What did you accomplish today?

Bobby schmeckle

Well-Known Member
If anyone’s bored and wants some good old fashioned fun....

join me here.
:lol:
God you guys never disappoint. I love you from the bottom of my cold, dead penis.
 

manfredo

Well-Known Member
I am decarboxylating weed for the first time, and it felt so very wrong go break up a 1/2 ounce of my finest buds and put them in pre-heated jars in my oven.

After reading a ton of info on making oil i found this person ICHIBANCRAFTER on line who's practices sound the best to me, for what I want to do and he (or she, IDK) has got a bunch of great info...Or I hope it's great! https://extractcrafter.com/

Happy Valentines Day :bigjoint:
 

raratt

Well-Known Member
I am decarboxylating weed for the first time, and it felt so very wrong go break up a 1/2 ounce of my finest buds and put them in pre-heated jars in my oven.

After reading a ton of info on making oil i found this person ICHIBANCRAFTER on line who's practices sound the best to me, for what I want to do and he (or she, IDK) has got a bunch of great info...Or I hope it's great! https://extractcrafter.com/

Happy Valentines Day :bigjoint:
I just put down parchment paper on a cookie sheet to decarb.
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Holy crap it's cold. We got the ice, more to come today. Say snow later tonight. Really here....smh. checked on the dogs already, ran the vehicles for a few minute, made sure the fridge is full. Packing it in for the rest of the day and night..... :bigjoint:

Oh space tomatoes where are u.....
 

natureboygrower

Well-Known Member
They actually do that with skidders and bulldozers in the woods. Not unusual at all.
Huge Propane torch with a piece of metal ducting and a tarp works best.
You probably have a good idea on how much this new equipment costs. Maybe 50 years ago they had to do that. At 350k for a skidder nowadays, I'd like to think a propane torch isnt needed to warm them up :lol:
 

printer

Well-Known Member
What have I done? Found I have wasted a lot of time? Carving a neck for a guitar, found a pitch pocket. Installed a truss rod, radiused a fretboard, cut the fret slots, glued onto the neck blank. Carved away. I should have stopped when I found it, thought maybe I could salvage it.





 

tyler.durden

Well-Known Member
What have I done? Found I have wasted a lot of time? Carving a neck for a guitar, found a pitch pocket. Installed a truss rod, radiused a fretboard, cut the fret slots, glued onto the neck blank. Carved away. I should have stopped when I found it, thought maybe I could salvage it.






Yep. Training to be a luthier takes many, many years of intense apprenticeship. It is magical what the good ones can create, I love watching good workshops do their thing. Lots of vids on the process on YT.
 

lokie

Well-Known Member
awesome article on it right here...Good luck to us both!!!

You did not offer up this link.
Showing fat ass animated emoticon

 

printer

Well-Known Member
Yep. Training to be a luthier takes many, many years of intense apprenticeship. It is magical what the good ones can create, I love watching good workshops do their thing. Lots of vids on the process on YT.
I am finally getting back to doing some guitar work. I have a number of guitars that need to be completed but the humidity is too low in my place to work on them. This is a project I was not too concerned with as far as humidity making the wood decide to go one way or the other. I doubt I would ever hold myself as being a luthier, a guy who can build the odd guitar or two perhaps.

I just got a reply on an acoustic guitar site and a real luthier told me to just glue in a sliver of wood. I was concerned with the glue not holding because of the pitch in the pocket. We will see what he has to say about that. This is just something that I can use to practice with when my other guitars are too heavy for me to play. I have a neurotic pain issue that sometimes makes just wearing cloths painful. So this is to be a lightweight guitar for those times. Some projects I need to get back to.

 

tyler.durden

Well-Known Member
I am finally getting back to doing some guitar work. I have a number of guitars that need to be completed but the humidity is too low in my place to work on them. This is a project I was not too concerned with as far as humidity making the wood decide to go one way or the other. I doubt I would ever hold myself as being a luthier, a guy who can build the odd guitar or two perhaps.

I just got a reply on an acoustic guitar site and a real luthier told me to just glue in a sliver of wood. I was concerned with the glue not holding because of the pitch in the pocket. We will see what he has to say about that. This is just something that I can use to practice with when my other guitars are too heavy for me to play. I have a neurotic pain issue that sometimes makes just wearing cloths painful. So this is to be a lightweight guitar for those times. Some projects I need to get back to.

Wow, sure looks like a luthier workshop. I play classical guitar, do you play both classical and acoustic? Sorry to hear about the neuropathy. Do you ever practice nude to alleviate it? ;)
 

Chunky Stool

Well-Known Member

Sounds easier than I thought!!

I had a thought. One friend of mine has been saving his leftover dry vape material, saying "I know there is a use for this stuff". And I bet he has a pound or more of it, probably a few pounds...they are heavy all day long vapors!! It seems like you could make cannabutter from it, and it's already been decarbed in the vaporizer. There's definitely some THC left, often quite a bit, when dry vaping, so why not? Anyone done it??
It depends on how you vape.
I gradually increase temperature until it hits 420 so the spent herb is very dark.
6096956E-272B-4098-A10A-B8C0BA7EE61A.jpeg
 
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