Club 600

DoobieBrother

Well-Known Member
Looks like a high tech trich scope
Just a GoPro camera, but I could probably get some okay snaps with it if there is good lighting.
Will have to wait until this spring and summer to find out, though, as I won't have any trichs to look at until the next outdoor grow season is well under way.
:-(
 

AlphaPhase

Well-Known Member
I watched a doc on youtube about A girl named Charlotte with health problems since birth. Really bad seisures, to make a long story short, some growers had been working on high cbd strains and helped this little girl get to enjoy her life. They even named it Charlottes web
I saw that as well! I think it's something like 25% cbd and under 1% thc, it's a pair of brothers that grow it, I can't remember their names but I think they are from california somewhere. I still can't believe cbd at the bare minimum, or hemp for that matter, is not legal. Some forms of hemp carry very high % of cbd!
 

giggles26

Well-Known Member
I saw that as well! I think it's something like 25% cbd and under 1% thc, it's a pair of brothers that grow it, I can't remember their names but I think they are from california somewhere. I still can't believe cbd at the bare minimum, or hemp for that matter, is not legal. Some forms of hemp carry very high % of cbd!
There's 6 brothers and they are from Colorado :)
 

curious old fart

Well-Known Member
I believe the brothers are from Colorado and they have one of the better cbd strains

Legal 'E-spliff' helps relieve pain of MS and cancer patients - without the cannabis high
  • Legal 'electronic joint' developed to help ailments eased by cannabis
  • It will help calm, relax and ease people's pain, but will not give a 'high'
  • This is because it contains cannabidiol (CBD) which acts as a painkiller
  • Does not contain psychoactive ingredient THC which gives a 'high'
  • Product will be available to patients in France from January 2015
By Madlen Davies for MailOnline
Published: 12:28 EST, 16 December 2014 | Updated: 12:55 EST, 16 December 2014


A legal 'electronic joint’ to help patients with conditions that are eased by cannabis will go on sale in France next month.
The firm behind the e-joint, called KanaVape, claims it will provide all the relaxing and pain-killing effects of marijuana, without the high.
The product has been engineered to contain cannabidiol (CBD), a compound in cannabis which has therapeutic uses as a painkiller.
But, crucially, the product does not contain THC, another psychoactive compound found in cannabis, which causes the ‘high’.


An 'electronic joint' made from hemp plants is being developed by a French manufacturer. It claims the e-joint, called KanaVape, will provide all the relaxing and painkilling effects of marijuana, without the high, as it does not contain the psychoactive ingredient THC


Cannabis-derived drugs such as Sativex are already used in the U.S., UK and other European countries to treat the pain associated with multiple sclerosis and cancer
‘KanaVape brings you many of the benefits of cannabinoids without the psychotic effect of THC’, its makers claim, writing on their website.
Cannabis-derived drugs such as Sativex are already used in the U.S., UK and other European countries to treat the pain associated with multiple sclerosis and cancer.
Two other cannabis-derived drugs, Cesamet and Marinol, are also used in Canada and the U.S. to treat the nausea and vomiting associated with chemotherapy and AIDS-related anorexia.
The founders of KanaVape, Antonin Cohen, a start up entrepreneur and Sebastian Beguerie, an agricultural engineer, spent two years extracting legal cannabinoids and developing the product, VICE News reports.

It is made from the hemp version of the plant, grown legally in France, which contains more CBD and only 0.2 per cent THC, which is not enough for recreational users of cannabis.
Mr Cohen, who previously worked in start-up companies in the U.S. where he said it was possible to earn a ‘comfortable salary’, said he quit his job and set up KanaVape as he wanted to help people suffering conditions that could be eased by marijuana.
He realised many people in France suffer from cancer or MS, and said it was an ‘injustice’ they could not use cannabis to ease their pain.
He said: ‘One of them said "Cannabis plant helps me to fight against my illness, however, the legislation that I have to put myself in situations of illegality. I therefore cannot provide myself with cannabis legally, I cannot find quality cannabis.”
‘We sell this product in France for the sick, a harmless molecule is sued and cannot be accused of marketing a product for recreational use. There is no high in it.’


Antonin Cohen, who previously worked in start-up companies in America said he set up KanaVape as he wanted to help people suffering conditions that could be eased by marijuana. Here, he is pictured speaking at the launch in Paris in December
He added that they are not interested in promoting the recreational use of cannabis, and have no problems with current drugs laws.
He is working with a legal firm who advise on the best ways to market the products.
Mr Cohen is launching his product amid a blazing debate over whether e-cigarettes should be regulated.
Some experts argue they are safer than smoking traditional tobacco, whose bouquet of toxic chemicals and gases can cause cancer, heart disease and strokes.
But the World Health Organization has called for them to be banned in public places, and their sale to vulnerable groups like minors and pregnant women regulated, as not enough research has been carried out into their long-term use.
Mr Cohen insists that he controls the entire production chain to ensure his product is safe.
While they are not officially registered as organic – because they did not pay the certifications – he claims their farming methods are the equivalent, he said.

:peace:
cof
 

giggles26

Well-Known Member
I believe the brothers are from Colorado and they have one of the better cbd strains

Legal 'E-spliff' helps relieve pain of MS and cancer patients - without the cannabis high
  • Legal 'electronic joint' developed to help ailments eased by cannabis
  • It will help calm, relax and ease people's pain, but will not give a 'high'
  • This is because it contains cannabidiol (CBD) which acts as a painkiller
  • Does not contain psychoactive ingredient THC which gives a 'high'
  • Product will be available to patients in France from January 2015
By Madlen Davies for MailOnline
Published: 12:28 EST, 16 December 2014 | Updated: 12:55 EST, 16 December 2014
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2876326/Electronic-joint-developed-help-people-multiple-sclerosis-cancer-pain-s-completely-legal.html#comments
A legal 'electronic joint’ to help patients with conditions that are eased by cannabis will go on sale in France next month.
The firm behind the e-joint, called KanaVape, claims it will provide all the relaxing and pain-killing effects of marijuana, without the high.
The product has been engineered to contain cannabidiol (CBD), a compound in cannabis which has therapeutic uses as a painkiller.
But, crucially, the product does not contain THC, another psychoactive compound found in cannabis, which causes the ‘high’.


An 'electronic joint' made from hemp plants is being developed by a French manufacturer. It claims the e-joint, called KanaVape, will provide all the relaxing and painkilling effects of marijuana, without the high, as it does not contain the psychoactive ingredient THC


Cannabis-derived drugs such as Sativex are already used in the U.S., UK and other European countries to treat the pain associated with multiple sclerosis and cancer
‘KanaVape brings you many of the benefits of cannabinoids without the psychotic effect of THC’, its makers claim, writing on their website.
Cannabis-derived drugs such as Sativex are already used in the U.S., UK and other European countries to treat the pain associated with multiple sclerosis and cancer.
Two other cannabis-derived drugs, Cesamet and Marinol, are also used in Canada and the U.S. to treat the nausea and vomiting associated with chemotherapy and AIDS-related anorexia.
The founders of KanaVape, Antonin Cohen, a start up entrepreneur and Sebastian Beguerie, an agricultural engineer, spent two years extracting legal cannabinoids and developing the product, VICE News reports.

It is made from the hemp version of the plant, grown legally in France, which contains more CBD and only 0.2 per cent THC, which is not enough for recreational users of cannabis.
Mr Cohen, who previously worked in start-up companies in the U.S. where he said it was possible to earn a ‘comfortable salary’, said he quit his job and set up KanaVape as he wanted to help people suffering conditions that could be eased by marijuana.
He realised many people in France suffer from cancer or MS, and said it was an ‘injustice’ they could not use cannabis to ease their pain.
He said: ‘One of them said "Cannabis plant helps me to fight against my illness, however, the legislation that I have to put myself in situations of illegality. I therefore cannot provide myself with cannabis legally, I cannot find quality cannabis.”
‘We sell this product in France for the sick, a harmless molecule is sued and cannot be accused of marketing a product for recreational use. There is no high in it.’


Antonin Cohen, who previously worked in start-up companies in America said he set up KanaVape as he wanted to help people suffering conditions that could be eased by marijuana. Here, he is pictured speaking at the launch in Paris in December
He added that they are not interested in promoting the recreational use of cannabis, and have no problems with current drugs laws.
He is working with a legal firm who advise on the best ways to market the products.
Mr Cohen is launching his product amid a blazing debate over whether e-cigarettes should be regulated.
Some experts argue they are safer than smoking traditional tobacco, whose bouquet of toxic chemicals and gases can cause cancer, heart disease and strokes.
But the World Health Organization has called for them to be banned in public places, and their sale to vulnerable groups like minors and pregnant women regulated, as not enough research has been carried out into their long-term use.
Mr Cohen insists that he controls the entire production chain to ensure his product is safe.
While they are not officially registered as organic – because they did not pay the certifications – he claims their farming methods are the equivalent, he said.

:peace:
cof
We must think alike a lot cof! Every time you post something I was just talking bout it or vice versa lol!
 

AlphaPhase

Well-Known Member
That's a great article cof! Very cool! Who knew the french were ahead of the us in the mj craze, well then again... I bet everywhere else is ahead of us lol. I'm just really happy to see laws keep changing slowly but surely, every step we take in the right direction is one less step the patients have to take. Global legal mj will happen :)
 

Figgy

Well-Known Member

curious old fart

Well-Known Member

oldman60

Well-Known Member
it appears that medical science is awakening to the possibilities of our beloved mj ...

Could CANNABIS be used to treat epilepsy? Boy, 12, is one of the first patients to trial radical new treatment

Max Robertson, 12 from Haddington, East Lothian, will trial the experimental drug Epidiolex, which is chemically based on CBD, a cannabis compound that is not psychoactive, and does not give a 'high'.
:peace:
cof
They are doing phenomenal work in Israel with cannabis also.
:peace:
 
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