fernand
Well-Known Member
@MinnBobber in my experience, everyone reacts differently, which makes sense in the context: a large number of mutually interacting substances in the plant playing on a very complex neural system with endocannabinoid modulation and enormous variation, person to person. The Indica route works pretty universally: sedation and some analgesia at the edges of couch-lock.
The other way is to hunt for your magic strain or family. That's when the cannabimix plays the right chord on your organ. It takes patience and a lot of gram purchases, looking up the genetic tree and steering in the branches. I first found one of the Sour Diesel derivatives that had a clear effect on the lower back, and that in the lowest temp fractions. So I started trying all the related strains and the strongest effect was from one called "Original Diesel". I can take one drag at a 3 setting on a Solo, no visible vapor, hardly a head hit, and the lower back gets some marvelous numbness. It even seems like it's probably one/several of the strong tasting terpenes that's critical, maybe interacting with THC, maybe not. I'd still like to try what they call "East Coast Diesel". Maybe they bred a harsh "diesel" taste out in many derived phenos, and maybe THAT's what I'm after? But it's in the low temp distillate anyway. Vaping the rest of a load only slightly increases the lower back relief, though it makes it psychologically more bearable. I'm not one to believe in magical Cannabis, and I think that anyone who says it has no side-effects or problems for anyone is naive. But I do believe that there's something to the concept that there's something like an "ideal strain" for any given person, and that it can be discovered with some thoughtful trial and error. Other than the general Indica effect, I doubt one person's key-strain will be yours.
In practice, if the pain is severe, I haven't yet found any cannabis that relieves pain as well as derivatives of that other plant. Maybe at full-force couch lock, I dunno, but we both seem to not be fans of that state.
The other way is to hunt for your magic strain or family. That's when the cannabimix plays the right chord on your organ. It takes patience and a lot of gram purchases, looking up the genetic tree and steering in the branches. I first found one of the Sour Diesel derivatives that had a clear effect on the lower back, and that in the lowest temp fractions. So I started trying all the related strains and the strongest effect was from one called "Original Diesel". I can take one drag at a 3 setting on a Solo, no visible vapor, hardly a head hit, and the lower back gets some marvelous numbness. It even seems like it's probably one/several of the strong tasting terpenes that's critical, maybe interacting with THC, maybe not. I'd still like to try what they call "East Coast Diesel". Maybe they bred a harsh "diesel" taste out in many derived phenos, and maybe THAT's what I'm after? But it's in the low temp distillate anyway. Vaping the rest of a load only slightly increases the lower back relief, though it makes it psychologically more bearable. I'm not one to believe in magical Cannabis, and I think that anyone who says it has no side-effects or problems for anyone is naive. But I do believe that there's something to the concept that there's something like an "ideal strain" for any given person, and that it can be discovered with some thoughtful trial and error. Other than the general Indica effect, I doubt one person's key-strain will be yours.
In practice, if the pain is severe, I haven't yet found any cannabis that relieves pain as well as derivatives of that other plant. Maybe at full-force couch lock, I dunno, but we both seem to not be fans of that state.