Browsing: Products

Photo: Smoke Out Family
The innovative Fumo Pipe combines characteristics of a pipe, a steamroller, and a bong.

​​The Fumo Pipe is an innovative smoking device. You light it like a pipe, and push the button on top to clear the smoke like a steamroller.

Smoke is cooled within the billet body, which the makers say is a natural heat sink, and you can fill the chamber to the volume you desire. Push the button on the pipe to close off the bowl, and a rush of fresh air comes through and clears the chamber.
For serious smokers who want more volume than is provided by the standard 3-inch tube chamber, massive smoke volume capability is available with your choice of 6-, 9-, or 12-inch upgrades. The 6-inch tube chamber is $16, the 9-inch is $18, or if you want to go all in, the 12-inch upgrade tube chamber is $23. Replacement 3-inch chambers are also available for $14.

Photo: Smoking Music
Ras Matthew is a reggae singer from Sacramento, California.

​​Welcome to Room 420, where your instructor is Mr. Ron Marczyk and your subjects are wellness, disease prevention, self actualization, and chillin’. Today’s lesson is solidly on the chillin’ portion of the curriculum.


Worth Repeating
By Ron Marczyk, R.N.

Health Education Teacher (Retired)
Beer is to baseball as marijuana is to music.
It’s always set and setting that puts me in the zone. My nights would not be complete without the music of Ras Matthew.
Ras Matthew is a reggae singer from Sacramento, California. His songs embrace the spiritual healing experience of the herb. You don’t have to be a Rasta to understand his universal message of peace, healing and brotherhood through the ingestion of the sacrament of cannabis.
In the 1930s cannabis was rebranded as “marijuana” to help demonize this substance with racism aimed at Mexicans and black musicians playing their “Satanic” jazz music.  Unfortunately, this misinformation worked, and we are living in a world where cannabis is still seen by some as an evil drug. This is our mission to fix.

Photo: Quick Trading Company
I know this much: It beats the Sears Wish Book all to hell.

​For those of you into nug porn — and I know I am! — The Big Book of Buds, Volume 4 from Ed Rosenthal gives you 236 pages of sticky sweet fun. Both an eye-catcher of a coffee table book and a valuable resource, this will quickly become one of your favorite volumes.

You can learn about the latest connoisseur varieties as Rosenthal hosts you on a visual journey with more than two dozen cannabis breeders from Holland, Spain, the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States. With spectacular photos and thorough, knowledgeable information, you can have a state-of-the-art guide to marijuana breeding to peruse as you smoke (or vape, or eat).
Eighty-six glorious varieties are shown in the luscious photos, which look so real you can practically smell the buds. Everything is described in vivid detail, with practical tips as only “Ask Ed” can give them, including growth characteristics and methods, and insights into the effects of various strains.

Photo: Steve Elliott
This box incorporates the roach art of Cliff Maynard, featured on Toke of the Town in 2009.

​Kief boxes — small, wooden boxes divided with a silk or metal screen used to separate kief (trichomes) from dried marijuana buds — are not only functional; they’re also works of art. This becomes immediately obvious when you look at the creations of Myron Connery, “Mr Keifbox” to his many fans, friends and customers.

Mr Keifbox is a true woodworker who does it the old fashioned way at his shop in Spanaway, Washington. He constructs handcrafted, custom made boxes with art of your choosing on the lid.
“Our goal is to become someone you come to for designing your dreams,” Mr Keifbox says, “that you would never get anywhere else.”
Kief (also spelled kif or keif) collects on the bottom, glass layer of the box, ready to be put in a pollen press, or collected for smoking, vaporization, hash making or cooking.
The three-tier pollenboxes come in various sizes from 4″x4″ and 3.5 inches high ($40 in white pine or maple) all the way up to big honking 24″x24″ boxes ($275 in white pine or maple), which are six inches high. Customers can add a hand-burned image to the top at no additional charge.

Graphic: 420list.org

​A platform for medical marijuana patients to share classified ads, listings, events, news and more, 420list.org serves as a central hub to facilitate communication between patients and dispensaries with local and real-time ads.

Jon at 420list.org answered a few questions for Toke of the Town.
Toke: How long has 420list.org been operating?
Jon: The official launch was on 4/20/10.
Toke: How many dispensaries are listed?
Jon: Currently there are 1,191 dispensaries (including delivery services), and 98 doctors listed.
Toke: How many states do you have listings for?
Jon: All 15 medical marijuana states, plus other states for news, etc.

Photo: UK420.com
An employee places filter tips in joints containing marijuana at a Dutch coffee shop.

​Officials in Eindhoven, a city in the south of the Netherlands, have rejected the idea of a pass system for buying cannabis, which would have prevented “drug tourists” from purchasing small amounts of marijuana in local coffee shops.

Local politicians in nearby Den Bosch and Maastricht have already come out against introducing the “weed passes,” the aim of which would be to bar the sale of cannabis to anyone other than Dutch residents, reports Radio Netherlands Worldwide.
Dutch towns including Eindhoven have supposedly been hit by a “wave of violent crime” somehow connected to the supply of cannabis to local coffee shops — at least if you believe those who wish to restrict sales.

Graphic: Choco-Potamus
The more you eat, the hungrier you get.

​Since you know the marijuana’s gonna give you the munchies anyway, why not multi-task and take a pre-emptive strike against hunger even as you medicate?

That choice is yours thanks to companies like Oakland, California’s Choco-Potamus, turning heads and pleasing palates with their luxury cannabis chocolates, reports the “SFoodie” blog at SF Weekly.
The use of real cocoa butter — not cheap substitutes like coconut oil — makes big difference in the final product, according to SFoodie, giving it a taste that ranks it “high” (yes, I went there) above the competition.
Available in both dark (sativa hybrid) and milk chocolate (indica/sativa hybrid), the bars are also connoisseur-worthy in another respect: The manufacturers use cannabis buds rather than the typical shake and stems used in edibles, giving the chocolates a stronger effect.
“The world’s finest chocolate and the highest grade cannabis buds, combined in one deliciously potent bar,” reads the Choco-Potamus Facebook page. “Each fast-acting psychedelicious dose lasts +3 super-functional hours.”

Photo: Fugitive.com
This stash of cash totaling $205 million was stolen, I mean seized, from Mexican drug cartel members by Mexican Federal Police and the American DEA during a joint raid on a suspected cartel boss’s home

​Gotta watch those darn south of the border “drug cartels.” Not only have they fought back against Mexico’s War On Drugs, resulting in thousands of deaths, but now they’ve gotten into Bill Gates’s pockets, too.

Drug cartels are making fake copies of Office 2007 and selling ’em on the streets of Mexico, at least if you believe David Finn, Microsoft’s associate general counsel for anti-piracy, reports Curtis Cartier at Seattle Weekly.
Finn showed off a copy of counterfeit Office software “brazenly” stamped with the rectangular “FMM” logo of La Familia drug cartel, reports Heather Smith at Bloomberg.

Graphic: Cheba Hut
C’mon, dude, I know you want one of those (nudge, nudge) ‘Toasted’ Subs at Cheba Hut, “where the only thing fried is the occasional customer” (wink, wink).

​This week, a counterculture-themed restaurant franchise will celebrate the passage of Proposition 203, the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act.

All day Thursday, February 3, Cheba Hut will sell four-inch subs for $2.03. There also will be live music, giveaways and raffles from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., reports the AZ Daily Sun.
“Hosting this event is another way of bringing our customers together and having an open forum on how Prop 203 can benefit Arizona,” said Cheba Hut CEO Scott Jennings.
Founded in 1998, Cheba Hut, home of (nudge, nudge) “toasted” subs, “where the only thing fried is the occasional customer” (wink, wink), has five restaurants in Arizona.
“Got the Munchies?” Cheba Hut’s website knowingly asks. “We have the goods you’re craving!”
As a delivery driver back in the 1990s, founder Jennings “noticed that on most of his late night deliveries, his customers were… um… inhaling!” the company website informs us. “Scott put two and two together and developed the Cheba Hut ‘Toasted’ Subs concept.”
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