Here is a cannabis oil recipe that is being used as a treatment for many different forms of diseases. These diseases include: cancer, arthritis, multiple sclerosis, diabetes, leukemia, Crohn’s disease, depression, osteoporosis, psoriasis, insomnia, glaucoma, asthma, burns, and migraines.
Warning! This information is a world public service. I advise you to never try this at home or anywhere else due to flammability and potential illegality. Remember, medical marijuana is still illegal in most countries in the world and many states of the United States. It is possible to treat all of these conditions and much more with hemp oil and here is a video about how to make it.
Warning! This information is a world public service. I advise you to never try this at home or anywhere else due to flammability and potential illegality. Remember, medical marijuana is still illegal in most countries in the world and many states of the United States. It is possible to treat all of these conditions and much more with hemp oil and here is a video about how to make it.
Steps 0-11
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0. What is a solvent? Rick Simpson recommends in the video: pure aliphatic naphtha (CAS number 64742-49-0 and a boiling point around 60-80°C) as the solvent. If you cannot get pure light naphtha, 99% or even better 99.9% isopropyl alcohol would be his second choice for a solvent. Organic folks (who do not like these chemical solvents) should use organic ethanol or grain alcohol (190 proof or 95% pure) as the solvent. Organic ethanol needs a longer time to mix with the plant material such as a month or cycle of the moon in the ethanol with daily stirring before making the oil. All of these are VERY flammable and extreme caution is advised on ANY of these steps. Protective eyewear is required. These steps must only be done by chemistry professionals in a safe lab or outdoor lab environment where medical marijuana is legal.
1. Place the starting material in a bucket of good depth to prevent the oil solvent mix from splashing out during the washing process. Then, dampen the bud with the solvent being used and then crush the bud material using a length of wood such as a piece of 2×2.
After the bud has been crushed, add more solvent until the bud material is completely immersed in the solvent. Work the bud material for three to four minutes with the length of wood you used to crush it. This time could be longer and at least a month (not minutes) is recommended when using organic ethanol as the solvent.
2. Then slowly pour the solvent oil mix off into another clean container, leaving the starting material in the original container, so it can be washed for the second time. To perform the second wash, add fresh solvent to the starting bud material again, until it is once more immersed in the solvent, and then work it for another three to four minutes, with the piece of wood you have been using. If using organic ethanol, the second washing would take another month and could be used for another batch later.
3. Use something such as clean water containers, with a small opening at the top and insert funnels into the openings, then put large coffee filters in the funnels. Pour the solvent oil mix from the first and second washes, into the coffee filters and allow the solvent oil mix to drain into the containers, which are holding the funnels and filters to remove any unwanted plant material etc.
4. The more funnels and containers you use, the faster the oil solvent mix will be filtered. Once the oil solvent mix has been filtered, it is now ready to have the solvent boiled off. It should also be mentioned that if you are using high quality medical marijuana buds, after the oil solvent mix has been filtered it often looks about the same as gasoline or at times it can be somewhat darker.
5. It is best to burn off the solvent with a rice cooker because it boils at the perfect temperature to remove solvent and water, but keep the cannabinoids intact. If a rice cooker is working properly, it will automatically come off the high heat setting at roughly 210 to 230°F or (100 to110°C), which is above the temperature where most people say decarboxylation is said to occur.
6. Then fill the rice cooker until it is about three quarters full of oil solvent mix, this allows room for the oil solvent mix to boil off without splashing over. Place the rice cooker on its high heat setting and then begin boiling the solvent off. Never attempt to do this without the use of a fan or laboratory ventilation hood, since the solvent fumes could accumulate and if they come into contact with the heating element within the rice cooker, it could cause these fumes to ignite.
7. As the level in the rice cooker drops, continue to carefully add the solvent oil mix you have remaining, until you have nothing left. When the level in the rice cooker comes down for the last time and has been reduced to about two inches of solvent oil mix remaining. Add about 10 to 12 drops of water to the solvent oil mix, which remains in the rice cooker. This small amount of water allows the remaining solvent, to boil off the oil which remains in the rice cooker more readily and it also helps to cleanse the oil of solvent residue, as the last of the solvent is being boiled off.
8. As the last of the solvent is being boiled off, you will hear a crackling sound from the oil that is left in the cooker and you will see quite a bit of bubbling taking place in the oil that remains. Also, you will notice what looks like a small amount of smoke coming off the oil in the rice cooker, but don’t be concerned, since this is mostly just steam produced from the few drops of water that you added.
9. After the rice cooker has automatically switched to its low heat setting, I usually let it cool until it can be switched to the high heat setting again. After the cooker has automatically switched itself to the low heat setting for the second time, I then take the inner pot out of the cooker and pour its contents into a stainless steel measuring cup.
10. Take the oil that you poured into the stainless steel measuring cup and put it on a gentle heating device such as a coffee warmer or electric heating plate to evaporate off whatever water remains in the oil. Quite often, it only takes a short time to evaporate the remaining water off, but also some strains produce more natural terpenes and flavonoids than others. These terpenes and flavonoids can cause the oil you now have on the coffee warmer to bubble for quite some time and it may take a while for such oils to cease this activity.
11. When the oil on the coffee warmer has little or no bubbling activity visible, take the oil off the coffee warmer and allow it to cool a bit, after which it can be drawn up into the plastic syringes for use.
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0. What is a solvent? Rick Simpson recommends in the video: pure aliphatic naphtha (CAS number 64742-49-0 and a boiling point around 60-80°C) as the solvent. If you cannot get pure light naphtha, 99% or even better 99.9% isopropyl alcohol would be his second choice for a solvent. Organic folks (who do not like these chemical solvents) should use organic ethanol or grain alcohol (190 proof or 95% pure) as the solvent. Organic ethanol needs a longer time to mix with the plant material such as a month or cycle of the moon in the ethanol with daily stirring before making the oil. All of these are VERY flammable and extreme caution is advised on ANY of these steps. Protective eyewear is required. These steps must only be done by chemistry professionals in a safe lab or outdoor lab environment where medical marijuana is legal.
1. Place the starting material in a bucket of good depth to prevent the oil solvent mix from splashing out during the washing process. Then, dampen the bud with the solvent being used and then crush the bud material using a length of wood such as a piece of 2×2.
After the bud has been crushed, add more solvent until the bud material is completely immersed in the solvent. Work the bud material for three to four minutes with the length of wood you used to crush it. This time could be longer and at least a month (not minutes) is recommended when using organic ethanol as the solvent.
2. Then slowly pour the solvent oil mix off into another clean container, leaving the starting material in the original container, so it can be washed for the second time. To perform the second wash, add fresh solvent to the starting bud material again, until it is once more immersed in the solvent, and then work it for another three to four minutes, with the piece of wood you have been using. If using organic ethanol, the second washing would take another month and could be used for another batch later.
3. Use something such as clean water containers, with a small opening at the top and insert funnels into the openings, then put large coffee filters in the funnels. Pour the solvent oil mix from the first and second washes, into the coffee filters and allow the solvent oil mix to drain into the containers, which are holding the funnels and filters to remove any unwanted plant material etc.
4. The more funnels and containers you use, the faster the oil solvent mix will be filtered. Once the oil solvent mix has been filtered, it is now ready to have the solvent boiled off. It should also be mentioned that if you are using high quality medical marijuana buds, after the oil solvent mix has been filtered it often looks about the same as gasoline or at times it can be somewhat darker.
5. It is best to burn off the solvent with a rice cooker because it boils at the perfect temperature to remove solvent and water, but keep the cannabinoids intact. If a rice cooker is working properly, it will automatically come off the high heat setting at roughly 210 to 230°F or (100 to110°C), which is above the temperature where most people say decarboxylation is said to occur.
6. Then fill the rice cooker until it is about three quarters full of oil solvent mix, this allows room for the oil solvent mix to boil off without splashing over. Place the rice cooker on its high heat setting and then begin boiling the solvent off. Never attempt to do this without the use of a fan or laboratory ventilation hood, since the solvent fumes could accumulate and if they come into contact with the heating element within the rice cooker, it could cause these fumes to ignite.
7. As the level in the rice cooker drops, continue to carefully add the solvent oil mix you have remaining, until you have nothing left. When the level in the rice cooker comes down for the last time and has been reduced to about two inches of solvent oil mix remaining. Add about 10 to 12 drops of water to the solvent oil mix, which remains in the rice cooker. This small amount of water allows the remaining solvent, to boil off the oil which remains in the rice cooker more readily and it also helps to cleanse the oil of solvent residue, as the last of the solvent is being boiled off.
8. As the last of the solvent is being boiled off, you will hear a crackling sound from the oil that is left in the cooker and you will see quite a bit of bubbling taking place in the oil that remains. Also, you will notice what looks like a small amount of smoke coming off the oil in the rice cooker, but don’t be concerned, since this is mostly just steam produced from the few drops of water that you added.
9. After the rice cooker has automatically switched to its low heat setting, I usually let it cool until it can be switched to the high heat setting again. After the cooker has automatically switched itself to the low heat setting for the second time, I then take the inner pot out of the cooker and pour its contents into a stainless steel measuring cup.
10. Take the oil that you poured into the stainless steel measuring cup and put it on a gentle heating device such as a coffee warmer or electric heating plate to evaporate off whatever water remains in the oil. Quite often, it only takes a short time to evaporate the remaining water off, but also some strains produce more natural terpenes and flavonoids than others. These terpenes and flavonoids can cause the oil you now have on the coffee warmer to bubble for quite some time and it may take a while for such oils to cease this activity.
11. When the oil on the coffee warmer has little or no bubbling activity visible, take the oil off the coffee warmer and allow it to cool a bit, after which it can be drawn up into the plastic syringes for use.
Dosage
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It usually takes the average person about 90 days to ingest the full 60 gram or 60 ml oil treatment. It is suggested that people start with three doses per day, about the size of a half a grain of short grained dry rice. The patient could take this dosage every 8 hours, early in the morning, then again in the afternoon and then they should take their final dose of the day, about an hour before bedtime. It should also be noted that as a patient begins to ingest this oil, the patient does not normally feel the oils effects until about an hour after they have taken their dosage, so please be aware of this fact and avoid operating all machinery. A beginner’s dose such as what is being described would equal about ¼ of a drop