Sustanon
Bluelighter
Just resize the image in paint. Id be careful about talking about quantities though, looks tasty but

Has anybody else picked up really small, rock hard nugs around Sydney recently? This shit is fucked. Weighs up fine, but chops up to shit. Hairy as fuck as well, really orange. Doesn't smoke up to good either, well not as good to what I usually get anyway. Wouldn't be surprised if it were slightly mouldy as well. I've gotten this a herb couple of times past couple of months, just a heads up. Such a rip off, don't even bother if you're offered it.![]()
Has anybody else picked up really small, rock hard nugs around Sydney recently? This shit is fucked. Weighs up fine, but chops up to shit. Hairy as fuck as well, really orange. Doesn't smoke up to good either, well not as good to what I usually get anyway. Wouldn't be surprised if it were slightly mouldy as well. I've gotten this a herb couple of times past couple of months, just a heads up. Such a rip off, don't even bother if you're offered it.![]()
just found some old photos of my outdoors, this is not last seasons but the one before's main bud, it was a jack herer rip off from ghsc it was good bud and got just under two pound from two plants.can someone show me how to wrap this image so its not so large?![]()
Abstract
Cannabis use typically begins during adolescence and early adulthood, a period when cannabinoid receptors are still abundant in white matter pathways across the brain. However, few studies to date have explored the impact of regular cannabis use on white matter structure, with no previous studies examining its impact on axonal connectivity. The aim of this study was to examine axonal fibre pathways across the brain for evidence of microstructural alterations associated with long-term cannabis use and to test whether age of regular cannabis use is associated with severity of any microstructural change. To this end, diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging and brain connectivity mapping techniques were performed in 59 cannabis users with longstanding histories of heavy use and 33 matched controls. Axonal connectivity was found to be impaired in the right fimbria of the hippocampus (fornix), splenium of the corpus callosum and commissural fibres. Radial and axial diffusivity in these pathways were associated with the age at which regular cannabis use commenced. Our findings indicate long-term cannabis use is hazardous to the white matter of the developing brain. Delaying the age at which regular use begins may minimize the severity of microstructural impairment.