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Anyone else on that BHO kick? Love the herb but this stuff, this stuff right here, its a game changer. Oh and...
1. Glass ( i only buy nice pieces to smoke in) 2. Vaporizer 3. Raw cones only 4. joints
I prefer to stick to glass or the vape and only really use paper if someone else prefers it.
First time I had BHO was at Bonnaroo. I have never been so out of it in my life. Could have been the foot long blunt I smoked after it. That was a weird time in my life.
In terms of how often I smoke them it's more like 1. Glass 2. Spliffs 3. Vapes 4. Blunts
But for enjoyment it's... 1. Glass 2. Vape 3. Blunt 4. Spliffs
It should help things burn more slowly and evenly, but I can't imagine the taste of tobacco is worth it.
I know these as 'Spliffs'. I see them uncommonly, and I don't much care for them. Usually the appeal of spliffs is to non-cigarette smokers that enjoy that nicotine buzz once in a while. Other people do it when they are trying to conserve weed. It's also a way to hide the smell better if you are trying to be incognito. I get why there are many reasons to prefer spliffs, but for me the taste is just weird and it doesn't quite satisfy me as much as some tightly rolled sticky-icky.
Likewise, spliffs in my experience have been used mostly when trying to conceal. They are fairly common among people I've met but my friends and I don't typically roll one up and though I like them, I rarely smoke or even think of them. Ha
Now concentrates. I'm slightly new to these but recently received a rig as a gift and I'm a huge fan. Not an everyday smoke for me though.
Emoney serves more of a purpose than any of you, especially Nate, whose incessant, garbled ramblings are so mindless and pointless that I get depressed just seeing them.
Post by bansheebeat on Mar 12, 2014 21:13:56 GMT -5
Grandparents went to bed early which means I got to get stoned and watch Through The Wormhole. Feels like I'm in high school again. Solid ending to the day.
I think the best bet is going to be meeting at one of our camps and everyone bringing some goodies to share. That way it doesnt matter who likes what music and just everyone enjoying each others company prior to Centeroo opening up would be fun. Just a suggestion.
I would say basketball is the best sport to watch when ripped.
Soccer
Soccer is a horrible, horrible sport. The fields to big, theres no scoring, and if you can "run nonstop" for 2, 45 minute halfs and your hair is still gelled/flat ironed to GQ specifications, your sport is lame. The only excitement comes when a goal is eventually scored or somebody does a nice little And-1 move and breaks a guys ankles. There more flopping than basketball, less excitement than baseball, and more pointless action than golf.
*This refers to men's sports. Women soccer players have my vote as Bad A$s. These chicks put back the pony tail and go out there and play in the dirt and blood.
Soccer Golf Nascar Tennis Hockey Curling Baseball Playoff Hockey Football Basketball
Soccer is a horrible, horrible sport. The fields to big, theres no scoring, and if you can "run nonstop" for 2, 45 minute halfs and your hair is still gelled/flat ironed to GQ specifications, your sport is lame. The only excitement comes when a goal is eventually scored or somebody does a nice little And-1 move and breaks a guys ankles. There more flopping than basketball, less excitement than baseball, and more pointless action than golf.
*This refers to men's sports. Women soccer players have my vote as Bad A$s. These chicks put back the pony tail and go out there and play in the dirt and blood.
Soccer Golf Nascar Tennis Hockey Curling Baseball Playoff Hockey Football Basketball
Posts like this make me really wish we still had the dislike button.
Soccer is a horrible, horrible sport. The fields to big, theres no scoring, and if you can "run nonstop" for 2, 45 minute halfs and your hair is still gelled/flat ironed to GQ specifications, your sport is lame. The only excitement comes when a goal is eventually scored or somebody does a nice little And-1 move and breaks a guys ankles. There more flopping than basketball, less excitement than baseball, and more pointless action than golf.
*This refers to men's sports. Women soccer players have my vote as Bad A$s. These chicks put back the pony tail and go out there and play in the dirt and blood.
Soccer Golf Nascar Tennis Hockey Curling Baseball Playoff Hockey Football Basketball
I see no counter-list to compute an argument. forgot what thread were in. "Theoretical Discussion"
From most boring to least boring.
Baseball Tennis Golf Hockey Soccer Football (NFL) Basketball (NCAA) Basketball (NBA) Football (NCAA)
I also think your description of soccer is laughably ignorant. Using incredible simplicity and biases like that can make any sport sound boring.
Ie: Football is so boring. It's just one guy handing it off to another guy who runs for three yards or so. Then one play the Quarterback actually decides to throw the ball, half the time it's incomplete. The only exciting part is the one or two times a game when the quarterback decides to throw the ball down the field. If you need all those pads and helmets to play a game, the sport must be pretty lame.
The Apalachee played a ball game, sometimes known as the "Apalachee ball game", described in detail by Spaniards in the 17th century. The fullest description, however, was written as part of a campaign by Father Juan de Paiva, priest at the mission of San Luis de Talimali, to have the game banned, and some of the practices described may have been exaggerated. The game was embedded in ritual practices which Father Pavia regarded as heathen superstitions. He was also concerned about the effect of community involvement in the games on the welfare of the villages and Spanish missions. In particular, he worried about towns being left defenseless against raiders when inhabitants left for a game, and that field work was being neglected during game season. Other missionaries (and the visiting Bishop of Cuba) had complained about the game, but most of the Spanish (including, initially, Father Pavia) liked it (and, most likely, the associated gambling). At least, they defended it as a custom that should not be disturbed, and that helped keep the Apalachee happy and willing to work in the fields. The Apalachee themselves said that the game was "as ancient as memory", and that they had "no other entertainment ... or relief from ... misery".[1]
No indigenous name for the game has been preserved. The Spanish referred to it as el juego de la pelota, "the ballgame." The game involved kicking a small, hard ball against a single goalpost. The same game was also played by the western Timucua, and was as significant among them as it was among the Apalachee.[2] A related but distinct game was played by the eastern Timucua; René Goulaine de Laudonnière recorded seeing this played by the Saturiwa of what is now Jacksonville, Florida in 1564.[2] Goalposts similar to those used by the Apalachee were also seen in the Coosa chiefdom of present-day in Alabama during the 16th century, suggesting that similar ball games were played across much of the region.[3]
A village would challenge another village to a game, and the two villages would then negotiate a day and place for the match. After the Spanish missions were established, the games usually took place on a Sunday afternoon, from about noon until dark. The two teams kicked a small ball (not much bigger than a musket ball), made by wrapping buckskin around dried mud, trying to hit the goalpost. The single goalpost was triangular, flat, and taller than it was wide, on a long post (Bushnell described it, based on a drawing in a Spanish manuscript, as "like a tall, flat Christmas tree with a long trunk"). There were snail shells, a nest and a stuffed eagle on top of the goalpost. Benches, and sometimes arbors to shade them, were placed at the edges of the field for the two teams. Spectators gambled heavily on the games. As the Apalachee did not normally use money, their bets were made with personal goods.[4]
Each team consisted of 40 to 50 men. The best players were highly prized, and villages gave them houses, planted their fields for them, and overlooked their misdeeds in an effort to keep such players on their teams. Players scored one point if they hit the goalpost with the ball, and two points if the ball landed in the nest. Eleven points won the game. Play was rough: players would pile on fallen players, walk on them, kick them, including in the face, pull on arms and legs and stuff dirt in each other's mouths. Players were told to die before letting go of the ball. They would try to hide the ball in their mouths; other players would choke them or kick them in the stomach to force the ball out. Arms and legs were broken. Players laid out on the ground would be revived by a bucket of cold water. There were occasional deaths. According to Father Paiva, five games in a row had ended in riots.[5]
The origin of the games was the subject of an elaborate mythology. The giving of challenges for a game and the erection of goalposts and players' benches involved rituals and ceremonies, "superstitions" and "sorceries," in the view of Father Pavia. The Apalachee expanded the superstitions to include Christian elements; after losing two games in a row, one village decided that was because their mission church was closed during the games. Players also asked priests to make the sign of the cross over pileups during a game.[6]