I had the ohaus, lol ..... family businessCan anyone top this for "old-school? LOL
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And the guy you bought it from had the expensive triple-beam scale
A quarter bag was about a quarter of a fold-n-close sandwich bag, and an ounce or "lid" you had to weigh by the flap because you couldn't close the "lid" All the mail-scale was for was to make sure it was "at least" LOLI had the ohaus, lol ..... family business
Those were handy though, double check the calibration with a nickel 5g. lol
Damn that reminds me of high school and the 80’s. I’m trippin, haven’t seen a finger scale in a minute! Thanks for the trip down memory lane. I’m happy to not have to worry about weight anymore. But nowadays 20 bucks will get you a scale that’s as accurate and a fraction of the time to use, digital. How times have changed, the ohaus I had was a $350 scale. If I remember right i got one of those finger scales at a headshop for like 15 or 20 bucks back in the day.
Back when dudes selling had class and rep for the most part.A quarter bag was about a quarter of a fold-n-close sandwich bag, and an ounce or "lid" you had to weigh by the flap because you couldn't close the "lid" All the mail-scale was for was to make sure it was "at least" LOL
Ever have the beaded-feathered roach clip dangling from the rear-view? The one your girl clipped in her hair if you got pulled over LOLBack when dudes selling had class and rep for the most part.
I got 3 & 4 finger bags back in the day for 30 & 40 bucks, That was old schoolA quarter bag was about a quarter of a fold-n-close sandwich bag, and an ounce or "lid" you had to weigh by the flap because you couldn't close the "lid" All the mail-scale was for was to make sure it was "at least" LOL
In school late 70's early 80's, a nickel, dime, quarter etc. was what you were paying ($5, $10, $25), not what it weighed. A quarter was usually about a quarter of a sandwich bag. And when you rolled it up it better be more like a burrito than a cigar [the cigar was a dime LOL].I got 3 & 4 finger bags back in the day for 30 & 40 bucks, That was old school
I wasn’t connected to the general market as I only sold some to certain homies, I grew up in grow families so I got lowers and larf from outdoor for free. I only sold nickels and dimes, but it wasn’t usual to sell it honestly. Mostly if I needed some cash in a pinch and the agreement was free weed as long as I kept it to my self. They didn’t want it to show up locally.In school late 70's early 80's, a nickel, dime, quarter etc. was what you were paying ($5, $10, $25), not what it weighed. A quarter was usually about a quarter of a sandwich bag. And when you rolled it up it better be more like a burrito than a cigar [the cigar was a dime LOL].
I think it took about $5 to fill the tank on my Nova though, so it's all relative.
No one grew where I was, except for your odd plant in the woods. I was the entrepreneur that had an after school job in construction since before high school, so I bought a pound when I found a good one and never really paid again. I'd smoke the profit and buy more.I wasn’t connected to the general market as I only sold some to certain homies, I grew up in grow families so I got lowers and larf from outdoor for free. I only sold nickels and dimes, but it wasn’t usual to sell it honestly. Mostly if I needed some cash in a pinch and the agreement was free weed as long as I kept it to my self. They didn’t want it to show up locally.