Sorry if there's a better thread already up to post this in - I looked for some sort of Ketamine megathread, and couldn't find a suitable one.
I don't mean to pretend I know what I'm talking about, and I may use words that mean nothing or are dealer buzzwords, and for that I apologize. I'm just trying to make the best of a bad situation.
I picked up a vial, and just before the deal my friend informed me that it was actually "human" K, if my understanding is correct, this is a term used to refer to ketamine engineered for human recreational use, not the good ol' fashioned cat tranquilizer I've come to love. In my experience it's a different high and sort of inferior. Anyway, I was told that this particular batch also needed to be dissolved in distilled or drinking water and let to dry out or blow dried, whereupon it would be ready to be scraped and served. I have personally never heard of this, but I went ahead and did it.
What I didn't think about was how to properly let it evaporate. I think I put too much water in (about five or six tablespoons), and stirred it with a plastic fork until it dissolved. Now I have a conspicuous saucer of water just sitting in my room. I didn't think ahead (classic behavior) to just how long it would take to just lose that much water. Any way I can safely speed up the process?
I don't mean to pretend I know what I'm talking about, and I may use words that mean nothing or are dealer buzzwords, and for that I apologize. I'm just trying to make the best of a bad situation.
I picked up a vial, and just before the deal my friend informed me that it was actually "human" K, if my understanding is correct, this is a term used to refer to ketamine engineered for human recreational use, not the good ol' fashioned cat tranquilizer I've come to love. In my experience it's a different high and sort of inferior. Anyway, I was told that this particular batch also needed to be dissolved in distilled or drinking water and let to dry out or blow dried, whereupon it would be ready to be scraped and served. I have personally never heard of this, but I went ahead and did it.
What I didn't think about was how to properly let it evaporate. I think I put too much water in (about five or six tablespoons), and stirred it with a plastic fork until it dissolved. Now I have a conspicuous saucer of water just sitting in my room. I didn't think ahead (classic behavior) to just how long it would take to just lose that much water. Any way I can safely speed up the process?