subsequent bags will have finer and finer consistency. The cannabinoid resin heads will become more concentrated in these finer consistency extracts.
EdiblesPeople have already been very helpful on this topic before I edited the OP, so I'll try to condense some of that information here.
۩ wrote:You can do a double boiler with some coconut oil. Infuse it so that gel caps could be consumed. GREAT for fevers and muscle pain (it can also be applied externally, fried with, etc)!!
DMTripper wrote:I have a book on .pdf called The Art And Science Of Cooking With Cannabis and it's a great read. I haven't had the opportunity to try out any recipes but the guy who wrote it seems to know what he's talking about.
Erowid:
http://www.erowid.org/li...ooking_with_cannabis.pdf (quote slightly edited for conciseness)
Tinctures are another method of oral ingestion. Cannabis is placed in alcohol, high-fat oil, or vegetable glycerine for an extended period of time, filtered, and then consumed orally or sublingually. I have no experience here, so input is appreciated.
Topics for Discussion:-What are some ways to increase the efficiency of various ingestion methods? For example, if you were stranded on a desert island with only 10 grams of cannabis and the things an average person could get from a kitchen or hardware store, how would you make it last the longest?
-This topic usually causes a round of elitism and disdain, but it may be worth exploring. What is the composition of the resin that accumulates on cannabis pipes? Anecdotal evidence shows it to be psychoactive, but it seems that harmful components of smoke will be present in higher concentrations. Is there a way to purify this extract? Some things to consider: THC is not water soluble, but are tars and other contaminates? Bongs and such are commonly cleaned with isopropyl alcohol and kosher salt. Salt can be used to separate isopropyl alcohol and water. Could the isopropyl layer be decanted after cleaning a bong, and then further purified with something such as activated charcoal?
-The MAPS study suggests that pure H2O may not be ideal for use in bongs, and that other liquids may reduce the filtration of THC. Could saltwater or other liquids be more helpful here in either reducing the solubility of THC in the mixture or making it less able to stick to something before reaching the lungs?
Thanks for reading, and have a nice day. Suggests, comments, and criticisms are welcome.