• Download [TOP] The Big Hash Palm Trees

    From Virgen Vanier@vaniervirgen@gmail.com to comp.lang.mumps on Thu Jan 18 03:30:56 2024
    From Newsgroup: comp.lang.mumps

    <div>The plastic cup had to be emptied in one go. So much for my intention to drive without alcohol in my system. But I returned to my seat with a smile. Our first hash was fantastic and I felt at home immediately.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>download the big hash palm trees</div><div></div><div>Download Zip &#10003;&#10003;&#10003; https://t.co/CIHIjaweVu</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Just to clarify, the hash was started in (what is now) Malaysia by a group of Brits who had been sent to work in various positions in Kuala Lumpur. Gispert was an accountant who unfortunately lost his life in the Second World War. Hashing started up again afterwards and only started spreading out in the 60s, first to Singapore and then further afield.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Miami Art Week is jam-packed with events, shows, and afterparties this year, so I compiled all of the must-see events in glass and hash to help you prioritize your social calendar. Now all you need is some sunscreen and a mojito.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Katherine Wolf is an independent writer and the Chief Marketing Officer of Malek's Premium Cannabis - a boutique cannabis brand based in Denver, Colorado. Passionate about glass, hash, and a good latte.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>When used outside NixOS, the Nix package manager can run alongside your OS'spackage manager (apt, yum, brew, etc.) without interfering with it in any way.The Nix package manager stores all of its packages under the /nix/store path,and packages under that path are named by the hash of their dependencies.Transitively, this is what allows Nix to manage the coexistence of manydifferent versions of the same package, be that different versions of thesource code or the same source code built against different sets ofdependencies. Installing things with Nix is pretty easy; the tricky part is toget those weird hash-looking paths in your PATH. And that's where Nixtutorials usually want to take over your entire machine so they can manage yourshell.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The other question that this should raise is how do you know what hash toinstall in the first place. The answer to that is that Nix works with arepository of Nix "recipes" called nixpkgs, which is a GitHub repo thatcontains "derivations" for many, many, many programs. The way you find outspecific hashes is that you tell Nix to use a specific commit from that repo asyour "packages definitions", and from then on you only need to specify thepackage name (and sometimes some options) and Nix will figure out theappropriate hash itself.</div><div></div><div></div><div>In true Breakers style, even your easygoing breakfast can take place in old-world elegance. An architectural gem, The Circle boasts soaring 30-foot frescoed ceilings and eight oval murals depicting Renaissance landscapes, including the Villa Medici, near Florence and the famous Tivoli Gardens, south of Rome. (Never mind the backdrop of palm trees and ocean through the arched windows.)</div><div></div><div></div><div>Hello! This is my first post on this forum. And I was wondering if anyone knew where palms in the Boise area are being grown. I've been a palm enthusiast for a long time and I would love to know where I can go to appreciate them in the treasure valley! If anyone has an idea please let me know! Thank you!</div><div></div><div></div><div>Edwards Nursery has some Sabal Minors and needle palms growing in it's canal unprotected. There is Gossets landscape in Garden City that has some Minors and needle palms as well. I have some Minors, needles, and tracycarpus. The trachy unprotected will be hit and miss.</div><div></div><div></div><div>There's a few trucking yuccas too that kinda give the palmy/tropical look. Yucca gloriosa verigatta, schottii, and rostrata have been fuss free for me, and I've seen some gorgeous yucca elata's around town too.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Today you can enjoy any number of cannabis concentrates. Cannabis oil, shatter, crumble, batter, Butane Honey Oil, Rick Simpson Oil - there are many different variants on the same theme and you probably have your own favourite cannabis concentrate. But many will remember the days when the only choice was weed or hash. So what is hashish, how is hash made, what is the potency like and how does hash differ from other cannabis concentrates?</div><div></div><div></div><div>Anyone that has harvested their own cannabis plants will be familiar with the scissor hash which builds up quickly on the scissors used to trim your plants and buds. Sometimes, especially with a well grown premium cannabis seed variety, you will need to occasionally scrape away the hash accumulation from your scissors or trimmer. Scissor hash is excellent hash, with all the terpenes from the fresh plant you will get a great tasting treat.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Once it has cooled, you can see the amber residue, commonly known as rosin or rosin hash. This process is a quick and easy way to make some rosin hash from your buds. The only downside of this technique is that it takes a long time to create large volumes of rosin. One of the advantages of rosin is that it is a clear and pure extract with a similar appearance to shatter. It is also a completely solvent-free way of making a cannabis concentrate.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Hand rolling is a technique of rolling blooms firmly in-between your palms to collect the hash, often while harvesting. Unlike finger hash or scissor hash (which is often an unintended bonus after harvesting your plants), hand rolling is a process of deliberately converting the blooms into hash. It may not be the most efficient process, then again hand rolled hash has probably been used for thousands of years in times when cannabis grew in massive quantities free from prohibition.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Hand rolling of hash probably originated when stone-age man found fields of cannabis plants and wanted a quick way to make hash from them. With such an excess of buds the low efficiency of the hash production wouldn't have seemed like an issue. Hand rolled hash is simply scraped from your hands, along with any sweat and dirt, and compressed into a shiny ball. Old school simplicity with great modern appeal!</div><div></div><div></div><div>Charas is another name for hand-made hash. Charas makers would roll fresh cannabis blooms between their palms. The hash would be scraped off and collected. Some of the most prized charas is the pale Malana Cream products which are produced slowly with hours of effort for just a few grams. In contrast to hand-rolled cannabis (which can be done with dried and cured blooms), charas tends to be made from fresh (occasionally unripe) and uncured buds/blooms.</div><div></div><div></div><div>You will probably have noticed kief collecting at the bottom of your jars or grinder. Kief is simply the trichome resin glands which have fallen off the buds. It looks like a light brown or pale coloured dust. This can be made into hash simply by collecting and squashing it with your fingers. The heat from your fingers helps melt the oils and speeds up the process. Some people invest in small hash presses, sometimes called a pollen press. This mechanically squeezes the kief under pressure into a block of hash, perhaps with your own unique motif or logo on it. Of course, making hash from kief can be increased in size and scale by deliberately dry sifting your buds to create kief. Or you can use a mechanical tumbling drum to make kief.</div><div></div><div></div><div>If you are using trim from your plants aim to recover around 10% (by weight) of kief. When using buds to make hash, to maximise yields the buds are usually broken apart before being shaken. This allows trichome glands from within the bud to be easily removed.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Making hash with a tumbling drum tends to be done only by the larger scale hash producers. Some less scrupulous hash producers shake kief from their buds to make hash, before selling the buds. This is a risky business for the shady characters involved. Often the buds are of significantly lower potency after the kief removal and are difficult to sell, creating a bad reputation for the producer.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Hash can also be made by the water/ice method. A bucket of iced water is stirred vigorously while cannabis is added to it. When making hash you can use buds or trim. High quality shredded buds will produce more hash than low quality trim. The cold temperatures induced by the ice make the trichomes brittle and easy to break off. The stirring motion causes the resin glands to fall off the cannabis and into the water.</div><div></div><div></div><div>This ice-water hash making technique is a solvent free process and produces excellent quality hash. If you are looking to make hash at home in reasonably high quantities then the ice water method is well worth considering. You can read a dedicated Dutch Passion blog on hash production with the ice/water method.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Another way to make hash is using dry ice. Dry ice is solidified carbon dioxide (CO2). You can buy it online for overnight delivery, or you can order it from pharmacies. Dry ice uses very low temperatures, fans claim this helps preserve a lot of the terpene content for extra flavour. The dry ice method involves mechanical agitation (shaking) of the buds/trim with dry ice to remove the resin glands. These can be collected in the normal way and sieved with silk screens or hash bags (bubble bags). The trichomes drop through the holes in the bags according to their size.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Male cannabis plants are often discarded by home growers. They will pollinate your female plants turning the buds into seeds. Most of the cannabis seeds sold these days are feminized seeds. Usually they will grow into a crop of 95%+ female plants. But male cannabis plants do produce THC, just not as abundantly as female plants. Save male plants for your hash-making exploits and put them to good use.</div><div></div><div></div><div>You can make hash from any cannabis variety, whether it was grown indoors, in a greenhouse or outdoors. Hash can be made easily at home whether you grow feminized seeds, autoflower seeds, CBD seeds or any other type of cannabis seeds. But some cannabis varieties will give you particularly good results. Below we recommend an indica, sativa and autoflower seed variety from the Dutch Passion collection. All will give great results if you want to try making your own hash.</div><div></div><div> df19127ead</div>
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