Guest guest Posted August 11, 2010 Report Share Posted August 11, 2010 The cannabis tincture manufactured here is manufactured by placing either trim(manicured off leaves from the flower), or shake(assorted ground leaves), in everclear 75% ethanol(>1:1 )for a period usually ranging from six months to a year, these are strain specific AF(Malowee origin, sativa,THC 23.7%, CBD <0.1% and CBN <0.1%), stimulant, antidepressant,intraocular pressure reducerAFPI(sativa dominant)PIAF(indica dominant)PI(Afgahni origin, indica,THC 19.6%, CBD <0.2% and CBN <0.5%), painkiller, sedative,antibiotic (AF preferred my females, whilst, PI preferred by males, generally, reversal of effect in children as in ADD/ADHD/ODD/spasms successfully treated with AF caps and cookies, rare cases of adult reversal,will interview, pharmacogenomics and constitutiion will shape future of medicine) if can will front money for AFPI and PIAF studies when I come back. surely several weeks are suffficient to extract cannabinoids?, do any of you of a cheap source of percolators, herb presses, as wish to optimise their extractions. On a separate note a patient with Lyme's, coccodimyosis, barret's esophagus, hemocritosis, claims that lecithin and 10 ml of milk thistle glycextract(which grows at the top of the garden), improved liver pain 60% within a couple of days, will continue making. National geographics came to interview founders yesterday. One thing I have realised that playing with cannabis of unknown origin is unethical, unresponsible and dangerous, with known genetics it can make effective medicine. Time of day constitution and symptoms are important when considering which straion and route is applicable. Will do case studies on most interesting. Will do short case study on oil patients (one sample oil 78% THC, high delta 8 but also 6 and nine, cbd, cbn and misc.), 8 patients, four oils (strain specific, double blinded) pain, nausea appetite etc. before/after over one week per oil. I may be ranting but cannabis is an important medicine and is worthy of consideration in many cases, it is our right to use this plant in phytotherapy and I will fight for this right after seeing the difference it makes in the lives of the terminally ill and those in chronic pain. The time is now to study this plant. To: ukherbal-list From: hetta@... Date: Sun, 8 Aug 2010 22:05:52 +0300 Subject: Re: tincture shelf-life > Individual herb tinctures seem to vary widely in their shelf life. Some last > for years, but others (e.g. Arctostaphylos) start losing their effect fairly > rapidly, after about 6 months from date of manufacture. Strangely, dried Arctostaphylus will still work even powdered and kept in a plastic bag for years on end ... nothing in the dried herb that could deteriorate by exposure to oxygen or light. H. -- Henriette Kress, AHG Helsinki, Finland Henriette's herbal homepage: http://www.henriettesherbal.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2010 Report Share Posted August 12, 2010 > do any of you of a cheap source of percolators, Get a glass Perrier bottle (it has the right shape for percolation) Burn off the bottom (dip some cotton thread in a liquid that'll burn, tie it around the bottom (for a straight-sided bottle: as close down as you can get. For Perrier: as close to the center of the " belly " as you can.), hold the bottle bottom up until the thread is all black, then dip the bottom including burning thread quickly into a bowl of ice water. You'll hear a _crack_. If you see cracks running up the sides of the now upright bottle, try, try again. Once you have a clean crack, sandpaper the edges. (Alternatively, take the bottle to a glass cutter and have him take off the bottom.) (Alternatively, take a large bottle made of thick plastic (2 l coca-cola bottles, anybody?), and take your bread knife to it.) Bottles with screw caps are better, as you can then control the flow, even though you've packed your herb too loosely ... > herb presses, You don't need a press if you percolate. > I may be ranting but cannabis is an important medicine and is worthy of > consideration in many cases, it is our right to use this plant in > phytotherapy and I will fight for this right after seeing the difference it > makes in the lives of the terminally ill and those in chronic pain. The > time is now to study this plant. Using cannabis might also get you arrested ... which isn't in the interest of you OR your clients. H. -- Henriette Kress, AHG Helsinki, Finland Henriette's herbal homepage: http://www.henriettesherbal.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.