It depends on the mold. Some molds carry toxic compounds and disease. You need to be able to identify the mold first. Good luck getting an expert's scientific identification of mold in the OP's jurisdictionDon't ask how I know, but my doctor buddy says humans can consume a lot of mould before experiencing issues. I'd be fine with it myself, especially making budder or something where it's a small amount of the end product. But thats just me, and I'm sure there will be all sorts of positions on this
As the resident full melt maker here, I would not recommend this unless you have a set of old shitty bags that you keep in quarantine which you don't mind being contaminated with mold. Same goes for bubble machines etc, don't use your main machine as it can be very difficult to sterilize all surfaces and prevent the mold from subsequently contaminating future runs.Smoke it, no, I would not. Make some bubble hash out of it. All that mold will filter out through the bubble bags.
... may cause "winegrower's lung", a rare form of hypersensitivity pneumonitis (a respiratory allergic reaction in predisposed individuals).
It depends on the mold. Some molds carry toxic compounds and disease. You need to be able to identify the mold first. Good luck getting an expert's scientific identification of mold in the OP's jurisdiction
The source of the mold contamination will determine the kind of mold that innoculates. There are all kinds of sources of mold contamination in a given location which may give rise to risk of contamination from any number of different molds found in that place. There is a dizzying array of kinds of molds out there - I know of a variety of different molds which can affect cannabis plants, and to truly identify what one is dealing with is not as simple as guessing on the basis of the mold that another local grower might have found.If he has some form of bud mould, and admittedly I have no training in the matter, but wouldn't it be the same genus of mould that other growers in the same region would experience?
Other molds trigger allergic reactions and respiratory problems.
A few molds produce mycotoxins, which are poisonous substances.
It does go on to say that you should never knowingly ingest mouldy foodstuffs, but in reality the risk of injury from ingestion isn't that bad.
As the resident full melt maker here, I would not recommend this unless you have a set of old shitty bags that you keep in quarantine which you don't mind being contaminated with mold. Same goes for bubble machines etc, don't use your main machine as it can be very difficult to sterilize all surfaces and prevent the mold from subsequently contaminating future runs.
Otherwise, it is true that mold can be at least somewhat removed with bubble hash technique. I still can't stress enough that all bud should be inspected thoroughly before purchase and mold or evidence of early mold should be grounds for instant rejection of said product.
Wonderful to hear my friend, please do share pics of your bubble if you get a chance, it is always wonderful to meet other hash enthusiastsTrue. I make my own share of bubble hash as well, been doing it for years. I can see why you would suggest using different bags though.
Wonderful to hear my friend, please do share pics of your bubble if you get a chance, it is always wonderful to meet other hash enthusiasts
Believe me man, I know, but my points above still stand. There are potential health risks and one should always reject moldy material if you have absolutely any other option. Others can make their own decision, but I would not advise the use of moldy material online, since vulnerable populations may follow my advice.@herbivore21 All great points. I'm still not convinced tho. In much the same fashion as who don't use 'food grade' solvents there is simply a requirement to be both aware of what you are doing, as well as taking such steps to reduce risks as much as possible. But risk removal doesn't mean tossing everything out. There are still things that can be made with it. If it was one massive blob of mould that would be a bit different, but it would still work for topicals, and hence beneficial in some fashion.
In the hypothetical scenario you suggested, I would first be pulling apart every single nug and inspecting the centre calyxes for mold (IME, mold takes hold inside the densest, largest colas first, closer towards the stem before spreading to the distal calyxes/leaves). Everything that has actual visible mold on it is first quarantined from the rest. Even innocuous, non-toxic molds like botrytis cinerea can mean that anything with full blown mold (usually a fur of one shade or another) should be discarded - the reason is simple, botrytis destroys resin. However, usually botrytis will be noticed before everything is affected, which is why we separate anything visibly mold affected to begin with. Anything not visibly mold affected will need to be kept in a freezer or incredibly dry conditions (ideally <55% RH) to prevent any spores from becoming more full-blown mold.So I'm kinda looking for a forum where we can discuss 'edgy' topics, such as this, without defaulting straight to 'toss it out' mindset. I was on another group and watched some tremendous arguments about ISO safety. Some people were pro ISO, others vehemently anti, and the best part is many of the 'anti' group just knew it was bad, but didn't know why. It's hard to speak from a position of knowledge when you don't have any.
I'd rather cut through the pro/anti argument and discuss actual ways to do things safely, if that makes any sense. If for no other reason than the paper exercise. There are a great number of people who don't mind flirting with disaster. Heck, some of us did it professionally for a number of years, which is probably part of the issue...
So, hypothetically, North Korea has dropepd a bomb somewhere. You are living in a cave - just you, 500 lbs of weed, and whatever lab eqpt you can scrounge from the local 7-11. Your weed is a bit mouldy, but you can't just pop to the shop to pick up more - you have what you have... What would you do with it?
Mycotoxins can be soluble in ISO, so they might be concentrated even moreSome people were pro ISO
Bold statement when some molds feed on ethanol.I would be shocked if ethanol would extract mold from the cannabis rather than kill the mold..
even if it kills the mold, that doesn't mean it's toxic products disappearI would be shocked if ethanol would extract mold from the cannabis rather than kill the mold.
that goes for any other solvent too, as long as u don't know what u are dealing withMycotoxins can be soluble in ISO, so they might be concentrated even more
I mean your health and the risks you take with it are up to your own judgement but even if the weed was free I'd never risk it, personally.
@killick As for "discuss actual ways to do things safely" you're not going to get that from the people like me in the mindset that you kinda can't do it safely. So you're really gonna just hear people like me saying that it sounds sketchy and people less worried that say yeah, seems fine. There's not too much middle ground there because you're either comfortable with it or you're not.
For me, this idea goes against the whole point of vaping. A lot of us vape because evidence seems to show that it's healthier than smoking, so if we're trying to be healthier why on earth would we knowingly consume mold? Where's the value in saving a couple bucks on moldy weed vs the possible health risks? Zero in my book, but ymmv.