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Keeping It Legal
Feb 17th
Keeping it Legal
With laws changing weekly from state to state it is hard to keep up with where you can “lite” up. Herbal-Smoke.com is able to compound its products to be legal in 50 states. We customize our brands to fit our clients demand but also to keep it legal. No worries to our Louisiana clients, we will use a different herb to custom make your special blend. Our herbologists are diligent and skilled in providing quality legal blends.
Traffic stop leads to big synthetic marijuana bust
Feb 17th
A big bust of synthetic marijuana at three south side gas stations and the home of a suspected supplier this month is one of Milwaukee’s first court cases against alleged sellers and manufacturers of the designer drug, authorities say.
Federal officials say the fake pot has become prevalent in the Milwaukee area and nationwide over the past few years, but they say they are not aware of any successful prosecution locally yet because the drug is so new.
According to the Milwaukee County district attorney’s office, one case involving synthetic marijuana has been charged and is pending in court.
It was a regular traffic stop that led Milwaukee police on the trail of the drugs in mid-January, according to an affidavit accompanying a search warrant.
A District 2 Milwaukee police officer on his way to work noticed a man driving erratically.
He followed the man as he drove to the Petro Mart gas station at 2341 S. Chase Ave. The officer was worried about public safety if the man drove away, so when the man came out of the station, the officer stopped him.
In the man’s car, the officer noticed a blue and white glass pipe commonly used to smoke drugs and a foil package of a product labeled “Mr. Happy.”
The man later told officers that he bought the drug at the gas station, and that another south side gas station sells it, too, according to the search warrant.
In early February, Milwaukee police officers searched the Petro Mart and two other south side gas stations within 1 1/2 miles – the Mitchell Petro Mart at 1401 W. Mitchell St. and the Best Petro at 575 W. Becher St., search warrants show.
The busts netted 10.5 pounds of synthetic drugs.
Two of the gas stations are within 1,000 feet of schools: The Mitchell St. station is across the street from South Division High School on Lapham Blvd. and close to Forest Home Elementary School.
Best Petro on Becher St. is near St. Anthony High School, according to the search warrant.
While some of the drugs allegedly were sold close to schools, Tony Tagliavia, a spokesman for Milwaukee Public Schools, said the district’s safety director “hasn’t seen any incidents connected to synthetic cannabinoids come across his desk.”
Police also searched the home of a 36-year-old man who is a suspected wholesale supplier of the drugs. At the west side man’s home, they found 112 pounds of drugs wrapped in 22,560 packages as well as close to $10,000 in cash.
DA’s office reviewing case
“We are currently reviewing the results of that investigation to determine the appropriate next steps,” Kent Lovern, chief deputy district attorney with the Milwaukee County district attorney’s office, said in an email Thursday. “The use and sale of synthetic marijuana is a growing public safety concern.”
Assistant U.S. Attorney Tracy Johnson said the agency hasn’t prosecuted any local cases involving synthetic marijuana.
The name, officials explained, is somewhat of a misnomer because the drug doesn’t actually contain marijuana.
Known under names such as K2, Spice, G-13, Dank, Mr. Happy and Mr. Nice Guy, the drugs are herbal products laced with synthetic cannabinoids. They are chemical compounds similar to tetrahydrocannabinol, which is naturally present in marijuana and causes a high when smoked.
Federal officials say the synthetic compound is produced in large “backdoor” chemical factories, for instance in China, and sold to suppliers in the United States.
Here, the powder is diluted and mixed or sprayed onto leafy or twig-like herbs flavored like fruits, berries or cotton candy.
The reason for the “synthetic marijuana” name is that it can be smoked like pot and provides a marijuana-like high because the active ingredient works by attaching to the same receptors in the brain as pot.
“Makers of these harmful products mislead their customers into thinking that ‘fake pot’ is a harmless alternative to illegal drugs, but that is not the case,” acting U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Administrator Michele M. Leonhart said in a news release.
Tests are limited
One of the appeals of synthetic drugs is that, contrary to marijuana, they don’t show up in standard drug tests administered by employers. And police have no street-level kits to test the drugs, so samples have to be submitted to a laboratory.
That the drugs are readily available at some gas stations and online under the guise of herbal incense or potpourri also gives people a false perception of safety, officials say.
Studies of the health effects of the drug are scarce because it’s so new. Based on preliminary findings and cases seen around the nation – including an alleged incident involving actress Demi Moore – officials suspect the drug can lead to heart attacks among teens and may contribute to paranoia.
So far, it appears to be only a secondary contributor to death.
The power of the drug can vary, even within the same bag, because the compound may not be evenly distributed, DEA officials explained.
The DEA started hearing about the products in 2009 from poison centers, hospitals and law enforcement.
“Over the past year, smokable herbal blends marketed as being ‘legal’ and providing a marijuana-like high have become increasingly popular, particularly among teens and young adults,” the DEA said in a news release Nov. 24, 2010, leading up to a ban of the chemicals. “These chemicals, however, have not been approved by the (Federal Drug Administration) for human consumption and there is no oversight of the manufacturing process.”
To protect public health, the agency used its emergency scheduling power on March 1 to institute a one-year ban on five chemicals used to make fake pot.
The action made it illegal to possess or sell the chemicals or products that contain them.
The rule also contained language that allows officials to argue in court that “substantially similar” chemicals found on the streets fall under the same ban, which would allow for prosecution.
Wisconsin enacted similar legislation last summer.
But to get around the law, manufacturers are constantly coming up with new variations of the designer chemical compound. It’s a cat-and-mouse game between drug manufacturers and users on one side and law enforcement and governmental regulators on the other that makes it difficult for users to determine what’s legal and what they’re smoking.
“Once one thing is made illegal,” the local DEA official said, “the traffickers try to come up with another compound and try to make something they believe fall outside the laws.”
So, You Want to Smoke the Fake Weed?
Feb 13th
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Recently I received a phone call from an unknown number, which I usually don’t answer, but thought I would- just this time… It was a ladies’ voice. She started with general chit chat, about the weather (because it was a beautiful day) and she thought I might be busy in my garden. I said “No, I’m not too busy!” She started asking me if I wanted her to “call me back later, like at some other time- because maybe I didn’t have time to talk with her.” Again, I said “No, it’s fine!” She sounded like she was having second thoughts about calling me.
I mostly listened to this nervous rambling, trying to figure out if this was a prank call –or serious- until she told me who gave her my number.. and just FYI, I really thought I might smack the person who gave out my number to a stranger, but the lady on the other end sounded afraid. So to make her feel more comfortable, I said “Is everything ok? You sound nervous, can I help you with anything?” …Then came a moment of silence.. She hesitantly said she was calling me because (in her own words) “You’re a plant person”…
I thought Whew! Ok great- its about plants! (One of my favorite top three subjects). She began to ask if I had I ever heard about a product being sold in our convenient stores and and head shops, or “new age”or “modern” tobacco shops- known as Fake Weed.. (insert the sound of a scratched record)… And then there was awkward silence on her end – and on mine. I mustered a nervous laugh, and said “Ummmmm” ?? (I was nervous because I suddenly felt like I was catapulted into the twilight zone.) More silence on her end, so I asked “Are you still there?” She peeped out a quiet “yes.” I immediately knew she was serious – and I realized that NO, I was not in the twilight zone…
Now back to those awkward silent moments on the phone. I joke about it now, but at the time, I didn’t know if I should be offended at her description of me being a “plant person” while inquiring about this fake weed, or should I be flattered – that somebody would have the confidence or the need to trust my opinion on said fake weed… especially since we don’t even know each other. Hmmm.
Anyways, I began to tell her that I have heard of it and that I do know that it goes by many different names – and claims to be anything from an incense to a bath salt. I explained that these psychoactive herbal and chemical products are known as a “synthetic cannabis,” and when consumed are supposed to mimic the effects of cannabis, or marijuana.
I’ve seen the products in the convenience stores. Have you? You know the ones – in the glass cabinets – right beside the fancy water bongs, pipes, plant grinders, and such. The smokable products claim to be an Aromatic Potpourri Herbal Incense and go by different names like: MaryJane Permagrin (really?) Burny, VooDoo, Spizz, Zombie Killa, K2 and I even saw one called Poison. (Well, at least they got one thing right in that name!!!). The products claim to be legal, natural and some even say JWH free. (Look up JWH-018 or JWH-073 or HU-210.)
They usually contain certain herbs like:
Alviae Folium: (if you go to the USDA Plants Database, you will not even find this! To google it brings up Salviae which when used orally as an essential oil, can cause convulsions, but when smoked can cause hallucinations – and just FYI, Salvia divinorum is sold in a baggy as a dried herb that looks just like a bag of marijuana – and comes complete with the said hallucinations, whether mild or intense) nice.
Next, Turneria diffusa (commonly known as Damiana, has a long history of being an aphrodisiac but also used to relieve excess mental activity, seriously?).
Another one, Verbascum Thapsus (commonly known as Aaron’s Rod or Great Mullein. Native Americans smoked it with tobacco to relieve coughing spasms, used like an expectorant. Studies have shown that Mullein also contains derivatives of coumarin!)
And last but not least we bring you Artemisia vulgaris (has a number of recorded historic uses in food and herbal medicine but must be used with caution because it contains coumarin derivatives. Also contains a small percentage of an oil called thujone – which is toxic in both large amounts and/or prolonged intake. It’s also known to induce uterine contraction during pregnancy, but also increases heart rate in the user. And when burned creates a heat of its own which could explain the “burning up” sensation people get.)
Feel free to google any of the herbs. Most have been used medicinally for hundreds of years, but usually in a controlled environment, by herbalists who know what they are doing.
I also want to mention a similar product called Spice (synthetic cannabinoid). It can contain any number of herbs like Canavalia maritime, Nymphaea caerulea, Scutellaria nana, Pedicularis densiflora, Leonotis leonuris, Zornia latifolia, Nelumbo nucifera andLeonuris sibiricus. (Just FYI people- when these products were tested, they did not even contain the herbs it claims- but mostly contained tocopherol, another synthetic cannabis chemical).
The products even come with a warning on the package that says “Not for Human Consumption.” You can even purchase different weights, like 2 ounces (that can cost $35.00 before tax) or 4 oz -and you can buy this stuff in different strength “mixtures” as well. Now, because I am a studious and sincere “plant person,” I explained to the lady on the phone, that it’s NOT a good idea to use this and that I would strongly recommend that she steer clear. Mainly because I am familiar with the herbs that are listed and I do know that they can be dangerous in certain doses, the molecular properties of the plant can change when burned – and most importantly, they add chemicals known as “research drugs” to the plant mixture to be able to call it “incense.” Wow! Key words: Research Drugs. These Research drugs, are used in research to see “if our bodies will metabolize them into a carcinogen.” Yikes!…
Some people might want to argue that there is nothing dangerous about these products, but lets think about Poison Ivy. Not everybody is allergic to it in plant sap form. But when it is burned, the molecular structure is changed, and the smoke is highly poisonous – to everybody – whether you are allergic or not. On top of that, these products contains chemicals, like the research drug JWH. Some even claim that they do Not contain JWH.
People, this is definitely a sensitive subject and I’m positive that people don’t want to talk about it in certain circles… and just so you know, my certain “circle of life” is actually square. Yes, I grew up in the 80’s and there were plenty of things back then to distract us from the “right road” but now, our young folks have so much more to be distracted with! There are too many designer drugs like this out there, that are not what they claim to be! On top of everything, it can all be purchased in a local convenient store, a gas station and easily found on the Internet.
Very little is known about the long-term effects as of right now, and my gut feeling tells me that until people use this for a while, we won’t know the worst side of all this. I feel really bad for the guinea pig folks and the uninformed folks. Which will be our younger crowd – and some older people.
I was amazed at the chat articles I did find on line about this new fancy “all natural herbal incense.” Seems that the general consensus is mostly written by the folks who love it. These people get mad at articles like this one. But it bothers me that they can be so easily mislead by these Fake Weed suppliers. They are mostly mad because it seems that when they finally find a substitute for marijuana, like this all natural herbal mixture, the “dang police want to go and ban it & make it illegal.” (See, they can’t smoke real Marijuana because maybe they are subject to monthly drug tests – and now they’re finding out that they cant smoke the new stuff either??!!).
Now I am NOT an expert on this subject, but as a “plant person” (as the lady called me), I would suggest you NOT trust everything you read on these products. They don’t tell you the percentage of the Herbs that are used. Nor do they tell you which “research drug” (or how much) was mixed in with the herbs. You won’t know what lab they were mixed in either, if any. Being a plant person, I do know that many people have died from using, smoking or ingesting plants and herbs and chemicals – all for the sake of medicine. (That’s Not a job that I will ever sign up for because I completely trust those dead “plant people”).
Recently, reports are on the rise- of people being rushed to the hospital due to using these products. Maybe you Or maybe you recently heard about the 911 call made for Demi Moore – because she had smoked something “incense like” which produced convulsions.
These products have been around since the early 2000’s and thankfully, in 2008, certain states have put an emergency ban on these products and or made them illegal to sell – because the Poison Control Centers are being bombarded with calls from people who had smoked it. The effects being reported were euphoria, hyperventilating, extreme paranoia, feeling of “burning up,” time distortion, nausea, vomiting, excruciating headache, extreme depression after smoking it, and finally moderate to severe hallucinations – to the point that some thought they might die. Some people are now reporting that they are having panic attacks and anxiety disorders (even after months have passed since they stopped smoking the incense.)
In my humble Plant Person opinion, I see this as an up-and-coming new blight to our society – as if we need another one! I just can’t understand why people want to pick up new bad habits, as if we all don’t have a few already.. We don’t eat right, we don’t exercise enough -and now this?
If you are one of the people who wants to experiment with this and have plenty of money to do it – because it won’t show up in a drug test, well, all I can say is that I am trying to arm you with knowledge. I hope you will open your mind and take into consideration that I am coming from a really good place with this article. I am trying to expose the danger. Maybe the parents out there will look for behavioral changes in their teens and pre-teens. Yeah I said it.. pre-teens.. Nobody wants to face the fact that their kid is susceptible.
I know I’m going “out on a limb here,” to bring up such a topic, but I feel that I need to… especially as a “plant person.”
So the next time you walk into a convenience store that sells these products, maybe you can actually take a good hard look at these products – without being embarrassed. Ask, or demand, (whichever you prefer) that the store owners STOP selling this. Maybe you can tell them you won’t support their business as long as they continue to sell these products to our young people.. Maybe together, we can stop the “enablers.” You might actually save somebody’s life, no matter what their age might be.
Editor’s Note: Melissa Allman is a Georgia Master Gardener, Horticulturist, Garden Media Producer, Garden Coach, Plant Whisperer and blogger for Patch.
New Product and it is amazing!
Jan 20th
We liked this review so much, we decided to make it easy for everyone to read & appreciate. Thanks, Niki, we like those Lazy Cakes too!
Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownies: Better than Space Cakes
| Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownies: Don’t make any big plans. |
Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownies kicked our ass.
After trying the Drank Relaxation Beverage and finding it lacking, we had low expectations for these brownies, which are sold in head shops around the Valley (we picked ours up at It’s All Goodz). But we’d heard Lazy Cakes brownies were all the rage, and since we love desserts, we figured we’d give the brownies a shot.
And boy, did the brownies shoot back.
We’ve tried “special” brownies and cookies, “space cakes,” and just about any other marijuana edibles you can think of. But they were never a favorite medium for us — the high takes too long in coming (you’ve got to digest the food first), and it’s so sustained that sometimes we didn’t even notice it.
Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownies don’t contain any marijuana at all, so imagine our surprise when, after eating only half of one (we shared it with a friend), both of us found ourselves passing out on the couch 45 minutes later (at around 9:30 p.m.).
| Lazy Cakes: Open wide. |
Initially, we thought we were just eating a brownie that wouldn’t do much for us. It tasted good — the brownies are very chewy, with a rich layer of fudge in the middle — but we figured the flavor was the end of the experience. Sure, the label read, “May cause drowsiness,” but we had our sodas and sugar cookies, so we figured we’d be able to stay up and watch at least two episodes of the original V television series on DVD.
Then, something happened. Our bodies went limp. We closed our eyes. There was yawning, then snoring. Suddenly, we were on our way to bed at 10 p.m., which is about three hours before we usually hit the sack. And then we slept for almost 12 hours.
The magic of the Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownie is in its proprietary blend. There are two servings per brownie, and 15 mg of the blend per serving. The blend includes herbal relaxation aids like Valerian Root Extract, Rose Hips Extract, and Passion Flower, but the real kicker in this blend is the 3.9 mg of melatonin per serving (nearly 8 mg in one whole brownie).
Melatonin, as we pointed out in our blog about Drank, is a compound produced in our brains, and research has shown supplementing with it can be an effective sleep aid — and when we say “supplementing,” we’re talking about a standard daily dose of about 1 mg. These brownies have nearly 8 mg of melatonin. That’s what makes them so potent and effective.
We would definitely recommend Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownies as a legal alternative to pot-infused food products, but we also encourage potential eaters to research Melatonin and any possible side effects to long-term supplementation. These things taste good and they work, but we wouldn’t make a daily snack out of them.
http://blogs.phoenixnewtimes.com/bella/2010/12/lazy_cakes_relaxation_brownies.php
We liked this review so much, we decided to make it easy for everyone to read & appreciate. Thanks, Niki, we like those Lazy Cakes too!
Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownies:
Better than Space Cakes
| Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownies: Don’t make any big plans. |
Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownies kicked our ass.
After trying the Drank Relaxation Beverage and finding it lacking, we had low expectations for these brownies, which are sold in head shops around the Valley (we picked ours up at It’s All Goodz). But we’d heard Lazy Cakes brownies were all the rage, and since we love desserts, we figured we’d give the brownies a shot.
And boy, did the brownies shoot back.
We’ve tried “special” brownies and cookies, “space cakes,” and just about any other marijuana edibles you can think of. But they were never a favorite medium for us — the high takes too long in coming (you’ve got to digest the food first), and it’s so sustained that sometimes we didn’t even notice it.
Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownies don’t contain any marijuana at all, so imagine our surprise when, after eating only half of one (we shared it with a friend), both of us found ourselves passing out on the couch 45 minutes later (at around 9:30 p.m.).
| Lazy Cakes: Open wide. |
Initially, we thought we were just eating a brownie that wouldn’t do much for us. It tasted good — the brownies are very chewy, with a rich layer of fudge in the middle — but we figured the flavor was the end of the experience. Sure, the label read, “May cause drowsiness,” but we had our sodas and sugar cookies, so we figured we’d be able to stay up and watch at least two episodes of the original V television series on DVD.
Then, something happened. Our bodies went limp. We closed our eyes. There was yawning, then snoring. Suddenly, we were on our way to bed at 10 p.m., which is about three hours before we usually hit the sack. And then we slept for almost 12 hours.
The magic of the Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownie is in its proprietary blend. There are two servings per brownie, and 15 mg of the blend per serving. The blend includes herbal relaxation aids like Valerian Root Extract, Rose Hips Extract, and Passion Flower, but the real kicker in this blend is the 3.9 mg of melatonin per serving (nearly 8 mg in one whole brownie).
Melatonin, as we pointed out in our blog about Drank, is a compound produced in our brains, and research has shown supplementing with it can be an effective sleep aid — and when we say “supplementing,” we’re talking about a standard daily dose of about 1 mg. These brownies have nearly 8 mg of melatonin. That’s what makes them so potent and effective.
We would definitely recommend Lazy Cakes Relaxation Brownies as a legal alternative to pot-infused food products, but we also encourage potential eaters to research Melatonin and any possible side effects to long-term supplementation. These things taste good and they work, but we wouldn’t make a daily snack out of them.
http://blogs.phoenixnewtimes.com/bella/2010/12/lazy_cakes_relaxation_brownies.php
Originally posted 2011-03-11 19:21:26. Republished by Blog Post Promoter
NEW HERBAL SMOKE PRODUCTS
Jan 20th
Blueberry Skunk – 3.5 grams (1/8oz) includes Rolling Papers $6.50 -Blueberry Skunk Herbal Smoke is a delectable blend of herbs lending succulent blueberry notes to the taste buds. Worry not that you have forgotten rolling papers to enjoy your Blueberry Skunk! They are included, so they go wherever you go.
Chocolate Skunk – 3.5 grams (1/8oz) includes Rolling Papers $6.50-Mmmmmm…CHOCOLATE! What could be better than a chocolate herbal blend? How about a chocolate herbal blend that brings its own rolling papers along?! That’s exactly what Chocolate Skunk Herbal Smoke is: a little bit of heaven in 3.5-gram pouches. Ahhhh. Snug inside this pack of delicious herbs is a single pack of Juicy Jay’s Fudge rolling papers. When you roll up the Chocolate Skunk Herbal Blend in the Juicy Jay’s Fudge Rolling Papers, you create a tantalizing herbal smoke that is perfect after meals or before bed.
Juicy Herbs Feverfew Herbal Blend $6.50 -The Feverfew weed was not named by accident. Feverfew has long been used for reducing fever, headaches, digestion upsets, and arthritis. Juicy Herbs Feverfew Herbal Blend has been specially concocted for your smoking pleasure and has been paired with the right Juicy Jays Rolling Paper.
Juicy Herbs Mad Dog Herbal Blend $6.50 -The Mad Dog herb is a member of the mint family. Smoke Mad Dog and you will see why it has traditionally been used as a mild sedative and sleep inducer. Burn Juicy Herbs Mad Dog Herbal Blend and see why many use the herb as incense. Juicy Herbs Mad Dog Herbal Blend is made for smoking and makes it convenient with the handy, included Juicy Jays Rolling Papers.
Juicy Herbs Marshmallow Root Herbal $6.50
BlendJuicy Herbs Passion Flower Herbal Blend $6.50-The Passion Flower is the flower of a hardy vine that grows like a wildflower. This dried plant is used as an herbal medicine to treat nervous anxiety and insomnia. And now, Juicy Herbs presents it Passion Flower Herbal Blend for your wellness and enjoyment, complete with handy rolling papers!
-Potentilla Erecta $6.50 - has historically been used to treat a variety of ailments, including bleedJuicy Herbs Potentilla Erecta Herbal Blending and upset stomach. Juicy Herbs Potentilla Erecta is now in herbal smoking form paired with the perfect Juicy Jays rolling papers.
Juicy Herbs Purple Spearmint Herbal Blend$6.50-Spearmint is known for its antioxidant and anti-stomach ache effects. Juicy Herbs Purple Spearmint Herbal Blend comes complete with Juicy Jays’ famous triple-dipped rolling papers. Juicy Herbs Purple Spearmint comes in a perfectly portioned 7-gram pouch.
Juicy Herbs Wild Crafted Damiana Herbal Blend $6.50-Damiana is popular for its relaxing effects. Juicy Herbs brings you Wild Damiana in a convenient 7 gram pouch, complete with Juicy Jays Rolling Papers. These herbs are cut and sifted for smoking, however we recommend seeking professional advice from your doctor before using any herbal supplements. The effects of the Wild Crafted Damiana are similar to a mild Cannabis high. Great for making things more comfortable or to ease the sexual tension between people. This blend is great for night time relaxation!
Juicy Herbs Wild Lettuce Herbal Blend $6.50-Juicy Herbs has cut and sifted Lactuca virosa for your herbal smoking pleasure. Lactuca virosa is commonly known as wild lettuce and is famous for its relaxing and mild sedative effects. So, if you need to just chill out, grab one of Juicy Herbs’ 7-gram pouch of therapuetic Wild Lettuce complete with Juicy Jays Rolling Papers.
Skunk Smoke – 3.5 grams (1/8oz) includes Rolling Papers $6.50-Skunk Smoke “stinks…but it’s awesome!” The most awesome thing about the Skunk Smoke herbal blend, is that the perfect amount of rolling papers is included! Savor the chocolatey aroma, the sweet flavor. There are only 3.5 grams of the Skunk Smoke Herbal Blend in each pack, so you might need 2!
Strawberry Skunk – 3.5 grams (1/8oz) includes Rolling Papers $6.50-The Strawberry Skunk Herbal Blend only comes in 3.5-gram pouches. It’s so delicious, you might need 2! Strawberry Skunk Herbal Blend comes with its very own rolling papers…the ideal quantity! Tucked inside is the perfect paired rolling papers: Juicy Jay’s Strawberry rolling papers. They perfectly combing with this Strawberry Skunk Herbal Blend to create an herbal cigarette so delicious, you will
Originally posted 2011-01-28 15:59:48. Republished by Blog Post Promoter
K2 Gains Popularity Among Athletes: Similar High As Pot, No Positive Drug Test
Jan 20th
From THE POST GAME -YAHOO SPORTS Wednesday, March 9, 2011
David Rozga loved the Packers. He had a No. 4 tattoo for Brett Favre on his right shoulder, and he planned to add a No. 12 for Aaron Rodgers. He played football until he broke his leg as a sophomore in high school, and he often made the trip with his dad to Lambeau Field from his home in Indianola, Iowa. David Rozga dreamed of seeing the Pack win a Super Bowl.
He didn’t get the chance. Last June, he left a high school graduation party, returned home and took his own life.
David Rozga was 18.
His parents, Mike and Jan, blamed themselves. “It really made us look deeply at ourselves,” Mike says. “How terrible parents we were to not have seen this in our son.”
Two days later, David’s girlfriend, Carrie, came by with a confession: On the day he died, she said, David had been smoking a synthetic marijuana called K2, also known as Spice.
David’s parents had never heard of it. Carrie hadn’t, either. But when Mike Rozga called the police, he began to learn about an herbal blend sprayed with chemicals that mimic the high from marijuana. It’s marketed as incense but it is nothing like the stuff that makes your kitchen smell like potpourri.
Reporting by ThePostGame.com shows K2 use may be on the rise in the athlete population –- not only at various levels of amateur sport, but in professional sports as well. “I go straight weed in the off-season,” one NFL veteran told ThePostGame.com on condition of anonymity. “Then, in-season, when they test, I go to [K2].”
“It’s a danger to anybody who thinks this is a legal way to get high without being caught,” says Jay Schauben, director of the Florida Poison Control Center. “The possible side effects include significant hallucination, cardiac effects, seizures, rapid heart rate, hypertension, severe agitation, passing out, and panic attacks.”
Rozga believes a K2 high led to his son’s suicide. The Indianola police chief, Steve Bonnett, wrote a letter saying David “had a severe panic attack after smoking K2, which resulted in his death.”
“David suffered greatly,” Mike Rozga says. “He was tormented by this drug.”
Leading health experts believe more tragedy is to come — and that athletes may be at particular risk.
“We’re receiving more reports of its use in the athlete population,” says Frank Uryasz, director of the National Center of Drug-Free Sport. “It appears to be marketed heavily to young people — high school age and below, and college. We’re getting reports from colleges, where athletes are asking about it.”
One such report to the Drug-Free Sport hotline, from an NCAA athletic trainer, reads:
“Three student-athletes were breaking apart cigarettes, mixing it with K2, rolling it back up into papers and then smoking. One young man, who had NO past medical history, had a seizure and lost consciousness. He was found outside the dorm by campus security convulsing. His heart rate was elevated above 200 for enough time that he was admitted for 24 hours of observation … When asked why he did it: “I didn’t think it would be that much of a rush, I had no control over my body in that I could see but could not talk or speak.”
Here’s another report, from another athletic trainer:
“We have a student-athlete who was in the emergency room over the weekend! Says he was smoking ‘Spice.’ His heart was racing, his blood pressure was off the charts, and he was hallucinating. This went on for hours!!”
K2, which was first identified in December 2008, has an active ingredient called JWH-018, which is very similar to the compound that produces the high of marijuana. But K2 does not produce a positive drug test, and that is part of why its use has skyrocketed in the U.S. over the last two years. According to the American Association of Poison Control Centers, there were 14 cases of K2 exposure in the 48 states plus the District of
Columbia in 2009. In 2010, that number exploded to 2,888. Already this year, there have been nearly 1,000. In the last four months alone, 151 Navy sailors have been accused of using or possessing the drug.
The U.S. Naval Academy expelled eight midshipmen last month for using K2.
Several forms of synthetic marijuana were added to the DEA’s controlled substance list last week, including JWH-018, but it’s virtually impossible to identify and ban all of them.
K2 is relatively inexpensive and widely available; it’s even sold at some gas stations, according to several experts. David Rozga got his at a mall near Des Moines, according to his father.
ThePostGame.com recently bought a three-gram package of “K2 Peach” at a smoke shop in Orlando for $59.95. The package said “Not for consumption,” and it came with a small leaflet that said “Not … for human consumption” three times.
But it is being consumed, and athletes who use it are at particular risk, some experts say. “For athletes, you run the danger of having cardiovascular effects,” says David Kroll, professor of pharmaceutical sciences at North Carolina Central University. “I would hypothesize that with enough people using this stuff, you’re bound to see a heart attack.”
Performance-enhancing drugs may add yet another layer of risk. “If you combine these products and steroids, I can’t begin to predict the negative consequences,” says Anthony Scalzo, director of toxicology at St. Louis University. “If you add these stresses to the heart, someone’s probably going to have a heart attack from it.”
But those who use it often fail to see the danger behind the high.
“I used it freshman year,” one Division I NCAA athlete told ThePostGame.com, on condition of anonymity. “We tried it and realized that it has similar effects to weed. It was the first time where you could do something that you shouldn’t be doing but you couldn’t get in trouble for it.”
There are no confirmed deaths from K2, however the Drug Abuse Warning Network reports there were 374 emergency room admits last year because of K2 and similar substances.
“Sometimes you feel like your heart is going to come out of your chest, going to explode,” says the D-I athlete. “Your pulse just goes up like crazy. You literally feel like sometimes you’re going to die. But you wake up the next morning and you’re like, ‘Whatever, it’s fine.’
“If you smoke weed, you’re just chill. When you smoke K2, you are (messed) up. Sometimes I felt almost like drops of water were landing on my body somewhere. You’ll feel like a cool drop somewhere and I’ll check but there’s nothing. It’s weird. It’ll trigger different kind of senses around your body.”
The DEA plans to keep K2 illegal for at least a year. The NCAA has also decided to ban it, effective August 1 of this year, but according to NCAA associate director of health and safety Mary Wilfert, “We don’t have a punishment until a student tests positive.” And there is currently no test for K2.
“This market is always going to be available,” says the D-I athlete. “No matter what laws they pass, there will be a way to get around it. I don’t think there’s a way to test for (K2), so athletes are going to use it. Athletes are going to keep doing stuff they can get away with.”
That’s Mike Rozga’s biggest fear. He started the site K2DrugFacts.com as a way to warn the public, but it’s too late to save his son. He watched the Packers win the Super Bowl in his home, weeks after spreading some of David’s ashes in an end zone at Lambeau Field.
“We would have watched the Super Bowl together, without a doubt,” Rozga says. “As a lifelong fan, I was really happy. But it was one of the many things I’ll never get to share with David. I’ll never go to another Packers game with him.”
Originally posted 2011-03-09 12:11:57. Republished by Blog Post Promoter
Substitute to Smoking Tobacco & Marijuana
Jan 20th
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Benefits of Herbal Smoke
The first and foremost advantage of herbal smoke is that it caters to the particular category of smokers who want to quit cigarette or marijuana smoking. One of the main reasons for wanting to stop smoking marijuana being the fear of losing their job, assets, friends and family members, or being arrested, but they are not able to stop. Herbal smoke and herbal smoking blends give people another choice. Many herbs and herbal smoking blends offer a similar effect, just not as potent or debilitating.
Originally posted 2010-12-10 13:38:55. Republished by Blog Post Promoter




