I want to preface this by saying I am certainly no expert.
I was looking for some studies on cannabis storage and came across this:
This study was published in 1999 and refers to analysis of samples from 1993/94. It doesn't explain how the seeds for the plants were obtained but it does say that
the plants analyzed were grown at a University lab. The THC percentages average under 5%. I know there is a lot of debate over how much THC your average plant had in the 60s, 90s,... but my purpose in posting this is to point out that regardless of what the actual % was, it seems very likely that the THC/terpene ratio was much lower. So, if you want to get high using a cannabis with 5% THC, you would need a much higher dose than with a modern product (which seem to average 25% now). That means you would likely consume about 500% more terpenes to consume the same amount of THC as you would with the 5% THC plant. Obviously vaping vs. smoking affects the % of THC, and other terpenes, extracted... that's another factor.
I have very low tolerance and use no more than about .2g, with half (.1g) being CBD flower. I thought I was getting something comparable to what you may have experienced from the "natural" plant before it was bred to produce the crazy high THC content that we see today. I suspect hemp was bred for hundreds of years to produce higher THC, but we've clearly been more successful as increasing THC since we identified it and developed the ability to test for it.
Maybe we need to but our weed to a 4 to 1 CBD flower to modern high % THC flower to get something resembling a "natural" high. Just throwing this out there for thought/comment.
I was looking for some studies on cannabis storage and came across this:
UNODC - Bulletin on Narcotics - 1997 Issue 1 - 008
The concentration of D9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabinol (CBN) in cannabis plant material (marijuana) of different varieties stored at room temperature (20-22o Celsius (C)) over a four-year period was determined. The percentage loss of THC was proportional to the storage time.
www.unodc.org
This study was published in 1999 and refers to analysis of samples from 1993/94. It doesn't explain how the seeds for the plants were obtained but it does say that
the plants analyzed were grown at a University lab. The THC percentages average under 5%. I know there is a lot of debate over how much THC your average plant had in the 60s, 90s,... but my purpose in posting this is to point out that regardless of what the actual % was, it seems very likely that the THC/terpene ratio was much lower. So, if you want to get high using a cannabis with 5% THC, you would need a much higher dose than with a modern product (which seem to average 25% now). That means you would likely consume about 500% more terpenes to consume the same amount of THC as you would with the 5% THC plant. Obviously vaping vs. smoking affects the % of THC, and other terpenes, extracted... that's another factor.
I have very low tolerance and use no more than about .2g, with half (.1g) being CBD flower. I thought I was getting something comparable to what you may have experienced from the "natural" plant before it was bred to produce the crazy high THC content that we see today. I suspect hemp was bred for hundreds of years to produce higher THC, but we've clearly been more successful as increasing THC since we identified it and developed the ability to test for it.
Maybe we need to but our weed to a 4 to 1 CBD flower to modern high % THC flower to get something resembling a "natural" high. Just throwing this out there for thought/comment.