Showing posts with label Cannabis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cannabis. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 05, 2024

Tokeland Cannabis

On the Shoalwater Indian Reservation at Tokeland, Washington, on WA Road 106, there is a gas station and convenience store, a Indian Museum and Library, cafe, Casino, and the Tokeland Cannabis store

A few miles south of WA 106  is the historic Tokeland Hotel. It was build in 1886. Inside is the Quill Restaurant.

The Tokeland Cannabis store is known for selling good pot/grass/cannabis/marihuana, and a large carved wood statue of a smoking pipe, a large Bong. It was carved by the local artist, Jeffro Uitto.




"It’s all about the big bong out front! Master wood carver and Tokeland resident, Jeffro Uitto (@jeffrouitto), made one of the most memorable welcome items you’ll ever see on display. His company, Knock on Wood, is world renowned and upon opening in this southern corner of the state, he set out to create one of his masterworks. And if that doesn’t blow you away, wander inside to see his Tree of Life panel carved from salvaged redwood taken from an old water tank. Check out his work online, but if you want to see it in person first, make a day of it and roll over to Tokeland Cannabis."





Saturday, May 06, 2023

Belushi's "Enough is Not Enough"

The Fireplace Records, Chapter 23


Belushi's "Enough is Not Enough"

More Drugs, More Sex, More Money, More Fame, More Euphoria!
Falling into false, evil, perverted, and selfish aims, goals, acts and choices! 
Vomit ... Face Yourself!  Don't Face Yourself ... Vomit!
Face Yourself and Don't Face Yourself ... Vomit!

A Student's Considerations:

Everyone's Big Problem: 
Knowing When to Stop!
Knowing When to Say No!  
Moderating and controlling one's greed, desires, wishes, and "needs" for More.
When to embrace moderation, restraint, conservation, simplicity?
Don't wear away your life too fast.
Learn about the Epicurean's view on pleasures and pains and peace of mind.
Limits, limits, limits ... do you understand "limits?"
Don't let others deceive, trick and mislead you.
Some bad habits will grab you by the neck and choke you to death.
If you have extra money, share it with others and good causes.
Your life is a model for others; don't let them down.
Please, Let Enough be Enough!
Stoics, Epicureans, and Buddhists all caution us about taking pleasures,
   attaching too much emphasis on pleasures, and preferring peace of 
   mind, wholesome human functioning, and tranquility.



By Hakuin Ekaku

 


Related Links, Resources, References


"Whiskey bottles, and brand new carsOak tree you're in my wayThere's too much coke and too much smokeLook what's going on inside you
Ooh that smellCan't you smell that smellOoh that smellThe smell of death surrounds you."
- Lynyrd Skynyrd

John Belushi (1949-1982)

Classic Koans: Nothing on drug misuse found yet.  






Refer to my Cloud Hands Blog Posts on the topic of Koans/Dialogues.

The Daodejing by Laozi    Best? 

Pulling Onions  Over 1,043 One-line Sayings by Mike Garofalo

Chinese Chan Buddhist and Taoist Stories and Koans

Taoism

Buddhism

Fireplaces, Stoves, Campfires, Kitchens, Pots, Firewood

Chinese Art

Tai Chi Chuan and Qigong

Meditation Methods

Zen Koan Books I Use

Koan Database Project

Brief Spiritual Lessons Database Project: Subject Indexes


Subject Index to 1,001 Zen Buddhist Koans

(This is an ongoing project for the Spring-Summer of 2023)


Sparks: Brief Spiritual Lessons and Stories

Matches to Start a Kindling of Insight
May the Light from Your Inner Fireplace Help All Beings
Taoist, Chan Buddhist, Zen Buddhist, Philosophers
Catching Phrases, Inspiring Verses, Koans, Meditations
Indexing, Bibliography, Quotations, Notes, Resources
Research by Michael P. Garofalo

The Fireplace Records
By Michael P. Garofalo








Subject Index to 1,001 Zen Buddhist Koans




Sunday, August 15, 2021

Palouse Region, Southeastern Washington



We spent some time last month in the rolling hills and wheat fields of the Palouse Region of Southeastern Washington. We drove from Walla Walla on State Road 12 through Dayton, Pomeroy, to Lewiston. Then, north, up a steep grade overlooking Lewiston, on State Road 195 to Pullman, then Colfax.

She prefers and likes being the pilot driver, I am a very content passenger and occasional navigator.  She safely pilots our 2018 Ford Escape, Titanium, on a 2.5 liter engine, at 30 mpg.  We quietly rolled across the Palouse in beautiful summer warm weather and clear skies.  Brown wheat fields in four directions.  No irrigation systems visible in most cases.  

Since I was not driving that fine day, I slowly smoked a gram of potent sativa cannabis during the many hours of quiet staring out the car window and occasional map reading.  Mind tripping potent pot for road tripping trips.  I am sure that cannabis is grown in the heavily irrigated Yakima Valley, and indoors anywhere in Washington where cannabis for recreational use has been legal since 2012, and 25% of every purchase of pot is taxed.  The Palouse appears to be primarily wheat and beans, and largely not irrigated.  A primary rule is "where is the water, and how much can you use." Therefore, you could grow marihuana in the Palouse with drip irrigation methods.  

We stopped at a rest stop in the Palouse.  Stretched our legs and bodies.  Used the vault pit toilet.  We enjoyed looking at the immense fields of wheat.  I held and closely studied some wheat plants.  









Wheat food products have kept me alive for 75 years.  



"The Palouse is the most serene and pastoral of the seven wonders of Washington State. It is a region in south eastern Washington characterized by gentle rolling hills covered with wheat fields. The hills were formed over tens of thousands of years from wind blown dust and silt, called "loess", from dry regions to the south west. Seen from the summit of 3,612 foot high Steptoe Butte, they look like giant sand dunes because they were formed in much the same way. In the spring they are lush shades of green when the wheat and barley are young, and in the summer they are dry shades of brown when the crops are ready for harvest. The Palouse hills are not only a landscape unique in the world, but they are beautiful to behold, making them my favorite of the seven wonders of Washington State."

Monday, November 02, 2020

Entheogenic Use of Cannabis

 

Here is an excerpt from a longer article titled "The Entheogenic Use of Cannabis," from Wikipedia, 2020.  The agricultural history of marihuana growing and its uses all around the world is succinctly covered in the article.    

"Cannabis has served as an entheogen—a chemical substance used as an entheogen—a chemical substance used in religious or spiritual contexts[1]—in the Indian subcontinent since the Vedic period dating back to approximately 1500 BCE, but perhaps as far back as 2000 BCE. Cannabis has been used by shamanic and pagan cultures to ponder deeply religious and philosophical subjects related to their tribe or society, to achieve a form of enlightenment, to unravel unknown facts and realms of the human mind and subconscious, and also as an aphrodisiac during rituals or orgies.[2] There are several references in Greek mythology to a powerful drug that eliminated anguish and sorrow. Herodotus wrote about early ceremonial practices by the Scythians, thought to have occurred from the 5th to 2nd century BCE. Itinerant Hindu saints have used it in the Indian subcontinent for centuries.[3] Over the last few decades hundreds of archaeological and anthropological items of evidence have come out of Mexican, Mayan and Aztec cultures that suggest cannabis, along with magic mushrooms (psilocybin), peyote (mescaline) and other psychoactive plants were used in cultural shamanic and religious rituals.[2] Mexican-Indian communities occasionally use cannabis in religious ceremonies by leaving bundles of it on church altars to be consumed by the attendees.[4]

Here was an October 2020 Facebook Post of mine:

I favor the Federal decriminalization of marihuana. In the State of Washington, since 2012, marihuana farms are prospering, tax revenues are growing from pot sales, investors in commodities are benefitting, law enforcement can focus on more important matters, people have more access to new CBD products, tourists are attracted to our state, and some folks can just enjoy a pleasant puff now and then purchased at a local pot shop. The Federal marihuana laws are unnecessary, costly, unjust, and out of date. I don’t smoke or drink now, but others can now purchase and use marihuana in Washington without being treated as a criminal. Many Democrats, Independents, and Libertarians support the Federal descheduling of cannabis.