Cornishman
Bluelighter
About as safe as it gets.
Just don't mix alcohol. %)
Just don't mix alcohol. %)
About as safe as it gets.
Just don't mix alcohol. %)
Could someone shed some light on thenodiazepam degrading in solution?
I can get etizolam powder nice and cheaply and quite enjoy the instant hit 2ml of vodka with 1mg etizolam dissolved it in gives you when held under the tongue. The last 2 times I have Flown through my stash in a matter of days/a week and have not noticed any loss of potency.
Does storing pure powder dissolved in vodka lead to any degrading of the etizolam at all? If so what kind of time span?
Thanks![]()
Booze benzo's and being a cunt! There's a programme for BBC3! :D

I spent the best part of 3k in the last month on drugs.
Only got 8 quid to my name.
Least the docs given me a sick note.
EDIT: And I have some HK blues!
Is the cocaine your doing in all this money on quality stuff I assume Cornish?
The msj's people were asking about earlier must be pretty decent if they are the same ones I have currently. Very cheap in not massive bulk.. But I did 4 yesterday after the gym and haircut and ended uo having to go to sleep.
Got 100 free from a mate and a bit of nice moroccan so will probably be benzo's and spliffs again tonight![]()

Addiction experts are warning that a ballooning illicit trade in a tranquilliser popularly known as "mother's little helper" is now a significant factor behind many drug-related deaths. They say diazepam, once prescribed to anxious housewives in the 1970s and better known by its former brand name of Valium, is being used recreationally by a younger generation unaware of its potentially lethal side-effects.
Police suspect that a plethora of amateur laboratories are manufacturing the controlled class C drug in response to growing demand from users who often combine it with other substances. The drug and alcohol treatment charity Addaction fears that the scale of the problem is becoming a major problem for health services and has called for doctors and pharmacists to be better informed about the dangers of the drug.
Addaction said people once misused diazepam that had been diverted from prescriptions or stolen from pharmacies, but in the last five years there had been an increase in the amount of diazepam bought from online pharmacies outside the EU, mainly in India or Pakistan. With diazepam tablets selling for as little as 50p, the drug – a form of benzodiazepine known by users as "benzos" – offers a cheap alternative to most other drugs. In addition, a counterfeit trade appears to be emanating from Scotland, where police have unearthed a number of amateur laboratories creating illegal versions of the drug. "It's a relatively new phenomenon, but we suspect that there are ongoing diazepam production operations going on up and down the country," said Kenny Simpson of the Scottish Drug Enforcement Agency.
The rise in popularity of diazepam may be part of a wider trend in drug abuse, according to experts. Some drug counsellors suspect that the falling numbers of heroin users is partly down to addicts switching to diazepam, which is prescribed to alleviate stress and tension. Many abusers like to mix diazepam with alcohol, with users reporting online that it helps "sedate" them for whole days.
Official figures show that diazepam misuse in Scotland last year came second only to heroin. But the true scale of the problem remains opaque as the number of benzodiazepine seizures are not recorded separately from those of other class C drugs. "The drug trend picture shows an increase in the availability of illicit diazepam, coupled with low prices and the prevalence of 'poly' drug use, creating potential for an increase in fatal overdoses," Kenny Simpson of the Scottish Drug Enforcement Agency warned.
The counterfeit trade appears to be sophisticated: Diazepam tablets being sold illicitly often bear a variety of genuine manufacturers' logos. But experts said it was difficult to gauge whether the drugs were genuine or fake.
"We are hearing numerous reports of tablets with these names stamped across them," said Gareth Balmer from Addaction's service in Dundee. "It could well be the case that some, or even all, are counterfeits and contain varying doses of diazepam. Counterfeiting causes a range of problems, not least because the user does not know what drug it is they are taking, how strong it is and how their body will react to it."
Experts have detected what they say is an alarming rise in cases of "super-dosing", where people take vast quantities of diazepam that far exceed a "prescribed" dose and can result in violent, sometimes fatal, seizures. Addaction reports that one man in his 30s approached them for help saying he had ingested 500mg of the drug, as much as 100 times a normal dose.
Balmer warned: that there could be major consequences for drug treatment if the problem went unchecked. "Diazepam is a very difficult drug to treat. It is behind many drug-related deaths. I believe it's been involved in every single death we've seen in 2012."