Archive for the ‘Medical Marijuana Facts, Help, Tips’ Category
Hydroponic or Natural Growing
Hydroponic versus Natural Growing – Which Is Better? Or Does It Really Matter?
Minnesota marijuana enthusiasts often spend ridiculous amounts of time debating the “proper” and “best” growing protocols to ensure the cleanest highs, the most perfectly calibrated and titrated doses of cannabinoids, and so forth. One debate that rages within the medicinal marijuana blogosphere is whether to “go organic” or “go hydroponic” or both. We’ll dive into the debate and give you the bullet-point summary.

Organic
Organic, natural cannabis is grown without the use of toxic pesticides, nutrient-challenged soil, artificial nutrients, and chemical fertilizers. People have different ideas about what exactly constitutes “organic” or “natural,” but essentially farmers eschew using mined phosphate, chloride, many mineral salts, many fertilizers, and other components that could harm the plant and environment. Unfortunately, beyond these fluffy definitions – which sound good on paper – various standards apply to various types of natural growing. So consumers may not know exactly what they are getting, even if something says both “natural” or “organic” on the label.
Hydroponic
Hydroponic is about growing plants without soil. The plants are grown in a relatively sterile
environment, so pesticides are not needed, growing times and seasons are extended, and nutrition can be optimized. Hydroponic marijuana growers utilize nutrient solutions that are rich in refined minerals. Micro organisms cannot flourish, since there is no soil, so these organisms cannot contribute potentially dangerous anti-nutrients and chemicals. And finally, advocates of hydroponic growing suggest that fewer natural resources (e.g. soil) are needed; therefore, the process is gentler on the environment.
Does it matter whether your medicinal marijuana is hydroponic, organic, natural, or none of the above?
This is the $6 million question. And while there are advocates of various schools of thought about growth, the reality is that the science is relatively nascent. In other words, it’s difficult to judge what’s healthy and what’s not because there is a lack of carefully controlled clinical studies on this stuff. Perhaps these methods are healthier for you or will deliver a more controlled, titrated high, but the science isn’t settled. Individual tolerances and preferences may vary widely.
How Marijuana Can Help Patients with Glaucoma
Glaucoma is a painful, chronic condition, in which pressure on the eyeball increases over time, causing
blurred vision, pain, loss of capacity, and possibly loss of vision altogether. Its etiology is obviously
complex, and possible solutions abound.
But one solution that you might not have considered – but likely should have considered – is medicinal
marijuana.
Marijuana has a history as a medicine that dates back centuries. Indeed, in 1937, when Congress passed
the Marijuana Tax Act, which effectively turned cannabis illegal, the only opponent of the bill was a
representative from the American Medical Association!
Marijuana’s active chemical compounds, cannabinoids, can help with a variety of health conditions,
possibly including chronic pain, fibromyalgia, nausea, multiple sclerosis, and arthritis. Active marijuana
compounds can limit pressure in the eyes of glaucoma patients, thus limiting damage.
And while some clinicians suggest that more conventional therapies are better for relieving intraocular
pressure – they may do so better than cannabinoids – drugs and conventional therapies also have side
effects that can make them inappropriate or even dangerous for certain patients.
If you are one of the more than 60 million glaucoma sufferers worldwide, you may be able to slow the
progress of this frustrating disorder – which has the potential to degrade and destroy the optic nerve –
with the proper, medically-supervised use of medicinal marijuana.
Behind Smoking — Yummy Marijuana Tea
Here’s How to Make It, Step by Step
In popular lore, marijuana is taken one way – by smoking it. Perhaps you use a hookah, a pipe, a
bong, or you simply roll weed in paper. But smoking it is the only way to go.
Right?
Not necessarily. Marijuana tea is a safe, enjoyable, relaxing, and non-smoking way to enjoy the
numerous medicinal benefits of cannabis.
Here is what you need:
- Two cups of creamer (e.g. half-and-half or milk),
- 2 grams of hash or kief,
- Sugar or artificial sweetener (e.g. Equal, Splenda, Davinci syrups).
- Tea (your choice – e.g. English breakfast, Irish breakfast, decaffeinated black tea, etc.).
- Makes 3-4 cups
- Heat the half-and-half (or milk) on medium low.
- Once the dairy is warm, stir in the hash or kief until it completely dissolves. (Be careful not to have too hot, will burn. If this happens you can burn out the THC.)
- Pour this mixture into mugs, and then fill with the brewed tea.
- Add Splenda or sugar (or whatever else you have on tap) to sweeten it to your taste.
This recipe should give you about four cups of tea.
Whether you suffer from chronic pain, an eating disorder, arthritis, pain from multiple sclerosis, nausea, chemotherapy, or glaucoma, the professionals at Oakland Bay Area CannCare can help you come up with a prescription for natural relief that meets your needs.
Just because you don’t enjoy smoking – or you can’t smoke because of emphysema, lung disease, or an allergic reaction – doesn’t mean that you should be prevented from enjoying the multifarious medicinal benefits of one of nature’s great holistic cures. Not only can you make great tea but edibles do wonders as well. See our past blog A Yummier High?
Who Qualifies for Medical Marijuana ID Card?
Who Qualifies for Medical Marijuana ID Card?
If you suffer from a chronic condition, such as pain, cancer, glaucoma, or arthritis, California
Proposition 215 Act allows you to consume medicinal cannabis to manage your symptoms. You
must get an official diagnosis and recommendation from a physician (or psychologist, podiatrist,
acupuncturist, doctor of naturopathy, etc) and submit records that verify the diagnosis.
Once you are approved, you can possess 8 ounces of marijuana legally in the state of California
(not including stems and leaves) and maintain six mature plants at your house (or 12 immature
ones). If your physician recommends it, you can actually possess more, per Senate Bill 420. To
get a medical marijuana card in California, here are the steps:
1. Get a recommendation from your physician.
2. Submit form CDPH 9042.
3. Send your form to your county’s health department with an application fee, copy of your
doctor’s recommendation, proof of residence, and a government issued photo ID, such as a
driver’s license or passport.
Note that, once you get your medical marijuana identification card, also known as an MMIC, you
should use cannabis in a safe and legal way. Here are some tips:
- Avoid smoking marijuana where the law prohibits smoking (e.g. airports, restaurants, schools, et cetera)
- Avoid smoking around your children
- Prevent your children from accessing the marijuana
- Store your marijuana safely in your car’s trunk. Avoid keeping loose marijuana in your vehicle, as you could get charged with possession.
- Avoid giving marijuana to friends or family members – this is illegal.
- Do not operate your vehicle after ingesting or smoking marijuana.
- Educate yourself about use and abuse – how cannabis can treat problems like fibromyalgia, chronic pain, nausea, eating disorders, et cetera.
Alcohol Tincture Versus Glycerin for Marijuana Edibles
Which is Best For Medical Marijuana Edibles?
For medicinal marijuana users who prefer tinctures to smoking or using a vaporizer, decisions abound. One of the big ones is whether to use alcohol or glycerin tinctures. They are fanatical adherents of both “schools of thought,” and medicinal marijuana forums on the web are rife with debates over how/whether/when to use these tinctures.
According to most reports, alcohol tinctures are more potent in terms of leading to faster and greater absorption. Thus, per the amount of tincture you use, you will get a strongerdose of THC when you use an alcohol tincture.
That said, there are trade-offs.
First of all, some people complain that the alcohol doesn’t taste good or that it irritates the mouth. Others complain that the alcohol actually changes the character of the high in negative ways (although some people say the same of glycerin). Other patients may simply refuse alcohol because they’re recovering alcoholics, and they don’t want to toy with even minuscule amounts of ethanol for fear of setting off cravings for drinking.
Both alcohol and glycerin can release by products depending on heating, pressure, and storage conditions. For instance, if you store an ethanol tincture in a plastic container, the ethanol can interact with the plastic to release harmful free vinyl chemicals, which can make some people sick.
Also, if you heat alcohol tincture above 300 degrees Fahrenheit, the cannabinoids (activemedical compounds) can vaporize, so you will lose the medicinal effects. Likewise, if you heat glycerin to high temperatures, harmful by products can be released. And if you overheat either tincture, you will lose the cannabinoids.
Probably the “alcohol versus tincture” debate will never be fully resolved, since in many cases, it comes down to questions of taste and your desire for a certain intensity/character of the high.
A Yummier High?
One of the reasons why some people “veer away” from the medical marijuana option is that they don’t want to get into the habit of smoking something – anything.
Fortunately, there are other ways to enjoy the pot that you need to treat conditions like glaucoma, depression, and pain from chemotherapy. One delightful option is the edibles/ingestibles route. Today’s medical marijuana dispensaries have gone way beyond the simple (but effective) “pot brownie.” Today, you can find pomegranate tea, pecan chip cookies, granolabars, ice cream, and even olive oil with medically active cannabis. Note that these aren’t necessarily “swappable.” A pecan brownie designed to deliver a high to treat your depression may not be appropriate for someone who needs different kind of high.
As an LA Weekly blog post on the subject recently put it: “because such things have to be carefully considered, patients with doctors’ recommendations need the guidance of care givers at a marijuana dispensary. [Each of the yummy edible/ingestible formulations], including “oral sprays, pills and tinctures …is made with a different strain of cannabis – sativa, indica and hybrid– which produce different effects and are beneficial to specific illnesses.”
The LA Weekly blog also notes that, believe or not, there is a restaurant in Denver called the Ganja Gourmet – a pot restaurant! The menu includes house pizza, tamales, hummus, spinach pie, bottled “ganjanade” and a plethora of delicious desserts, like giant chocolate bombs andstony road ice cream.
Marijuana Vaporizers
Marijuana Vaporizers: How They Work, and How They Protect You
A marijuana vaporizer is a device that heats up medical marijuana to temperatures of around 285degrees Fahrenheit to 393 degrees Fahrenheit for the purpose of boiling and vaporizing active compounds called cannabinoids. A user inhales thin vapors of mist instead of smoke. Differenttechnologies vaporize the marijuana in different ways, but the general principle is: you heat the marijuana at a much lower temperature than you would if you smoked it.
This leads to at least three benefits:
1. Relatively odorless and clean. Although the vaporization process does generate a residual resin, the process involves little burning, so the odor will be significantly contained.
2. Essentially smokeless – The American Lung Association and other public health institutions often warn people against smoking cigarettes, marijuana, and other herbs or compounds because the harsh chemicals in the smoke can damage lung tissue and lead to chronic ailments, such as emphysema, asthma, and worse. A standard marijuana joint will burn at extremely high temperature – one online resource says upwards of 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit or higher. This extremely high temperature burning releases carcinogenic compounds (cancer-causing agents), and the smoke also can interfere with the taste and experience of the high.
3. Get more bang for your buck. Cannabinoids are the active compounds which deliver the medicinal effects. When you smoke a joint, the combustion destroys many of these compoundsVaporization, on the other hand, does a far better job of preserving these key cannabinoid compounds. So if you’re on a budget, vaporization therefore makes a lot of sense; you can stretch your supply and still get active healing.
For nearly 15 years – ever since Californians gained the right to use medicinal marijuana to treat ailments like glaucoma, anxiety, and chronic pain thanks to the Proposition 215 Act – patients around the Bay Area have been looking for reputable, experienced, and careful suppliers of medicinal pot.
Locating a Medical Marijuana Dispensary: What to Look For, What to Look Out For
What to Look For, What to Look Out For

Whether you’ve been using medical marijuana in California for years to treat the chronic, wrenching pain of fibromyalgia; or whether you just got your first prescription for medicinal pot to manage an eating disorder, you want to find a dispensary near you that can deliver effective, safe, and legal medicinal marijuana.
This post will examine what to look for (and what to look out for!) when reviewing dispensaries.
Finding Candidate Dispensaries
Obviously, you can Google around (or use Google maps) to locate shops near you. Doing preliminary research on the web is great. Check out any candidate treatment center’s website, credentials, testimonials, and online resources. Different dispensaries offer different products. Some may offer free patient consultations. Some dispensary websites will give you discounts on products you might like to use.
Leveraging Other Patients’ Experiences
Just doing research on the internet may not be enough. A terrific looking shop may have a shabby website; and vice versa. Customer feedback can be a way to bridge this knowledge gap. For instance, using customer review sites, Facebook, and other social networking tools, you can get more detailed feedback about an establishment.
You can also check out forums devoted to medical marijuana “best practices” to learn what to expect when you visit dispensaries and to further your education about how marijuana can treat arthritis, cancer, chemotherapy, chronic pain, glaucoma, nausea, and other ailments.
In Person Visit
Once you’ve zeroed in on a good local dispensary – one that has a great website and excellent consumer reviews – go for a visit. Keep in mind that the medical marijuana industry is still at a very early stage, so there is not a lot of uniformity among dispensaries. Make sure that the people who help you have the credentials, background, and experience to advise effectively, and be sure to keep your doctor informed of your treatment progress.
A Cannabis Spray Delivery System for Natural Relief
Sativex Spray:
A Cannabis Spray Delivery System for Natural Relief
Sativex is an extract from medicinal cannabis plants. It contains active compounds, such as tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD). Developed by a British company, GW Pharmaceuticals, Sativex offers an alternative way to take medicinal marijuana. Instead of smoking the marijuana or ingesting it orally, you literally spray the cannabis medication under your tongue.
Sativex: Safe for Use
Over the past decade, Sativex has been approved for safe use in Britain and Canada, after multiple trials showed that the medication effectively treats multiple sclerosis pain. Whereas a lot of other medicinal marijuana drugs used synthesized forms of marijuana extract, Sativex uses real extract from pot plants. According to tests and anecdotal evidence, Sativex appears not only to relieve pain but also to reduce spasms and muscular tension in multiple sclerosis patients.
Can’t Sleep? Medical Marijuana Can Help Treat Your Insomnia
Medical Marijuana Can Help Treat Your Insomnia
Many people fail to realize how lack of sleep can have a negative effect on their life. Insomnia is not only the cause of poor health; it can also greatly reduce your productivity at work and when left untreated, it can even lead to death.
Although there are several over the counter drugs available to help people fall asleep, many of these products cause drowsiness during the day — not to mention other potential medical complications. There are many insomnia sufferers who complain of feeling tired and sluggish during the day after using sleeping aids.
The good news is you no longer have to settle for harmful sleeping aids. There is a safe and effective alternative known as medical marijuana. Medical marijuana has worked wonders for many victims of insomnia.
It is important to note that medical marijuana is a natural alternative that doesn’t have the dangerous effects that many sleeping aids have. More importantly, medical marijuana doesn’t make you feel sluggish and fatigue. As a matter of fact, after consuming medical marijuana, it helps you to fall into a relaxing slumber. When you awake, you’ll feel well rested and revived.
Marijuana for medical use is legal today in California. To legally access medical marijuana today, you need a medical marijuana ID card and prescription that was issued by a certified medical doctor. To arrange an appointment today with a local doctor here in Oakland, CA who can write these prescriptions, please go to our contact and appointment page here- Marijuana ID Cards.



