Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
Plead, I like a coy.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
You're listening to Lifestyle Radio.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
The opinions expressed during this show are those of the
individual participants and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
their associated organizations or Lifestyle Radio.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Do you like music?
Speaker 3 (00:32):
You like? We?
Speaker 4 (00:33):
Well, we're gonna be good friends. This is much child like,
more than smoke in trees.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
Some make you dance with those. Z Dough and Tach.
Speaker 4 (00:42):
You have achieved smoke a bowl on the four twenty
radio show on Lifestyle Radio.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
You didn't mute it. You didn't take the mute off
quick enough. Some of us might have been singing.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
Dude, I was singing too. But you know you can
unmute your mic and then we will hear you. No,
it won't. Yes it lets me. You want to try
it again, Let's try it.
Speaker 3 (01:11):
Again, Try it again. Mute me.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
You're listening to Lifestyle Rate.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Sing.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
Let's sing, everybody, let's sing. Okay, enough of that.
Speaker 3 (01:39):
The idea I don't want to sing.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
I'm gonna I'm gonna run it through a transcriber and
print out the words so that we have them, and
then I can put them on the thing and we
can play bouncing ball.
Speaker 3 (01:52):
So you mean not after like what ten or twelve
years now, you don't know the words of the song.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
Young never gave me the words.
Speaker 3 (02:02):
He just here?
Speaker 2 (02:04):
So what how how that happened? Was I we needed
a theme song, I said, I said, just out loud
on Facebook and Twitter, I need a theme song from
four twenty radio show. And all of a sudden, Jim said,
here you go. And then he's also done another one
(02:25):
called uh it's for twenty two and I missed it.
Speaker 3 (02:30):
Oh yeah, so I've got that. We heard you?
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Did we?
Speaker 3 (02:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (02:37):
I didn't hear.
Speaker 3 (02:39):
Yeah I did.
Speaker 2 (02:41):
No, I didn't. So you got you got snow?
Speaker 5 (02:46):
Me?
Speaker 3 (02:46):
Yeah? Yeah, we we always got snow. Anyways, listening, Welcome
to the four twenty Radio Show. Sorry for ignoring you.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
We're not ignoring anybody. The car still frozen? Is it?
Speaker 3 (02:58):
Really?
Speaker 2 (02:59):
Yeah? I got to deal with it. We're going to
try and start it tomorrow and do a dump run.
Hey buddy, it's puffity puffy. Okay, I'm gonna let you
do that. But so that there's none of this shit
going on, okay.
Speaker 3 (03:14):
Sure, but sometimes that people like that.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
So my question to anybody who's watching, did you watch
the concert? I know that that Marcel did not and
he said, what concert, what's it for? Blah blah blah
blah blah. It's for the fire that happened in Los Angeles.
In all the boroughs of off Los Angeles, California, there
was a lot of I called it a geriatric concert.
(03:49):
Rod Stewart, Steven Steeles, Graham Nash, Joan Jet, the Black
Peppers or the Black Peppers, the Black Crowth. I mixed
bands together. There, that's it. Yeah, anyways, it was I
enjoyed it. Stevie Nicks, it was awesome, but I'm sorry
(04:13):
to say that Lady God got ruined it for me.
Speaker 3 (04:16):
Why what Lady Gaga Doll?
Speaker 2 (04:19):
She was the closing act. But it really really started
to go bad with Sting and Stevie Wonder. Oh really yeah,
But you can watch it and while you're watching it,
make a donation. It goes. Every dollar goes to the
people who need it short term and to help rebuild
(04:41):
the communities long term. Sixty million last time I looked,
as well as Stephen Bomber, the owner of the La Clippers,
is matching dollar for dollar. I think that's who it is.
Speaker 1 (04:57):
Can you hear me?
Speaker 3 (04:57):
Now? We can hear you just like out before. I
heard you before.
Speaker 1 (05:04):
Shut the front door.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
No, I don't want you here.
Speaker 3 (05:08):
I heard you when Al was talking.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
Yeah, you know what the problem was though? That was
the wrong mic How was the webcam mike? And I'm like,
mother of all that is good and holy, just help me.
Speaker 3 (05:25):
To this microphone. This microphone made your camera go off.
Speaker 1 (05:30):
No, I just didn't want you to see me doing this.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
You could see she was getting frustrated.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
No, because I kept doing this because I had to
see my tech and then I had to look up
here and just looked like I look like a gopher.
It is funnier, but now I didn't get tea my dinner.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
You know what be really funny either if Timmy had
strings above you and he was going like this, what's
for dinner? Any of you say McDonald's, I'm gonna boot
you out of here.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
I don't need it, thank you.
Speaker 1 (06:02):
Nothing chicken parm and pasta.
Speaker 2 (06:05):
Yo, okay, mister KFC.
Speaker 3 (06:07):
No nothing, I don't have anything.
Speaker 2 (06:10):
I don't have anything either. Although I went shopping today
seventy six dollars worth of groceries for the week for
one person.
Speaker 3 (06:20):
It fall fit in one bag.
Speaker 2 (06:23):
And it did all of it. I used to go
shopping for twenty dollars a week. When I moved back
down to the city, it cost me twenty dollars to
get from Toronto to the farm, which was an hour
and a half drive. Okay, it cost me forty dollars
to go forty five minutes down to Marathon and back.
(06:44):
It costs eighty dollars for a tank of gas to
go up to thunder Day at thunder Bay and back.
It's fucking brutal, it is.
Speaker 3 (06:56):
What's your gas price up there?
Speaker 2 (06:58):
The last time I looked, it was one fifty nine
six or something like that.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
Still doing fucking better than.
Speaker 2 (07:04):
We are, you know what I'm hearing that?
Speaker 3 (07:07):
Yeah, just ours just went down today to one sixty four.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
Uh. You can go over to the res and it's
probably one thirty something something.
Speaker 3 (07:17):
We can go to the res and it's one sixty four.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
Yeah, sometimes we get res prices here. I guess it
depends on who drops off gas, you know, first.
Speaker 3 (07:27):
But if I go to Costco, it's one fifty four.
Speaker 2 (07:32):
It's nuts about it. It's still pricey, you know. I mean,
I thank god that we're not in the US paying
gallon prices because well, I mean, although the gallon is
less than.
Speaker 3 (07:42):
You're talking about, I think i'd rather.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
A leader is almost twice as much as.
Speaker 3 (07:48):
A gallon, isn't it. No, three point seventy four leaders
to a gallon to a US gallon.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
Don't you pay per use though? Like you only pay
for what use for. It's not like you have to
buy able gallan or a whole leader.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
Well here, I have to make sure I always make
sure that I have twenty dollars.
Speaker 3 (08:06):
Worth it, right, No, when you're putting gush in your vehicle, right?
But yeah, a leader is three point seventy four leaders
per one gallon.
Speaker 2 (08:20):
Yeah, I don't know those numbers. Okay, I'm sharing.
Speaker 3 (08:27):
Because I'm caring, caring about sharing.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
I'm caring. Not Karen. I dated Karen once.
Speaker 3 (08:36):
Yeah I did. I went out on a date with
a Karen once, and once I saw it was a Karen,
that the date was over.
Speaker 2 (08:52):
She wasn't a Karen. A drama queen, yes, but not
a Karen. But her name was Karen.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
Uh yes, yep, yeah, okay, I never went out with
a Karen, not one named Karen.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
Yeah, her name was Karen anyways.
Speaker 3 (09:15):
Yeah, Mary welcome to the show.
Speaker 2 (09:19):
Mary Jane's having my.
Speaker 3 (09:20):
We'ed smoking shirt. Okay, oh, you're going to smoke some weed.
I didn't know that you needed a special shirt. Fuck,
I've been doing this wrong for the last forty some years.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
Well, every shirt is my weed smoking shirt. But this
is just to announce to people like I'm smoking weed.
Get away whatever?
Speaker 3 (09:40):
Are you a true weed smoker? Do you have shirts
with the inevitable pole?
Speaker 2 (09:49):
I have no shirts with there that are not holy none.
Every single thing that I own has whole.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
Lot huh onesies. Yeah, yeah, but there's still the inevitable
pinhole burns. I had a nice satin shirt that man,
that thing used to light up so quick.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
You want to talk about I got a burn story
my mom, Sorry Mom, God love you. My mom had
some issues with prescription drugs and tackled you guys know
this story. She decided to fight with a bus in
(10:34):
her brand new white G five Pontiac and she lost
and bent the frame. They took her license away. I said, red, please.
There was twenty five kilometers on it when I picked
(10:56):
it up from the parking lot on the way home
from Toronto. Moving my mom up to my place, my
deaf buddy put a hole in the back seat smoking
a joint. Not twenty five fucking kilometers, not fifteen minutes
out of the fucking city.
Speaker 3 (11:19):
I took a car for a test by one time
Sheelership took him for a test drive without smoking a hashoid.
Little pie's hash fell on the seat burn alua, hole
in the seat. Took car back. What do you think
of it? I think it's an awesome car, but I
need it in a different color, so I got one
(11:40):
without the pinhole burn.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
Well he he he went. He got out of the car,
and I looked down at him. I looked down at
the seat, and I looked at him, and I mentioned
he's deaf. And all I got was.
Speaker 3 (11:54):
Whaw good evening d from Nova Scotia.
Speaker 6 (12:03):
She oh, we all snowed in too, So what's everybody smoking?
Speaker 2 (12:15):
What are you smoking? Marself?
Speaker 3 (12:17):
I am smoking my normal oil.
Speaker 2 (12:21):
I really wish you'd turn your camera.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
On, buddy, Yeah, but that won't happen.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
Well, we'll talk about that.
Speaker 3 (12:27):
Well, no, it's I don't have a location that is suitable.
We'll leave it as.
Speaker 2 (12:32):
A turn your desk.
Speaker 3 (12:34):
There's a word, a turn fucking surrounded.
Speaker 2 (12:38):
I'm sitting in a closet.
Speaker 3 (12:39):
Dude, Come on, I am surrounded, dude. No, I'm smoking
oil temple ball and drinking a double ice creamed red
Eye ice cap.
Speaker 2 (12:51):
I would like to try some temple ball. I've never
tried it. I picked up a bag. You'll find this interesting,
Mary Jane. I don't know if you've ever heard of
these guys. These guys are the big bag of buds.
And what it is is you get a half ounce
of a Sativa and a half ounce of an Indica
(13:13):
and it was one hundred and twenty dollars Canadian. And
I'm I'm not crazy about them individually, but I really
like the mixed okay. So the the red one, which
is ic C Okay, it's a cross of wedding cake
(13:37):
and Gelato number thirty three and it's I'm not even
going to get into the milligrams because you know they're bullshit.
And the other one is Ultrasur which is ultra sour
and lemon Murgie Marky number one sixty six. And I'm
(14:01):
I'm liking them when they're together, right, do.
Speaker 3 (14:05):
You smoking Granddaddy Purple and buddies doing the dry sift.
Speaker 2 (14:09):
And I'm all and I also got some some vortex
uh old fashioned, oh gosh, which I'm going to roll.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
I'm still smoking my super Lemon haze.
Speaker 2 (14:26):
I like that.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
And then I've got I picked this up from the
store the other day called Machiato gold some days.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
And how many are in diamond?
Speaker 1 (14:38):
There's three diamond and fused pre rolls in here. And
how much m twenty dollars?
Speaker 3 (14:45):
That's not bad?
Speaker 2 (14:49):
And then are they point fives or are they ones? Yeah,
that's what you see. That's where I have an issue
thirty five dollars for for a gram and a half.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
It's twenty twenty two dollars.
Speaker 2 (15:04):
Oh you said twenty two. I thought I said thirty two.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
No, no, twenty two.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
Swayne got these. It was multiplying gummies gummies. I tried some.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
Oiler grummies in a bag.
Speaker 2 (15:19):
Yeah. I had some some cola gummies that were not
distolate that I got from the Uh from that pleans.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
Well, these are the full spectrum tricombe.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
Yeah, I believe that.
Speaker 2 (15:36):
Excuse me?
Speaker 1 (15:36):
Yeah, yeah, I just bought one the other day that
was a live resin from them.
Speaker 3 (15:45):
So if it's a full spectrum, then it should tell
you how much what the percentage of terpenes is right,
minded new glasses on.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
The edibles. It did. Yeah, I don't have anymore. I
already I ate it. That was a few days ago. Huh, yes, buddy,
rest in peace, Sam, Yeah, Marcelf. Do you know who
to whom he's speaking about?
Speaker 3 (16:11):
Sam the skunk Man?
Speaker 2 (16:13):
Yeah? Can we can?
Speaker 3 (16:14):
We was? Sam was the creator of the skunk stream.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
The Okay, I have some I have lemon skunk seeds.
I think that's what it is. Can you pull something
up maybe that we can play, uh, to tell people
what to play?
Speaker 3 (16:37):
Yeah, like a little little video or something I can
look and see, because.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
You know what I've I've never heard of this gentleman,
but I have, like I've heard the name, but I
didn't know who he was, just like the hash queen
what's her name? I can't remember her name. She was
hanging out smooching with me, Meila. Yeah, she was hanging
out smoothing smooching there with with Sherry Anne. Right.
Speaker 3 (17:07):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
The only reason I said that she had it on camera. Ah,
we should invite her on the show, Mila.
Speaker 3 (17:22):
Yeah, okay, there's a there's a video.
Speaker 2 (17:25):
And and Cherry Anne as well. I mean she she
can come anything. I keep her for special moments. I
have my my Sherry Anne and my Mary Mary Anne.
Speaker 3 (17:40):
There's no real videos?
Speaker 2 (17:43):
Is there? Not a like a about or a profile
or an interview, even like a short interview.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
Oh yeah, there's there's all kinds of those.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
So find a minute, maybe a two minute interview that
will pay play in the center of the show.
Speaker 3 (18:00):
Mm, good luck.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
Well, what's what's the links.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
An hour?
Speaker 2 (18:10):
Oh? Well, how about we'll put a link into our
chat here and people can check it out. So give
me that, Give me that link and and put it
into the into the comments, and then people can check
it out on their own. We don't have to load
the video and get in trouble with Facebook. I'm being proactive.
Speaker 3 (18:33):
You see, I have I have a video of him. Well,
it's not of him, it's his voice, okay, because and
it's the origin story of how he bred skunk number one?
And how long is it a minute?
Speaker 2 (18:48):
Bring it in and post it in the comments too.
But and I'm going to roll another another Scooby doobie.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
Okay, as long we shouldn't get caught.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
I'm getting sick of this. Every time I go to
roll a joint, and I want to put some hash
in it. I roll out my snake and then I
roll my junk and I smoke it without the hash.
I riped the goddamn thing apart to put the hash
in because I forgot. Oh. Look, she has a pretty
(19:25):
little microphone stand. Can you bring that with you to
can Xpo?
Speaker 3 (19:28):
Please?
Speaker 2 (19:29):
Thank you can.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
Bring where's my list?
Speaker 2 (19:34):
Are you going to bring your sound system to can Xpo? No?
Speaker 1 (19:38):
Why because they have their own sound system? Silly?
Speaker 2 (19:50):
All right, Sativa, indica, Sativa.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
It's early, all right, And the.
Speaker 2 (20:01):
Hell of a time opening this bag, Marcel, is this
the video?
Speaker 1 (20:06):
I will tell you. I'll open it like a bag
of chips.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
You know what. I just discovered that if you pull
this fucking tab and go like this, it opens right up.
Speaker 1 (20:15):
Yeah. But if you take any of these bags twenty minutes.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
I tried to open this earlier.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
But watch any of these bags, take it underneath and
just pull open, and you can pop open. Look, it
just pops it right open.
Speaker 2 (20:30):
And I bet you that was a day's worth of
training to get your can cell.
Speaker 1 (20:35):
No, they actually didn't tell us that at all.
Speaker 2 (20:37):
No, but yeah, cant can sell? Is that what it's
called cancel.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
Cancel, you can sell.
Speaker 2 (20:46):
I just noticed that my speaker's about to fall off
my monitor. I have my speaker. I have a bar
speaker nestled above two monitors. All right, let's watch this,
find out who the skunk man is, and then we'll
be back in one minute. Yeah, dude, now that we've
(21:07):
heard the static tech origin story, what about how I
bred skunk number one origin story? Well, it's.
Speaker 7 (21:17):
I think it's been in print many times. But I
basically had an Afghan which I hit Times of Colombian
and I was doing this with many Afghan Times Satiba hyebreds.
What I was trying to do is, at the time,
say my company's sacred seeds, which we were selling seeds.
(21:40):
I really wanted to sell seeds which were open pollinated.
So I didn't want to sell people varieties where they
would have to come back to me and get seeds
every year. I wanted seeds which would they could just
make the seeds themselves with the seeds I sold them.
(22:02):
I was thinking I was selling them the individuals, and.
Speaker 3 (22:07):
I did, there's your manus, thank you?
Speaker 2 (22:15):
Yeah, well okay, so now, yeah, yeah, we lost him
this week. Dave Watson. Yeah, yeah, let's put that up there. Yeah,
you know, we've lost a lot of a lot of
uh when when we lost Franco, that was my first
(22:42):
loss in the community when Franco died. And he died,
and Franco was the urban urban what did they call
Franco strain hunter? Strain hunter, thank you? And he used
(23:03):
to go off into the desert and into the into
the woods and into the uh into the four what
do you call it, the jungles of the world looking
for different strains and and stuff like that, and he
got very sick with I don't want to say because
(23:23):
I'm not sure, but he got.
Speaker 1 (23:25):
Very certain anything and used to travel all over did
he We we had greenhouse seeds, right.
Speaker 2 (23:32):
Yeah, we We've had them on the show many times
leading up to that.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
And my first real loss was Mark Emery. I was
sad over that one. He's still alive, right, not to me.
Speaker 2 (23:52):
You played into that very well, very Jane.
Speaker 1 (23:56):
Yeah, I'll never forget that day. That was a sad,
real lifeization.
Speaker 3 (24:02):
I have. Ah. I think I've done up a dozen
or so memorial placs for different activists that we've lost
from Nova Scotia over the years. Because we display them
(24:22):
at Harvestfest.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
We've lost a lot of actually.
Speaker 3 (24:25):
We've displayed them in any of the MUM events, but we've.
Speaker 2 (24:27):
We've lost a lot of people in them the worldwide community.
But you know, there's still a lot of people. Rick
Simpson's still alive, although I don't think you're doing very well.
I see him post every now and then.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
I saw something the other day.
Speaker 2 (24:46):
That said stay tuned, but that's usually what I see
at the end of his post. So, and.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
I feel like the cannabis space is one of the
most difficult spaces I've ever worked in, because, well.
Speaker 2 (25:01):
You're dealing with a lot of egos and personalities.
Speaker 1 (25:04):
Well, no, I feel like you're dealing with a lot
of sick people. If if medically they're either you know,
like we're either using it for medicine for our like
body health or our brain health. And if that's the case,
we're either dealing with some people that are not all
the time.
Speaker 2 (25:23):
No what, I'm glad we brought that up, because you know,
I spent a week in bed because I had no
meds and I was sick as well, but I had
no meds, and and so it's hard. It's not just hard.
What people don't realize is I don't take prescription drugs
unless it's diabetes related, and I don't use any other
(25:47):
pain medication other than cannabis. I don't use. I've given
up my I've given I've given. Yes, it's not I've
given up my antidepressants and my ADHD medicines and I
and I choose to use uh psilocybin instead for that stuff.
And but people don't realize. So when I have no medicine,
(26:11):
I'm not just a junkie sitting in a corner. I'm
a sick guy in bed because I can't walk, my
feet swell up, my head hurts, my body hurts, my
you know. And it's so anybody who is chosen to
use cannabis as a medicine, you know, Oh, he's just
(26:34):
old and sick, you know.
Speaker 1 (26:37):
No, You're like, I am getting older, and yeah, I'm
dealing with sickness and cannabis helps me correct. Yeah. My
My thing is that if we're using.
Speaker 2 (26:48):
And when you don't have it, what happens? I die, exactly, Marcel.
Speaker 1 (26:54):
I always look at it like this. If you use
it for your physical health, like your body, then chances
are we're going to lose a lot of advocates and
you know, people along the way because we're sick. You know,
we lost Tracy Curly and she had diabetes, do you
know what I mean? Like, there's so many names, so
(27:14):
many names we could drop.
Speaker 2 (27:16):
But yeah, Sandra Petite as well.
Speaker 1 (27:20):
Well, somebody like myself, I use it for mental as
well as physical. Yes, so it's kind of both, but
you're dealing with like now you're dealing with me, who's
got a little bit of not able to handle everything
the way other people can handle, right.
Speaker 3 (27:39):
But you also got to realize that anybody that's using
it for physical is using it for mental as well,
because pain is mentally demanding, right, So anybody with chronic
pain has a mental issue because you're fucking.
Speaker 1 (28:03):
Right, mentally stressed.
Speaker 3 (28:05):
Most likely mentally stressed. Uh you you mentally start adapting
to cope with it, all right, So by that adapting,
I mean sick people to the greatest actors in the world.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
I can't pretend like nothing's.
Speaker 3 (28:24):
Wrong exactly, And guys tend to do a better job
than women do. But no, that's also way. They don't
go to the doctors, and.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
He doesn't come from nowhere.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
Were you going to post this thing that you got here?
Speaker 3 (28:41):
But oh, it's just an example of the plaques that
we do for our members here.
Speaker 2 (28:46):
Oh I remember Corey?
Speaker 3 (28:50):
Yeah, so we lost Corey last year.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
Yes, I met him when I was there and and
and he's been on the show, I think one once.
Speaker 3 (29:05):
So we do it? Do you read it? Or are
you reading it? I want to take it off if
you're reading it.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
No, I'm not. No, I'm I'm loading something for our break.
I just I want to run something. We're gonna start
doing breaks every half an hour again, so I may
need a reminder and.
Speaker 3 (29:26):
Nowlement well it's half an hour now, I know.
Speaker 2 (29:29):
That's why I'm loading stuff. Hello, Wed, let's let's let's
do that. We're gonna run a couple of things here
and then we'll be back.
Speaker 8 (29:40):
Are you looking for NonStop, continuous cannabis and psychedelic programming.
If you are, then turn your browsers to four twenty
radio dot ca A or paceradio dot net, where you
will find the four to twenty page re rolled Saturday
Everything get started at a and eastern Saturday morning.
Speaker 9 (30:21):
This, guys, is a beech bottle with a little straw
in the end of it. Okay, back in the day,
we used to have glass bottles, soda ball okay, soft drinks.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
And this was built for the old school hash.
Speaker 10 (30:39):
This is the hash that your uncle's and your grandparents
would get. And this is the stuff that we would
all treasure whenever we could get it because we thought
it was the best stuff, because.
Speaker 2 (30:49):
It's the constant. It was our form concentrations. Yes, to
answer your question, now, oh, here we go. All right,
now you're gonna cut this out if it doesn't work.
(31:10):
Just now.
Speaker 11 (31:16):
These are the four or three tools I use.
Speaker 2 (31:22):
To form a ship that happen. So now once the
prep work has gone over on the lake and now
(31:42):
has to come over to me to put the mouse
design and finish off the top. So first up, I
just need to clean up and close off.
Speaker 3 (31:51):
The top and select over.
Speaker 8 (31:55):
M h. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (32:05):
The first thing I'll do is i will cheat up.
Speaker 9 (32:08):
The corner and I'll push in the maria, which is
the circular lovey.
Speaker 2 (32:15):
That's a stopper.
Speaker 10 (32:17):
Right Whereas I'm kind of like I'm forty nine years old.
Speaker 2 (32:20):
I don't have time to be an artist, you know
what I mean? Each one is individual though, there's only
one of each, so it does make it art.
Speaker 11 (32:32):
I'll stop it, yeah, okay, Hello, Hello, Hello, Hi, how
are you?
Speaker 2 (32:48):
I didn't mean to run that when I was going
to do that a little later, but it ran on itself.
Speaker 3 (32:53):
That was still cute.
Speaker 2 (32:55):
I didn't you know what. I have a do drop,
as you've seen. I've had it on here already and
it's in the other room, or i'd show it to you.
And the only difference really is is it's got water.
Mary Jane has a happle.
Speaker 1 (33:07):
I have the happly. Yeah, I'm jelly. I want the
dew drop you.
Speaker 2 (33:11):
Okay, you can want to switch my stem waiting for
Dave's Dave is it stands by his stems and if
you if you break one, you'll send you another one.
I'm waiting for one.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
I did like the laugh in the background when he said,
you're gonna cut this out if it doesn't work right.
Speaker 2 (33:31):
Anyways, what are you? Did you leave?
Speaker 1 (33:37):
I'm in I'm in the kitchen making a tea.
Speaker 2 (33:39):
You're making munchies.
Speaker 1 (33:41):
I'm making a tea.
Speaker 2 (33:43):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (33:44):
The commercial wasn't long enough, so you're going to play
a different one, a longer one three two?
Speaker 2 (33:53):
Why it's good.
Speaker 3 (34:10):
Dale with his it's good.
Speaker 7 (34:12):
Yeah, right, I was.
Speaker 1 (34:14):
Like Dale trying to lie to me the hell telling
me it's good freaking Dale.
Speaker 3 (34:23):
Yeah, Dale's here, is he?
Speaker 1 (34:27):
He must have heard me said us talking about him?
Speaker 3 (34:30):
Yep, I mean hi Dad. Yeah, she doesn't mean to
call you a liar, Dale?
Speaker 1 (34:36):
No I did.
Speaker 3 (34:37):
Yeah, okay, Now.
Speaker 1 (34:40):
That's personal preference. I'm sure he wasn't lying. He just
likes it.
Speaker 2 (34:46):
All right.
Speaker 3 (34:46):
I was looking for something and now you went and
gotten all flustered again derailed. Yeah, thank you for that.
Speaker 1 (34:55):
If I didn't even have my camera on, you wouldn't
have even known that I left.
Speaker 3 (35:00):
Well that's true. Well, yeah, that's.
Speaker 1 (35:02):
True because I can still hear and speak at the
same time.
Speaker 3 (35:12):
Where I'll go, I'm right here, I'm he's frozen.
Speaker 2 (35:17):
I am, I am right here. I'm just.
Speaker 3 (35:21):
Ah.
Speaker 2 (35:23):
I think I may have overdone it on the hash
a little bit.
Speaker 1 (35:32):
Do we have anything to talk about tonight?
Speaker 2 (35:34):
Today? We're just hanging out? What? What? What is Buddy saying?
Speaker 3 (35:40):
No?
Speaker 2 (35:40):
I you know what.
Speaker 1 (35:49):
Songs he played in some of your old episodes.
Speaker 2 (35:52):
Oh, thanks, buddy, And you know I can't every time
I even try and play those as a replay, I
get zinged and get blocked and shitit now because of
the music. I miss playing music. I used to run
the station for twenty Radio, used to run twenty four
to seven. It was an actual radio station. And then
everybody started shutting me off because I was playing music.
(36:16):
So then I tried to pay royalties, and still everybody
kept shutting me off. So I stopped paying royalties and
stop playing music. Unfortunately not allowed to the only thing
I can play is Facebook approved music, although that's changing.
Speaker 3 (36:39):
You can't you say it again?
Speaker 2 (36:42):
I can. Only the only time that we won't get
zinged now is if it's Facebook approved. They have a
sound area of Facebook where you can go and get
copyright approved by Facebook music that you can news in
any broadcasts including YouTube, including well you.
Speaker 3 (37:05):
See this is there on.
Speaker 2 (37:10):
When when you like. I was going to mix cloud
and paying royalties at mixcloud. But I'm only paying royalties
to be able to be viewed and listen to on
mixed cloud, right, so my stream goes anywhere else. I'm
not paying those royalties. It seems like a fucking scam
(37:33):
for me. Okay, guys, And because I'm playing I supposedly
paying royalties for any music I want to play, and
then I play it, and I and Facebook fucking threatens me,
and and YouTube threatens me, and you know, it's it's
not worth it anymore. So the long and the short
is I miss playing music. I listen to music all
(37:56):
the time. You probably enjoy my playlists. A lot of
people used to Yeah, I'm a dead g DJ.
Speaker 3 (38:08):
Yeah, me too.
Speaker 2 (38:09):
Been thrown out there.
Speaker 3 (38:13):
That was probably two thousands one to two thousand and three.
Speaker 2 (38:23):
It's not it's not the Internet. It's not the same.
When I started doing this, I was started playing with
SHOUTcast radio.
Speaker 3 (38:30):
Which started with real player.
Speaker 2 (38:33):
Well, let me finish. I started playing with what with
shoutcasts and started broadcasting through win amp, so if you
had win amp you could hear the broadcast. And then
I started broadcasting on all the different players replayer uh,
media player uh. And back then you had to have
(38:55):
a separate server for each one, and you ran yourself
because there was no there was no firewalls or anything
back then. So unfortunately, just like my website back in
the nineties, the introduction of NAT and firewalls stopped a
lot of play on the Internet. Yeah, yeah, that was
(39:23):
that was im I've been doing this a long time.
Speaker 1 (39:26):
As you know, well, I identify as a caj.
Speaker 2 (39:31):
A kid.
Speaker 1 (39:34):
No care to try again? No, no, I think Marcell
might get it. What's again, it's a caj.
Speaker 3 (39:49):
Should be he's gonna, he's gonna the JJ.
Speaker 2 (39:55):
I heard that of ourself.
Speaker 3 (39:59):
That's where I was. I have picked up on.
Speaker 2 (40:01):
Things like that, like when a cat jumps on some
on a female's lap, I'm gonna say, hey, she's playing
with her pussy. It's just who I am. If you
don't like it, yeah, ty waffle.
Speaker 1 (40:15):
That's it.
Speaker 3 (40:16):
It's not.
Speaker 1 (40:21):
So kJ is karaoke jockey.
Speaker 2 (40:24):
H Hey, you know I mean.
Speaker 1 (40:31):
Yeah, although I have had.
Speaker 2 (40:33):
To DJ, I you know what I have, uh, I
have been brain brain surfing and remembering a lot of things.
The mushrooms have helped my memory come back from keep
being a kids. I used to play the music at
(40:54):
camp in school. I used to record word all the
video shows on Much Music and have my own I
had my own music video library. And then you know,
and then we went digital and I started burning my
own playlists and then I, oh, you know, it seems
(41:18):
so I used to as a kid. I went to
Camp wabikon and on Lake Tamogami, and I uh did
all the lighting and the sound and photography for all
the the theater shows that we put on in the
barn right, and I did the spotlight. So yeah, I've
(41:40):
been doing it since I was ten. I used to.
I used to watch the bell guy come and play
with the phone, and then when he left, I'd take
the phone apart and hook it into the stereo so
that I could hear it over the stereo. And then
my mom would get a call from the office because
it stopped working, and she just told that if if
(42:01):
it continued, she was going to start getting built for it.
Did you do things like that, Marcel? Uh?
Speaker 3 (42:10):
Sorry, I was.
Speaker 1 (42:11):
Revlle was doing it like ten when he was young,
because I was. I was living and performing the same
thing every other guy was.
Speaker 3 (42:21):
Uh probably not. At ten, I was, I was going
walking back in the woods miles behind my hose fishing.
Speaker 2 (42:30):
We you know, did you went? You're the scene grew up.
Speaker 3 (42:34):
I grew up living in the in the woods, so.
Speaker 1 (42:37):
Yeah, I grew up there, and you still probably spend
a lot of time outside.
Speaker 2 (42:41):
We spent all the time walking out school. There was
no buses. We walked to school in a snowhead.
Speaker 1 (42:48):
Worn uphill both ways.
Speaker 2 (42:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (42:52):
No, but I can never remember ever having a snow day.
Speaker 2 (42:57):
No, we went to school week we could play with
the teachers weren't there. We got to fucking play outside.
Speaker 1 (43:03):
Yeah, it started with us. I remember, like we it
was the buses were canceled. They called them snow days,
but most of the kids still went in it.
Speaker 3 (43:13):
Yeah, because most of us want.
Speaker 1 (43:16):
Well that was it, but now it's kind of like
if you don't take the bus and you like, if
you walk normally, they still it's okay, you don't have
to come in.
Speaker 3 (43:26):
Well, we lived, we lived in but fuck nowhere growing
up and moved to the city. The school I could
almost see it from our our apartment building, and that
was elementary school. And then when I went to junior high,
(43:47):
I had to take a bus. The problem was it
wasn't a school bus. You had to take the city bus.
Take it. I got locked get a transfer us to
take it all the way back. So to be the
school at eight o'clock, you have to get on the
bus at like seven.
Speaker 1 (44:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (44:06):
Well I could leave my host at seven thirty and
walk there and be there before eight. So you might
as well as walk exactly. The only problem was it
was uphill and it was a steep, freaking hill. Then
you had to cross a highway. Oh but we did
it and didn't matter the weather, and then we'd do
(44:28):
it on the way home. But on the way home,
you know it's always going to stop and have a
couple of puffs along the way.
Speaker 1 (44:34):
Well, I feel like it should tell you something about
the school system when when they can call so many
snow days and they already have two weeks for Christmas holidays,
You've already got a week for March break and yeah,
but like, how much filler time do they actually have
in schools?
Speaker 3 (44:56):
Well, considering they're not teaching them how to read, write,
or do math, there's a lot of free time to
talk about what sex they want to grow up to be. Yeah, right, Well,
because that's what it boils down to. There's a lot
of these videos coming up that are really pissing me off,
(45:16):
and they're like small math equations and then they give answers,
but they don't give the right answer, right, So you
pick one of the answers of which answer it is,
but it's not the one that's actually correct. They don't
put the correct answer there because they don't know what
it is, because they don't know how to do basic math.
Speaker 1 (45:39):
Yeah. I will tell you that. My daughter is sixteen,
and when she was in grade one, she came home
with a spelling test and the words on it were whip, lip, mip,
sip and chip. Yeah, whip spelled w ip no such word?
Speaker 3 (46:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (46:08):
And I brought this to the teacher's attention and I said,
why is this not spelled correctly? And what is nip
and jip?
Speaker 3 (46:16):
Why?
Speaker 1 (46:16):
Why? Like she said, we're practicing on the ip sound.
We're not worried about the beginning. I said, well, that's
not the correct way to teach kids how to read,
and she said, or how to spell. She said, yeah,
but we're teaching them to read. I said, it's a
friggin' spelling test.
Speaker 3 (46:35):
Not teaching them to read either. Obviously, if you can't
spell the words right.
Speaker 1 (46:41):
Well yeah, I can't. I can't even remember.
Speaker 3 (46:46):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (46:48):
My son, who's twenty, said to me the other day
because he had to fill it a physical form when
you had him, thank you, so he says, So he says,
how do I do the at sign?
Speaker 3 (47:03):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (47:03):
My god, I said, what do you mean, he said,
like for my email and all that They've never they've
never had to write. They've they've been typing and texting
for so many years that writing is literally becoming like
(47:28):
the back burner. I'm like, I knew they got rid
of cursive, but that at symbol I told him, told him,
I said, do an A and then just draw a
circle around it.
Speaker 3 (47:40):
What was it the other day? Something? There was something
that was written note and it was all incursive and
everybody was everybody was freaking out because nobody could read it.
And as soon as they glanced that, I read the
whole thing.
Speaker 1 (48:00):
And do you know the scary thing about that? There's
a theory that said the reason why they stopped teaching
cursive in the first place was because the Constitution is
written written in handwriting.
Speaker 3 (48:14):
Well, yeah, I don't want they don't want people to
know what the Constitution actually says.
Speaker 2 (48:19):
I don't even know how to sign their name.
Speaker 1 (48:22):
But that's what we're saying. That they never talked to them.
And another I was like, in another thing, since.
Speaker 3 (48:28):
We're on the topic of this, agree with this.
Speaker 1 (48:34):
You're doomed. So a problem that stems from I don't
know if anybody else has dealt with this, but I
know I've talked with my friends about this, and I'm like,
I don't understand because her, my one friend's son had
a fever and he bundled himself right up and was shivering,
and he's like, I'm going to go have a hot shower,
and she's like, what are you doing? Like I've told
(48:54):
you before that that's not what you do. You do this,
And it seems like no matter how many times we
tell these kids, I say, kids under twenty, it's like
it doesn't sink in. It just sort of stays like
surface level. And they're saying it's because of the technology
in the last twenty years has been very fast paced.
(49:14):
It's been a lot of like the TikTok mentality where
it's like give me something new in the next thirty seconds,
where it doesn't actually sink in. They're not left quiet
long enough that their brains don't work the way ours do.
Speaker 3 (49:31):
Right.
Speaker 1 (49:33):
I'd like to hope we're not doomed, but I feel
like every twenty years there's like a massive shift. And
I think like, if you guys look at your age
and then go down twenty years from there, you're like
holy crap. Yeah, sat, and then go another twenty What
are you say? Well, I'm just saying, like I know
you're saying. I know what I went to school. When
(49:56):
I went to school, the biggest thing that the grown
ups were complaining about is that we didn't know how
to research. We didn't know how to actually figure out
the problem. We didn't have a problem solve.
Speaker 2 (50:08):
I spent half my day in the library looking at
those little cards. I like the filing system.
Speaker 1 (50:15):
That doesn't exist. You go into my wolder public school
library just has computers.
Speaker 2 (50:21):
When I was in public school, the large Metropolitan Toronto
Library on Young Street was built, and that's where we
went and had lunch and we would listen to albums
and because they had all the latest technology and computers
that you can just go in and use. Now that's
a reference library. It's the largest library in TRONTMA.
Speaker 1 (50:42):
And so when was the last time you were in
a library? Though?
Speaker 2 (50:46):
Here, Yeah I went because the continuing education stuff is there.
Speaker 1 (50:53):
Okay, but you didn't get a book or did you
get a book?
Speaker 2 (50:58):
No, I was signing up for a course. Yeah that
one to be political, I can see.
Speaker 3 (51:04):
I feel like it's not. It's not political.
Speaker 2 (51:08):
What we're going to say.
Speaker 3 (51:09):
Mary, we were talking about you were talking about the
school system and everything, and it reminded me that I
saw this.
Speaker 2 (51:18):
Hang on an angry orange man.
Speaker 1 (51:22):
No, it actually doesn't look that dark right now.
Speaker 2 (51:25):
It looks like he.
Speaker 1 (51:25):
Could use it.
Speaker 3 (51:26):
Oh, this is obviously a name.
Speaker 12 (51:30):
I am signing an executive order making it legal to
call your friends fags and retards if they are doing
something faggy or retarding. Fags and retards. Ladies and gentlemen,
we've got to start calling our friends this again, and
we will. We're going to call them fags and retards again. Today.
I am signing an executive order.
Speaker 1 (51:53):
Again. Some people never stopped. They never stopped calling their
friends that in a term of viment.
Speaker 3 (52:02):
My brother sent me, send me that the other day.
Speaker 2 (52:06):
All right.
Speaker 3 (52:08):
Now, I sent that to my brother the other day
and he turned around and he said, we were supposed
to stop. No I didn't.
Speaker 1 (52:20):
I do want to point out that the word retarded
literally just means slower than exactly.
Speaker 3 (52:27):
That's what I say. Retarded is is not as derogatory
term as everybody thinks.
Speaker 1 (52:33):
Well, it's only because some people started to use it
in a derogatory way.
Speaker 2 (52:37):
I don't like it because having being hyperactive and having ADHD.
When I was very young, I was called retarded. I didn't.
I don't like that word.
Speaker 1 (52:47):
That's what I mean. People used it as a negative connotation, right,
but I mean, I'm sure to Albert Einstein, we were all.
Speaker 2 (52:58):
Yeah, I got a lot of background noise. So I
don't know how long I'll be I'll be off mute.
Speaker 3 (53:03):
Okay, all right, you love the Love the two?
Speaker 2 (53:07):
Thank you go?
Speaker 3 (53:08):
What's on it?
Speaker 1 (53:12):
Mmm?
Speaker 3 (53:13):
I can't Oh oh yeah, okay, Actually watch Video World.
Speaker 2 (53:19):
You know, I couldn't. I can't even see what it says.
But I know the logo.
Speaker 13 (53:23):
I know the logo.
Speaker 2 (53:24):
Yeah, a little crooked.
Speaker 1 (53:26):
I don't know why. It makes me just want to
so is Darcy.
Speaker 13 (53:30):
Yeah, I said, I'm sitting a little perfectly night.
Speaker 3 (53:32):
Are you busy?
Speaker 2 (53:34):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (53:34):
Yeah, good, that's great. Yeah, that's why I said.
Speaker 2 (53:39):
I said a lull for a second here, So I said, trump.
Speaker 3 (53:42):
On makes makes for a slower evening.
Speaker 5 (53:46):
And one one uh and one night this week, Bursel,
me and mister Man's going to give you a call.
Speaker 3 (53:58):
What's an appointment?
Speaker 13 (54:00):
Yeah, well, you know what I mean. What you said
in the group to me.
Speaker 1 (54:03):
Yeah, we'll tell us something exciting, since you're only here
for a short period of.
Speaker 2 (54:07):
Time, something exciting. I gotta I got a job.
Speaker 1 (54:11):
Yeah, well that's exciting, but not really because.
Speaker 13 (54:13):
You're kind of minding. But as you can see behind me.
Speaker 1 (54:17):
Yes, yes, and then as long as you enjoy the job,
that's what's important.
Speaker 2 (54:22):
I do.
Speaker 1 (54:26):
Oh look goodies, like those cupboards are looking pretty fare.
Speaker 2 (54:31):
Busy night?
Speaker 1 (54:32):
Nice?
Speaker 13 (54:35):
Yeah, I said, I like it was busy way faster.
Speaker 3 (54:38):
Is it snowing down there?
Speaker 8 (54:40):
Mm hmmm?
Speaker 3 (54:41):
Or did it finally stop for you? Zach?
Speaker 2 (54:44):
I'll jack.
Speaker 1 (54:49):
We got lucky here. The snow just missed me.
Speaker 3 (54:51):
Oh, I'm gonna do it.
Speaker 13 (54:53):
I'm gonna do a quick little cler.
Speaker 1 (54:56):
Really good papers, lazy Susan and they just contact.
Speaker 2 (55:04):
They just contacted me. I got an email from them.
They wanted to know if we wanted to review some
of their stuff.
Speaker 3 (55:09):
I've never heard of them.
Speaker 2 (55:11):
All right, I will send you the email and you
can reply yourself.
Speaker 1 (55:16):
Okay, yes, yes, I love them because of course they're
all pink.
Speaker 2 (55:21):
They're doing a Valentine's List and blue purple.
Speaker 5 (55:30):
Oh sorry, purple, I'm colored blinds a lilac?
Speaker 3 (55:35):
Is there a difference between the two papers, like it's
one of thin and one horse blanket or just color
they are. They are the.
Speaker 14 (55:49):
Weight than I guess that really. Yes, it's kind of
like the green, like the Zigzag blue.
Speaker 1 (56:00):
No, it's like a it's like the giz green.
Speaker 2 (56:04):
I I am all out of giz green. I got
one box.
Speaker 3 (56:09):
Yeah, like.
Speaker 1 (56:12):
No, it's the zigzag hologram.
Speaker 3 (56:15):
Yeah, they're super tam Yeah.
Speaker 1 (56:17):
You know the holographic one. No, No, those ones are the.
Speaker 3 (56:25):
Thinnest my Yeah. Might I have a problem with thin papers?
Mm hmmm, So ill using them if I because I
spread oil onto a paper. Mm hmm.
Speaker 2 (56:44):
Uh. For oil, I like to use, funny enough, a
players or a blue because it's they're thicker.
Speaker 3 (56:53):
Right, I'll tell you what. For wraps, I've become a
big fin of only I don't like.
Speaker 2 (57:01):
I don't like what the King Paul myrself.
Speaker 3 (57:04):
Yeah, King Paul, I don't know what that one is.
That girl the Backwoods.
Speaker 2 (57:12):
Are you still smoking tobacco too?
Speaker 1 (57:15):
No, well it is it's it's belief cigarettes.
Speaker 3 (57:19):
No.
Speaker 1 (57:19):
I quit those over ten years ago.
Speaker 13 (57:21):
I don't say it's been a while.
Speaker 2 (57:23):
M J smoke that I know.
Speaker 3 (57:25):
I like it. I like the because of the filter.
Speaker 1 (57:28):
I'm cheating, Yeah, I do, waiting to try this one
a raw cone and deep I don't like as a
glass filter.
Speaker 13 (57:41):
Oh yeah, we got different. We have a couple of
different actra ones. We have the drizzle the drizzle rockets,
and then.
Speaker 1 (57:55):
The drizz somebody, somebody gave me the drizzle rocket one. Yeah,
popsicle flavor and I swear to god it smells like vomit.
Speaker 5 (58:06):
And then we have the actual moon rock Canada. These
are the star dusts, so they're but keeping shattered mm hmm.
And then to carry that, then the actual moon rocks
and then these things are fucking crazy.
Speaker 1 (58:28):
Are those the ones that look like white powder?
Speaker 2 (58:31):
These are sticky zoo and there's snowballs.
Speaker 5 (58:33):
What they are is it's a point eight at the
point eight of ls O flower one grammar distolate and
a point two of th C diamond dust or distolate.
Speaker 1 (58:44):
Yeah, yeah, the disolates to hold the diamond dust on it.
Speaker 5 (58:47):
And there and the reason they'll use disolate, Marcella will
back me up on this. And it's way cheaper to
use disolate than it is to use whole plant or
live resin well.
Speaker 2 (58:58):
Of all the the byproducts. Is it not right?
Speaker 3 (59:02):
But that's just why all of all of the gummies
and edibles and stuff that you're getting are full of
this slate. And that's why medical.
Speaker 13 (59:10):
We carry, we carried, we carried one. We carry one
one product here in the store that's not a distler slipper,
an edible, and it's Hippobytes. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (59:26):
Yeah, have you have you tried one?
Speaker 13 (59:31):
Not yet, Marcella.
Speaker 3 (59:33):
Well then how do you know that it's not this.
Speaker 2 (59:36):
You're promoting stuff that you haven't tried, Darcy.
Speaker 13 (59:38):
Come on, I'm just saying, way I got my store. Yeah,
we don't, well don't I did try these.
Speaker 3 (59:48):
I don't know what.
Speaker 1 (59:49):
Those age live resin gummies mm hmm.
Speaker 5 (59:54):
They're made, yeah, and equivalent to yours marcon Yeah. So
each one of them, they're like a little dot, a
little dot gummy. Yeah, and I have to eat three
of them, which is sixty milligrams to be equivalent to
one of your square twenty milligram gummis.
Speaker 3 (01:00:13):
But they do work, and they don't They do work,
and they don't taste lives.
Speaker 2 (01:00:18):
But they don't.
Speaker 5 (01:00:19):
But they don't taste bad, you know what I mean,
Like you can taste a little bit of the live version,
but nothing like nothing like well, you know, a gummy's yeah, exactly.
Speaker 3 (01:00:28):
But you're also you're also using a product that hasn't
been hasn't been decoboxlated because gummies, the temperature for gummies
is not sufficient enough to decoboxilate. Yeah, and it's not
in there long enough. So that's why you're not getting
(01:00:50):
as much of effect off of that amount. If it
was decoboxylated. Never put in the same amount, and it
might be a little different.
Speaker 2 (01:00:57):
It sure would. Hey, gentlemen, Yes, it's time to take commercial.
If you can't uh stick around, Darcy, that's cool, thank
you for joining us, of course.
Speaker 5 (01:01:07):
Dude, all right, I'll be popping in and out all
the time and that, like I said, when it's not busy,
he said, by all means when you're not busy.
Speaker 2 (01:01:14):
Go ahead and awesome.
Speaker 13 (01:01:17):
Alright, all right, and I got I got some merch
for you, m J.
Speaker 5 (01:01:22):
I gotta send you cool. I just need in the group,
send me your size and send for you, m JO,
and I'll get stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:01:31):
Right up to you. Awesome. So we're gonna take a
little break and uh have some fake news.
Speaker 3 (01:01:42):
We fake news.
Speaker 8 (01:01:48):
H are you looking for NonStop, continuous cannabis and psychedelic programming.
(01:02:09):
If you are, then turn your browsers to four twenty
radio dot CA or paceradio dot net, where you will
find the four twenty page re rolled Saturday Everything gets
started at eight am Eastern Saturday morning.
Speaker 1 (01:02:30):
Hi, I'm Timmy and I'm Mary Jane. He's the newbie,
she's the doobie and this is the show where weed,
we tote cannabis talk from both sides.
Speaker 2 (01:02:40):
Is that even possible? Hello? Look, she's right there in
her weed shirt.
Speaker 1 (01:02:55):
Who is that girl with brown hair?
Speaker 2 (01:02:57):
I don't know, uh blonde when I met you?
Speaker 3 (01:03:03):
I think, I just I.
Speaker 1 (01:03:05):
Think it was red red. I think it was red
fire engine red.
Speaker 2 (01:03:11):
At one, we're not doing your job?
Speaker 3 (01:03:16):
What was my job?
Speaker 1 (01:03:18):
Buddy?
Speaker 3 (01:03:19):
We I'm not even there.
Speaker 1 (01:03:23):
But it's also like, okay, yeah, I like the holographic ones.
If I'm going Ziggy's, I'm going holographic.
Speaker 3 (01:03:33):
Well, I see I buy I buy my blue Zigs
eggs by the box.
Speaker 1 (01:03:39):
So where do you get them from a store or online?
From a store, yeah, I get mine, not online.
Speaker 3 (01:03:49):
I have a wholesale store that I go to that
supplies other stores. So I can go and get them there.
Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
But Zig has a pack that's like this, like that,
their pack actually looks like this.
Speaker 3 (01:04:06):
Oh, I thought you were going to tell me that
was the size of the pack. That's a really ugly
ler escape by the way.
Speaker 1 (01:04:11):
Oh freak you. It's so cute.
Speaker 14 (01:04:13):
What are you talking about.
Speaker 3 (01:04:18):
I didn't even see it, or he'd have been blinded.
Speaker 1 (01:04:22):
Oh, look at my roller skates.
Speaker 2 (01:04:24):
I've seen her roller skates. Yeah she was.
Speaker 3 (01:04:29):
It's a good pearl finish. I mean that that looks cool.
Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
Well I'm going to be in those at can x
bo so I'm thankful it's only two days this time.
I'm not three.
Speaker 3 (01:04:40):
Oh you roller skate around to you.
Speaker 2 (01:04:43):
Our rolling camera girl.
Speaker 1 (01:04:45):
Oh, I'm excited because it's the Queen Victoria building and
it's literally all one level. All yeah, it's nice and smooth,
dark cracks. You got hurt.
Speaker 3 (01:05:04):
But then the booths are going to put out their
carpets and their runners and things like that.
Speaker 1 (01:05:09):
Most most places like that, all the carpets and stuff
stay in behind.
Speaker 3 (01:05:16):
Really yeah, because here what they do a show. They
carpet the walkways too.
Speaker 2 (01:05:21):
No, no, no.
Speaker 1 (01:05:22):
Depends on the building. At the Queen Victoria.
Speaker 2 (01:05:26):
It also depends on the time of year if you
go to a show. If you go to a show
in the winter, you're going to have rugs. When you
go to a show in in the you know, in March,
you're not going to have rugs, unless, of course it's raining,
then yes, they'll put rugs.
Speaker 3 (01:05:41):
Mhm. Either way, this is sco show. We can't predict
when we're getting rain.
Speaker 2 (01:05:48):
Here you can't either, but down in the city you can't.
Speaker 3 (01:05:51):
That's probably why they always put the carpets in, because
it could be sunny and beautiful oat and five minutes
later being born down raining on you, and then back
to sunny again. Welcome, Welcome to the coach, Welcome to
a night me. Yeah, oh wow, well.
Speaker 1 (01:06:13):
I remember it's note today. My son was born and
that was April.
Speaker 3 (01:06:16):
Third, he was born.
Speaker 1 (01:06:17):
He wasn't hatched, no, no, he wasn't hatched. No. I
just went to the hospital one night. I was like,
I want that one.
Speaker 2 (01:06:29):
So mister Bloom said he'd like to come on the
show soon. So I'm going to arrange stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:06:38):
You blew him on.
Speaker 2 (01:06:39):
We can talk about USA stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:06:42):
Actually I was going to talk about some USA stuff tonight.
So it's still reading some of this USA stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:06:48):
We have to.
Speaker 3 (01:06:50):
Well it's about uh changes to cannabis laws in the US, Okay,
And one of the things that they want is like
the legal states, like California, Well the majority of the
country down there, it's got legal states. Now none of
them can use banking yet.
Speaker 2 (01:07:13):
Still and we're in the same situation here in Canada
as well.
Speaker 3 (01:07:17):
Yeah, and I don't know what's going on in Europe
if they have banking issues there or with revolves around cannabis.
In Canada, it's total bullshit because in the States, they
they have they fall back with saying, well, we can't
do it because it's not federal, it's not federally legal,
(01:07:40):
we can't do that. But in Canada it is federally legal,
and so there's no reason for that. But they're they're
they're banks or decks.
Speaker 2 (01:07:49):
But you know, it's also it's a fear thing though,
it's a fear monger thing.
Speaker 3 (01:07:54):
Yeah, so they they're not going to jump on force
and UH forcing that change with the banking Iowa, Iowa
approved a bill to double the number of medical cannabis
dispensaries for their state.
Speaker 2 (01:08:17):
I think I saw something I didn't didn't realize it
was them though.
Speaker 3 (01:08:23):
FDA says that hemp is a higher priority for agency
warnings than marijuana because it's not regulated in many states
and it's more widely available, so they want to start
controlling hemp.
Speaker 2 (01:08:36):
I saw that, Yes, I saw that.
Speaker 3 (01:08:41):
Some of the lawmakers are working on reintroducing cannabis banking legislature.
All right, so each state New York, they're just budget
request includes new funding to support enforcement efforts against unlikely
since cannabis businesses.
Speaker 2 (01:09:03):
Do they do they enforce the unlicensed cannabis businesses like
they do here.
Speaker 3 (01:09:10):
Yeah, they read them.
Speaker 2 (01:09:12):
But more so than.
Speaker 3 (01:09:13):
Here probably, And fines they're probably about the same. M
You got to find them first.
Speaker 2 (01:09:22):
Yeah, so they're not hard to find here. They're kind
of out in the open.
Speaker 3 (01:09:28):
South Dakota, Toronto, They're.
Speaker 2 (01:09:32):
They're still there quite quite prominently. Yeah, like like there
it's a cafe. You go in and it's a cafe
and then you walk into the back, you know, And
what can they.
Speaker 3 (01:09:44):
Do Maine is what's main doing Maine is they're just
doing some internal crap. They didn't get the report that
they wanted.
Speaker 2 (01:09:53):
So how many states UH had had cannabis related changes.
Speaker 3 (01:10:01):
Well, none yet really, Well, because I was a federal election,
it wasn't it wasn't a state Oh.
Speaker 2 (01:10:08):
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. And their own question, what's
the Orange guy saying about about? Has he said anything?
Speaker 3 (01:10:18):
No, not really other than the fact that they're not
going to jump on change in the banking system. Oh
so he hasn't come out right and said yes or
no of anything yet in regards to cannabis. But there's
a lot of speculation, So people are getting ready for
(01:10:38):
that speculation one way or the other. Colorado makers file
file to build to read.
Speaker 2 (01:10:46):
Can't people why why why can't people just be honest
see one thing and do another that would.
Speaker 3 (01:10:57):
Just defeat their entire agenda. Oh well, right, so Colorado
is going to restrict some cannabis and psilocybin products.
Speaker 2 (01:11:11):
Say that against Sorry, they're.
Speaker 3 (01:11:13):
Going to restrict file the bill to restrict cannabis and
psilocybin products Colorado, Colorado.
Speaker 2 (01:11:22):
That that's surprising seeing as they were the first to
legalize cannabis.
Speaker 3 (01:11:28):
Yeah, Pennsylvania, I guess California was really Yeah. Pennsylvania representative
defended his plan to legalize marijuana sales through a system
of state run scores, so Pennsylvanious push for it. Vermont
judge is considering a request for an injunction against restrictions
(01:11:50):
on marijuana business advertising.
Speaker 2 (01:11:55):
That should be changed. Yes, we have that issue here.
Speaker 3 (01:11:59):
Oklahola medical cannabis regulators are working to build new licensing
and inspection software. That's good. Washington State regulators will host
feedback sessions next month on draft rules for transfer of
authority for accreditation of cannabis testing laboratories for fun. Okay,
(01:12:20):
that's just a crap one.
Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
I just love something, and I'm glad it wasn't this
window and this.
Speaker 3 (01:12:28):
Soda regulators will host a webinar about lower potency HEMP
edibles on Monday. Well, i'd like to get in on that.
I'd like to hear that. So I'm going to have
to go and search that one out. That's all I
(01:12:54):
got for American News. Sorry, Okay, how.
Speaker 1 (01:12:59):
Do you more information about what happened on the West
Coast with the raids?
Speaker 2 (01:13:07):
No, all I've seen are you know, probably what you've
seen just posts that that there was raids going on
and that yesterday wasn't uh yesterday or the day before
and it was Dana Larson's both of his dispensaries. You know,
I love Dana. I love what he's doing, what he's
(01:13:30):
trying to do, but unfortunately he's on the authorities and
everybody are on the attack because he's got his his
Coca lounge, he's got his drug test like he you know,
they're going to go after him.
Speaker 1 (01:13:45):
Unfortunately, the drug testing is a good thing, selling the drugs.
Speaker 2 (01:13:53):
He's got a bullseye on his head, unfortunately. And now
every time I I love having Dana on, but every
time I've run a replay with Daana on, I get
restricted on YouTube and on Facebook because of it. So
something's going on there. They're they're trying to shut him down,
and Dana is old school activist, so it's going to
(01:14:17):
be hard. You know. One thing. One thing, speaking of activists,
one thing that I've noticed with all this this Trump stuff.
And I don't really care who you're voted for, who
you like, you want to kiss him, you don't want
to kiss him, I don't give a shit. What I
care about is the fact that there are a lot
of old school activists coming out of the woodwork because
(01:14:42):
of what's going on. Uh, normal has stepped up their
their posts. They're posting a lot more lately because of
what's going on in the US and the threats that
are being made. You know, it's it's going to be
an interesting ride. Yeah, you know, yeah, ah Rolls, please
(01:15:09):
lay down.
Speaker 1 (01:15:10):
Your interesting ride in like a couple of months.
Speaker 2 (01:15:15):
We're going to have an interesting ride here in Canada
to over the next few months. We've got to deal
with Board in Ontario stepping down and hoping that people
will re elect him. And then and then you know,
the the mister moist and lushlessly.
Speaker 1 (01:15:36):
I couldn't leave soon enough.
Speaker 2 (01:15:41):
And the tariffs yep, the tariffs that that are starting
between us and yep. And then the push and shoved
match because Trump wants us to be Americans. I'm sorry,
but I will say this flat out. I will not
become an American, even though my mom was American, she
(01:16:04):
was born in New York.
Speaker 1 (01:16:07):
Technically, you could be a dual citizen right now.
Speaker 2 (01:16:09):
Yeah, we've explored that.
Speaker 3 (01:16:12):
Yeah, technically I don't think so.
Speaker 2 (01:16:15):
No, I couldn't. And that's why we found out. Because
I'm adopted.
Speaker 1 (01:16:21):
Oh you're adopted. If you were a birth child, that
would be different.
Speaker 3 (01:16:24):
Because yeah, you could do birthright citizenship that got shot
down in court.
Speaker 2 (01:16:29):
Yeah. No, you know, there was a time when I
was looking at applying for dual citizenship because I was
seeing somebody in the States, and I found out that
because I'm not a birth child, I do not qualify
for that right.
Speaker 1 (01:16:49):
Well, that makes sense, because that's how they get around
or they can prove that people aren't just adopting people
just to make them American citizens.
Speaker 2 (01:16:57):
I guess, I guess.
Speaker 3 (01:16:59):
I'm yeah, that's.
Speaker 1 (01:17:03):
How Timmy is a dual citizen because his mom's American.
Speaker 2 (01:17:07):
I know, I know a lot of I know a
lot of people who are are not full bred Canadian.
I was born here in Canada. I was born at
Mount SINAI I am Canadian, although I don't know. I
don't know. I don't know my birth parents. I know
nothing about the history. They're nothing.
Speaker 3 (01:17:26):
So here's my question in the case of Timmy. Yeah,
is she eligible to vote in both countries?
Speaker 1 (01:17:34):
Oh, that's a good question. I think you have to live.
Speaker 3 (01:17:37):
It's whatever you pay six months or something like that,
isn't it.
Speaker 2 (01:17:41):
No, it's it's whatever country you pay taxes and you
can vote in.
Speaker 1 (01:17:45):
Yeah, I think it's whichever country you live fifty one
percent of the time.
Speaker 2 (01:17:52):
Yeah, and if you're if you're living there, you're paying
taxes there. There you can vote. But if you don't
live there, like if you're a Canadian citizen.
Speaker 1 (01:18:01):
I did actually hear. Fun fact, if you live in
Puerto Rico fifty percent of the time, it's zero percent tax,
but you don't get to vote.
Speaker 3 (01:18:14):
Buddy's got a great idea.
Speaker 1 (01:18:17):
That's funny.
Speaker 3 (01:18:21):
Now let's go back to the original borders.
Speaker 2 (01:18:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:18:24):
See, that just proves I know very little about all
of this, and I'm not educating enough to make a
judgment call on any of it. I mean, US Canadians
can't even figure out our own shit up here.
Speaker 2 (01:18:36):
You want to talk to me about weed, You want
to talk to me about music. You want to ask
me about about the stars and the oceans and the
water and rocks. Great about rocks. We can talk about rocks.
But stuff your politics. Stuff your politics.
Speaker 1 (01:18:55):
I don't know it. I don't know it, and I'm
not ashamed to say that. I focus my at eension
elsewhere because politics, much like news, can be very negative.
Speaker 3 (01:19:06):
Well, you're you're I used to be.
Speaker 2 (01:19:11):
I used to watch around the time of the planes
crashing into the buildings. I was a absolute CNN junkie.
It was that was what was on the TV at night,
during the day when it when I just wanted noise, okay,
And I had to stop because I found myself getting
(01:19:34):
very depressed with the news that was going on. And
you know, mainstream media is not what it used to
be obviously.
Speaker 3 (01:19:44):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:19:45):
And and they actually, you know, some some journalists have
been accused of manufacturing the news. You know, a journalist
will tell you flat out when there's a plane that
goes down over a river, that's a good news day.
That's a journalism's way of looking at it. And uh.
(01:20:07):
But people's mindset has changed. I mean, journalism is not
what it used to be anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:20:13):
There are no journalists anymore. Now, they're all reporters.
Speaker 2 (01:20:16):
No I'm a journalist.
Speaker 1 (01:20:17):
You're literally reporting what they're told to report. They're not
actually going and finding the true story. That's why mainstream
media is not becoming the popular It's things like podcasts
and things like things like this where people can actually
talk about I hate to use the phrase their truth,
but talk about things that you are not necessarily like
(01:20:40):
the agenda of what they want you to talk about today,
Like you, I asked you, what are we talking about today?
You're like, we're just hanging out. Who knows what we're doing?
Speaker 2 (01:20:48):
So sometimes I like the conversation that comes up when
we're just hanging out. I mean, if we have specific
things to talk about, which sometimes we do or guests,
then that's what we do, you know, and and and
and and.
Speaker 1 (01:21:03):
Yeah yeah yeah. But then like we have discussions where
we have like flat earth discussions or global warming discussions
or things like you wouldn't hear any of that else.
Speaker 3 (01:21:17):
Do you want a global warming discussion?
Speaker 1 (01:21:20):
Well, mainstream? I mean you do hear it else elsewhere? Yeah,
what do you want to say? What about global warming?
That it's not true, that it's actually just like a
natural phenomenon it is.
Speaker 3 (01:21:34):
Yeah, like we've had that been going on for millions
of years. Why would it stop?
Speaker 2 (01:21:41):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:21:41):
Well, isn't it really cool?
Speaker 1 (01:21:43):
We go into an ice age again?
Speaker 3 (01:21:45):
Yeah? Yeah, it goes there, goes through cycles of hot
and cold, hot and cold, hot and cold, right like
menopause very much. So, Yeah, gets old and cranky and
and pisses everybody off, and then starts reason that death
and pissed everybody off even more. Right, But what's interesting
rate now that's happening that they're having a hard time
(01:22:08):
comprehending because this has happened before. Magnetic North is a
liquid mass that is.
Speaker 1 (01:22:16):
Uh, it's moving at a rapid rate.
Speaker 3 (01:22:20):
And it has it's increased at a very rapid rate.
Speaker 1 (01:22:24):
Righting, isn't it. It's shifting right?
Speaker 2 (01:22:29):
Well?
Speaker 13 (01:22:31):
Yeah, but.
Speaker 3 (01:22:32):
So at one point the north and South pole aren't
where they were, or weren't where they are right. At
one point they were at the equator or what we
call the equator, which would just make another equator. So
this because this planet is flops around. Sorry, supposedly this
(01:22:59):
planet flops around because it's a supposedly a spherical object
floating in a suspended orbit around a spherical ball of fire.
So for the flat earthers, they still haven't told me
(01:23:20):
how when it's dark here it's light in Australia. But
once you figure that one out, then maybe we can
discuss it further. But until then, the problem is is
with a liquid North that's moving rapidly and then not
knowing where it's going to go is going to create
(01:23:41):
a lot of geographical shifting because your polls move, your
planet moves. Planets that are made up of bunches of
slabs don't like being shifted. When it shifts, everything else shifts.
(01:24:05):
So it's gonna be cool if we're around long enough, if.
Speaker 2 (01:24:09):
We're still here. Did you hear about the new meteor
that whirling towards the Earth?
Speaker 3 (01:24:16):
Oh? Yeah, it's got a one percent chance of hitting us.
Speaker 2 (01:24:20):
No, it's more than that.
Speaker 3 (01:24:21):
No, it is. That's what they posted. It's a one
percent chance that it could hit us in twenty thirty two.
All right, yeah, I just read it tonight. I kind
of laughed.
Speaker 2 (01:24:32):
I hadn't read anything. I had just heard about it.
Speaker 3 (01:24:35):
Well, you've seen all of these tiktoks or Instagram videos
or whatever that are popping out, which is.
Speaker 2 (01:24:47):
Which you know, nothing happened with that other than promotion.
That's just what solid was. That was a bad press
promotion videos. Know what?
Speaker 3 (01:24:57):
Wait? No, what was the bad promotions? TikTok?
Speaker 2 (01:25:00):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:25:01):
You know who will go to cancel it?
Speaker 14 (01:25:03):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (01:25:03):
Zuckerberg bought it?
Speaker 3 (01:25:05):
Yeah, I was. I was pretty quick, but that's not
been confirmed.
Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
Can I nice send you the link? Didn't I send
you guys the screenshot that if you go into the
the oh, God, was it in the back end and
the rules and like under the privacy agreements when you
go all the way down to the bottom under license
or user license or whatever it says Facebook Meta And yeah,
(01:25:34):
I took a screen shot, you guys. Yeah, And and
the day before TikTok was banned, Meta opened a TikTok account.
Speaker 3 (01:25:44):
Right, so I've I don't have TikTok. I won't have TikTok.
Speaker 2 (01:25:50):
I don't know, I don't use it either, and we
won't broadcast on there.
Speaker 3 (01:25:53):
No, you m jave had TikTok before, right, I still
have it. Yeah. So when it shut off and then
when it came back on, did you have to do
a new user agreement?
Speaker 1 (01:26:06):
Our TikTok wasn't affected?
Speaker 2 (01:26:09):
Actually, okay the way Yeah. But in Canada it's different
because there were there were things that were already done
here that Trudeau implemented, and Canada, you can still down
the app, you can still download the app, you can
(01:26:30):
still use the the the site if you were a
previous member, but they will not allow you to sign
up and use an updated version, like they're not allowed
to update the app in Canada. That's that's what I
read anyways, and that was before they actually did the band,
(01:26:52):
which lasted what three hours?
Speaker 3 (01:26:54):
Yeah, I don't use it, so I got.
Speaker 2 (01:26:58):
Matter to me because I don't use it either. Yeah,
but you even noticed that I'm running the Three High
Guys the High Guys thing there.
Speaker 3 (01:27:10):
Now, So I see the twenty radio show is live.
Speaker 2 (01:27:17):
I just changed it, bonehead, Oh running this one. It's
been running this.
Speaker 3 (01:27:26):
Did you hear earlier at the beginning of the show
when you asked everybody what they were smoking, and I said,
I was doing the double ice cream red Eye, Yes,
I remember, it's kicking in. Yeah, so it was the
hash So I'm not reading that ship.
Speaker 2 (01:27:39):
And we still we still have a half an hour
to go.
Speaker 3 (01:27:42):
Yeah, I know it's great show.
Speaker 1 (01:27:45):
And tell for a second here, what is it?
Speaker 3 (01:27:48):
Boom?
Speaker 1 (01:27:48):
So I stopped at the local store and I picked
up some cologne. They're just samplers. It's called Bloom.
Speaker 3 (01:27:57):
But when I.
Speaker 2 (01:27:57):
Found wheat flavors.
Speaker 1 (01:28:00):
Yeah, the sensor Indica and Sativa.
Speaker 3 (01:28:05):
So Indica has got its own scent and Sativa has
its own scent.
Speaker 1 (01:28:09):
Now well, no, it says Indica and Sativa inspired. Uh,
the inspiration from uplifting and energizing qualities of daytime sativa
strains as well as uh intimate qualities of indika strains.
Speaker 3 (01:28:26):
There, I'll just let Buddy say it for me.
Speaker 1 (01:28:32):
You know what, I think it's I think it's a
great way to be like, wear this wondering the day
m hm.
Speaker 3 (01:28:39):
So it's a roma therapy kind of.
Speaker 1 (01:28:42):
They're just little like little samplers.
Speaker 3 (01:28:45):
And what do you do with them? You wear them?
Speaker 1 (01:28:47):
You wear them. It's perfume.
Speaker 2 (01:28:49):
Yeah, it's perfume.
Speaker 1 (01:28:52):
Yeah, it's just daytime time.
Speaker 3 (01:28:55):
There's perfume called petuli oil.
Speaker 2 (01:28:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:29:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:29:00):
It smelled like yeah, And that was that was a
really big smell in Yorkville in the sixties and seventies.
Speaker 1 (01:29:09):
I was going to say, that's very like hippie smell.
Speaker 3 (01:29:12):
It's it's it's it's almost I was all like so
when I was fourteen, So I went into a store
one day and there was a young girl working at
the counter who was older than I was. And when
I got up to the counter, all I could smell
was hash and and it smelled like good Afghan hash.
(01:29:37):
And so I got the counter.
Speaker 2 (01:29:39):
Okay, hold on, hold on, hold on. You said you smelled.
Speaker 3 (01:29:42):
Halibit afghansh ash ash.
Speaker 2 (01:29:47):
I thought, you said hat halibit that smelled like hash.
I was like, what, No, No, I never smelt any halibit.
Speaker 1 (01:29:54):
No, the cash registers smelled like hash.
Speaker 3 (01:29:56):
The girl at the cash registered like hash, so I said,
I said, wow, I said, you must really like my
favorite smell and she said she looked at me. I
said yeah, I said I like hash too, and she looked.
She goes, well, she's I know what your favorite smell is,
(01:30:19):
and it's not Hash. It's called Petuli oil. And that
was the first time I'd ever smelled it, and it
smelled exactly like the hash that they had my pocket.
Speaker 2 (01:30:28):
All of my mom's friends smelt like petuli.
Speaker 3 (01:30:32):
Yeah. I love that back in the day.
Speaker 1 (01:30:34):
That's why the hippies loved it.
Speaker 3 (01:30:36):
Yeah, because it smelled just like Afghan hash that we
used to get off the boat.
Speaker 1 (01:30:40):
I probably covered up the smell of your hash.
Speaker 3 (01:30:43):
Yeah. Yeah, But as soon as I smell it, I'm
just taking right back to the seventies to hash.
Speaker 2 (01:30:50):
You know, I enjoy that smell as well. But some
hashes smell.
Speaker 3 (01:30:55):
Like pooh oh. Yeah, some are bad, some are good.
It depends on what your product is that you start with. Well,
how you make a hash.
Speaker 2 (01:31:06):
The vortex hash that I have this is, uh, what
do you call it? They call it afghany black ash,
okay afgan black hash, and it's soft and it's old
old school. And then then you've got you've got your nugs,
which is old school black hash. Uh, and it's softer.
(01:31:28):
And then I tried last week, I tried some Wagner
and it was very sticky. It was more like a
just a big glob of globbness.
Speaker 3 (01:31:42):
That sounds like the ice cream biker hash that we
used to get her to go back.
Speaker 2 (01:31:45):
But you know, it was really it burned really nice
in my in my hash pipe, and uh, it burns
really nice in a doobie as a snake. And what
I discovered is I I make my snake and I
take my piece of hash and then I put it
in my weed and get it coated so that so
(01:32:08):
it doesn't get sticky, and then I can roll it
out and it doesn't stick to my fingers. Right, sure, Yeah,
there's lots of different we'd love to know your tips.
I'm sure Dale has a lot of tips because he's
a big hash maker. Right, do you make hash a lot, Marcel,
or do you just not bother because it's it's it's fair.
(01:32:30):
I have I made it last year, as you know. Uh,
and I made it with with a puff dog a
few years ago at the farm as well. But it's very,
very labor intensive.
Speaker 1 (01:32:41):
Al yeah, did you seriously just ask Marcel if he
makes hash a lot?
Speaker 3 (01:32:46):
Well? Because it's the guy that does the demo every
year of harvest Fest on how to make hash?
Speaker 1 (01:32:52):
Haven't you known Marcel longer than me? Like, I'm so
confused you and I knew that.
Speaker 3 (01:32:58):
But what I learned to do is stop parking around
and making little badges, do big batches and get it
done with and I only have to do it once
or twice a year.
Speaker 1 (01:33:08):
What size is a big batch?
Speaker 3 (01:33:11):
Oh maybe ten fifteen pounds of pot? Right, do that
up in one batch, run that through for a nice
water bath, and then collect all that hash up. That'll
be enough hash to last me for a year.
Speaker 2 (01:33:30):
I haven't you know. I would like to get to
that point, Marcel where I can do that stuff like that,
but I have not.
Speaker 3 (01:33:39):
It is a lot, I know. Yeah yeah, But when
you go at yourself, do you have that ability?
Speaker 2 (01:33:50):
Well? You know I'm working on it right now. I'm
having issues with chili Chili house. So what I what
I've been doing for the last few days is watching
my temperature and I'm finding that twenty seems to be
(01:34:10):
the sweet spot. It's twenty one point five up here
in my office right now, it's minus twenty one outside
and it's seventeen downstairs.
Speaker 3 (01:34:21):
So in your office, why not just put up a
tray with a heat mat and a dome and a light,
because it's it's do you're seed doings in that room?
Or does that room get cold when you glock out?
Speaker 2 (01:34:35):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, So I when I I've got I'm
moving some shelves around this weekend and I'm going to
put a shelf because i want house plants anyways, and
my plants are it's ruining my teak. The water is
ruining my teak from the plants. So I'm going to
put a put you know, the it's like you get
(01:35:01):
it at the hardware store. It's that metal mesh stuff,
and I'm gonna put it under the window and then
I'll have a place to start my plants. I'm going
to start my my plants for spring, as.
Speaker 3 (01:35:15):
Well as how much draft does coming around that window.
Speaker 2 (01:35:19):
Not much, and the heat metal over there.
Speaker 3 (01:35:23):
Yeah, well, the heat mat and the light the heat.
Speaker 2 (01:35:26):
Matt, it'll be in a dome and it's above the
heat register with the light on, with the light on, yeah,
so we'll see what happens. That's I'm thinking. Even though
that also because in the afternoon, the sun beats in
that window until it goes down and it gets quite warm.
(01:35:48):
So it's in the afternoon it's nice and warm, and
and I'm hoping it'll be okay, and if not a
little longer.
Speaker 3 (01:35:55):
I don't think that it's going to go over ninety
degrees in that dome, so I think it'll be fun.
Speaker 2 (01:36:01):
Well, what I'm going to do. I'm going to take
one of the thermostats that I hear from that I
have for my thing from outside, because you know, I
know how cold it is out there, and I'm going
to stick it in the dome with the mat on
to see the temperature in there, and then i'll report
back next week on that one.
Speaker 3 (01:36:20):
That'll also gives your humanity to own it.
Speaker 2 (01:36:24):
Yes, I'm hoping.
Speaker 3 (01:36:26):
I'm hoping it gives you.
Speaker 2 (01:36:28):
I'm trying to start some stuff so that I have
viable stuff ready to go out, buddy, But I'm having
a hard time cracking seed because the house is so
unevenly heated. So We're going to try and figure it out.
And if I have to wait another month, I will,
(01:36:49):
you know, I'm not. I refuse to waste any more money.
I spent one hundred and seventy five bucks on seeds
last year, plus some that were sent to me and
and nothing took because of the weather here.
Speaker 1 (01:37:07):
That was one of the hardest parts about growing indoors
was when it went from like summer to winter, because
then the house the temperatures change, but then it gets
drier in the house because the heat comes out.
Speaker 2 (01:37:21):
It's ninety six percent humidity here. It's never lower than
sixty that I see.
Speaker 1 (01:37:28):
And I would get down to like twenty, and.
Speaker 2 (01:37:30):
It's high humidity here almost all the time. Well, I'm
on a hill, I'm above the water, like I can
see the lake, and I get a lot of there's
so much cont it's a human peatree this house. There's
a lot of a lot of moisture.
Speaker 1 (01:37:46):
Unfortunately, maybe you need a dehumidifier.
Speaker 2 (01:37:48):
Because really probably yes, you know what, uh, dehumidifiers, humidifiers
air conditioners will run you about two three hundred dollars
a month here, Oh yeah, for hydro power consumption.
Speaker 1 (01:38:04):
And I'm not hydro one, don't you.
Speaker 2 (01:38:09):
I'm on hydro one and I only have I have
an electric furnace.
Speaker 1 (01:38:13):
I'm already is a criminal organization, Yeah, I said it. Yeah, yeah,
really you have no other choice too.
Speaker 2 (01:38:23):
I've already gotten my five hundred dollars bill, and next
month it'll be six, and then the next month it'll
be seven, and then it'll drop down to two fifty.
Speaker 1 (01:38:34):
I think the only thing worse than hydro one is
having to pay for propaine fuel for heat.
Speaker 2 (01:38:39):
Well, you know, I only have hydro stuff here. I
don't have I don't have wood, I don't have propane.
So those bills aren't, you know, an equation. They're not
in the equation, which is fine because if I had,
I'd be buying, you know, two thousand dollars worth of
wood every year if I was burning wood, and I.
Speaker 1 (01:39:00):
Difficult to deal with too, like bringing it.
Speaker 2 (01:39:02):
But it was appropra very expensive. Right now, A four
hundred round thing there that would sit beside the house
costs you know, a thousand dollars to fill. I don't
have a thousand dollars in a shot to fill. I'll
pay my bill, I'll get through it.
Speaker 1 (01:39:18):
Yeah, that was one of the hardest things, like realizations
when I first moved to the country, because I moved
from the city and I was just getting a regular
like hydro bill, and then I moved out there and
I got the hydro and then I got like, all
of a sudden, they came and they filled up my
propane tank in October September and it was like, like
you said, it was like a twelve hundred dollars bill
(01:39:41):
that they put in the mailbox and I was like, ooh, what,
how long when do I have to pay this? And
they're like, well, you have to pay it right away,
and then it only lasted for like six weeks and
then they had to come and fill it again.
Speaker 2 (01:39:54):
It depends on yeah, it equipment. There's there's in there's
a rebate and bursary program that will help you, for
a price update your appliances in your house, your your furnace,
your washer, dryer so that they are energy compliant, and
(01:40:15):
they do run a lot cheaper, okay, but then you
end up with a fucking appliance mortgage for the rest
of your life because you've just gotten ten thousand dollars
worth of new appliances, right, So I mean they get you,
they get you, they get you, they fuck you with
the cell phone. You know.
Speaker 1 (01:40:36):
I still I still have propane heat here, except it's
hooked up to the city. So like the gas pipe
comes in the house. I get a monthly bill based
on what I use.
Speaker 3 (01:40:47):
So that's natural natural gas.
Speaker 2 (01:40:49):
That's natural gas.
Speaker 3 (01:40:51):
That's natural gas.
Speaker 1 (01:40:52):
Sorry. Yeah, I still ask for unletted when I go
to the gas station. Just so you know, I asked regular.
Speaker 3 (01:41:04):
What do you mean to ask she.
Speaker 2 (01:41:06):
Doesn't go to the drive.
Speaker 3 (01:41:10):
You've got full service?
Speaker 15 (01:41:13):
Yeah, upon my own gas in around here, you'd have
no choice because I don't think I've seen a full
service station here in five years.
Speaker 3 (01:41:27):
Anyway.
Speaker 2 (01:41:30):
You know what, in Ontario, there are many gas stations
that offer a row that is full service.
Speaker 1 (01:41:37):
Oh yeah, that's true Canadian.
Speaker 2 (01:41:40):
At the rest in Alderville, at the gas station in Alderville,
they have that as well. They have a tenant there
that will come out in this one aisle and serve
you your gas and the price is a little bit more.
Speaker 3 (01:41:53):
Yeah, they used to do that here and the price
was a little bit more.
Speaker 2 (01:41:57):
They used to run out of the fucking gas station
with a with a window squeegee in their hand, going
what can I get you, sir? Now you got to
pay for it?
Speaker 3 (01:42:07):
No, hell, you're not listening. What we had was full
service stations. When I was in high school, every station
was full service. Yes, then we started going to you
can pump your own on these pumps and it costs
you a little bit less, but these pumps are full service.
Now there's no such thing as a full service line.
Speaker 2 (01:42:28):
They do that. They still have full service in Ontario,
several several gas stations, especially downtown in Yorkville. You know
there's a gas station there that that will send a
valet out and wash your car.
Speaker 3 (01:42:41):
And you know, well, I went to Walmart today, did you?
And I was heading to Walmart and it was rather
busy and I only had a couple of things. And
when I was going up to go to the checkouts,
one of the workers there said, self checkouts are open.
(01:43:03):
She said, just use the self checkots.
Speaker 2 (01:43:05):
That's all they have at the warm Walmart in.
Speaker 3 (01:43:08):
I say, it's all I was. If it was only
self checkouts, I'd never shopped there.
Speaker 2 (01:43:14):
And they have they have gone completely. They have tenants
there that watch what you're doing and they won't let
you leave the area.
Speaker 1 (01:43:23):
But it's a lot of now shere for twenty registers.
Speaker 3 (01:43:26):
Yeah, yeah, no that doesn't work.
Speaker 2 (01:43:28):
No, No, there's always a lineup.
Speaker 3 (01:43:32):
All I said was I said, is there a discount applied?
Speaker 2 (01:43:36):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:43:37):
She said no, And I said, then why would I
do that?
Speaker 2 (01:43:40):
And when I don't mind using self serve, when I
want to use it.
Speaker 3 (01:43:45):
Not when I don't, I don't use it at all.
Speaker 2 (01:43:48):
Sometimes it's quicker if there's if I feel like available
and I'm standing in a line of fifty people, I'm
going to go because it's open.
Speaker 1 (01:43:58):
I mean, what it's doing I think is it's perpetuating
this cycle of these young people not talking to anybody.
Speaker 3 (01:44:07):
Yes, exactly, having to.
Speaker 1 (01:44:08):
Look somebody in the eyeballs and say, you know, thank
you very much, have a good day. Like we need
to communicate with people. This is getting nuts.
Speaker 3 (01:44:17):
If you're working on the cash register, I'm talking to
you and I'm gonna make you talk back, right.
Speaker 1 (01:44:25):
I was the cashier that got everybody's life story.
Speaker 2 (01:44:28):
Yeah, because it's not a cashier anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:44:33):
As a waitress.
Speaker 3 (01:44:35):
Oh god, these younger generations are are basically introverting themselves
right by wanting not wanting to engage in reality you know,
you know.
Speaker 1 (01:44:54):
And developing fears and stuff like a lot of you
want to go where there.
Speaker 3 (01:44:59):
Are, You're gonna end up having a whole bunch of
agrophoric or agrophobic invalid sitting in the house. Hello, afraid
of their own shadows.
Speaker 2 (01:45:11):
That's me.
Speaker 3 (01:45:12):
You're afraid of your own shadow.
Speaker 2 (01:45:14):
Sometimes I'm more afraid of bears sneaking up on me
at night.
Speaker 3 (01:45:18):
Yours is more of a physical disability than anything for
you to get out and about. But I'm talking about
the eighteen, nineteen year old twenty year olds that won't
move out of mom's basement because they can't handle reality.
Speaker 2 (01:45:32):
I know, I know a few of those. Yeah, my
mom threw me out of the house. I was nineteen
years old. She threw me into a halfway house in Parkdale, Ontario,
in Toronto.
Speaker 3 (01:45:42):
Yeah, like Buddy just said, we're so doomed, And I was.
Speaker 2 (01:45:47):
I was. I was a nasty, nasty, nasty teenager.
Speaker 3 (01:45:54):
I was about the same as I am now. So No,
actually now I was a lot more quiet.
Speaker 2 (01:46:03):
No I wasn't. I I was in your face more
and now I'm quiet. I don't give a fuck what
you have to say. If I don't agree with it,
fuck off, get out of my face. I don't want
to talk to you.
Speaker 3 (01:46:13):
No, I was the really quiet person, not literally, but
most people were really scared of and then I kind
of just like that. People want to be afraid of it.
Nobody has to be afraid of me. Anybody can come
up and talk to me.
Speaker 1 (01:46:32):
But I think I think you're sweet. I also think
that if you're if I were to present an issue
with you, you might not be so sweet.
Speaker 3 (01:46:42):
Well, no, I can still be sweet. But my issue
is is I've got no patience or time to pussy
foot around and sugarcoat shit because.
Speaker 1 (01:46:57):
I feel like that comes with age though, like why waste.
Speaker 3 (01:47:00):
Even when I was younger. Sugar coating ship still means
you're getting fed ship, right because it's got sugar on
it or not, it's still ship, So save the sugar.
And I mean, everybody's too much sugar anyways, but just
give it bluntly.
Speaker 2 (01:47:20):
And she just do you smoke blunts in the house?
Speaker 3 (01:47:26):
Who?
Speaker 2 (01:47:27):
Yeah, do you do blunts myself?
Speaker 3 (01:47:31):
Not not the tobacco ones.
Speaker 2 (01:47:34):
But you but you mix, You're still mixing tobacco with
with your weed.
Speaker 3 (01:47:39):
No and your hash. No hash. Yes, we just boil
and hash, oil, paper, tobacco filler. I don't like weed.
I don't like the taste of weaed. But if I
smoke weed, it's by itself and it's pretty much much
just to sample it to see if it, you know, smokable.
(01:48:02):
But for me, no weed smokable because I've smoked so
much of it that I don't like the taste of pots.
I love the taste of hash, and I love the
taste of good edibles.
Speaker 2 (01:48:18):
And he likes the taste of tobacco.
Speaker 3 (01:48:21):
And I don't mind the taste tobacco. And for the
health benefits of the I.
Speaker 2 (01:48:25):
Just saw a short video I think was on YouTube.
It may have been a reel or something, And what
they're saying now is that there's no actual concrete evidence
that tobacco causes cancer.
Speaker 3 (01:48:44):
I've said that for yours. The majority of the people
that end up getting lung cancer from smoking got it
after they quit smoking, not while they were smoking. After
they quit, and it's very likely that if they continued smoking,
they never would have gotten the cancer. But we'll never know, I.
Speaker 2 (01:49:07):
Keep getting smoked leaking into my video.
Speaker 1 (01:49:12):
M few be in front of the camera.
Speaker 3 (01:49:15):
Mm hmm. Much out of that joint there the I
don't know, it's a it's a fuck up situation. But
it started with cush. It got to the point where
I couldn't even stand this. I still can't stand the
(01:49:36):
smell of cush, but even the taste of it was
turning me off. And then it slowly moved its way
to the other strings. But yeah, remember I'm coming onto
my fiftieth year of smoking pots.
Speaker 2 (01:49:56):
Fifty years When were you? What you?
Speaker 3 (01:49:58):
What age were you?
Speaker 16 (01:50:00):
You diagnosed with ms AH, I don't know whatever it
was in two thousand and eight, so whatever that was.
Speaker 2 (01:50:12):
I was eighteen years ago seven I was diagnosed with ADHD,
what they used to call hyperactivity syndrome. I was five
years old. I was on I was a test study
on high doses of Riddlin and dexadron till I was sixteen.
(01:50:35):
When my doctor asked me do you want to stop
taking the pills and are you smoking cannabis? I said no,
not yet, but my friends are. He said, well, if
you start stop taking the pills, which is what I've done.
As an adult now, right, But my question is do
(01:50:56):
you think that the prolonged use of what matphemphetamines? Right? Yeah,
uh hasn't had an impact on me and it's having
an impact on my brain as an adult.
Speaker 3 (01:51:14):
Yeah yeah, me too.
Speaker 2 (01:51:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:51:19):
But you like Kiwi's no oh too bad too.
Speaker 2 (01:51:28):
It's it's one of those flavors that's just like whoa.
Speaker 1 (01:51:32):
You know, I wonder there's a theory there's there's a
theory that your body knows what it what it needs, right,
but there's also a theory that your body sometimes pushes
the things that you need away. Maybe you just need
to eat the kiwi and like a smoothie mixed with
something else.
Speaker 2 (01:51:51):
Maybe I don't like the alone, like I don't like bananas,
but there's medical value there as well, right, the potassium.
Speaker 1 (01:51:59):
But well it could be a texture thing too, if
you're if you're like when becomes.
Speaker 3 (01:52:03):
Of foods is a very handles weird texture. Do you
like smoothies?
Speaker 2 (01:52:10):
Uh? Yeah, yeah, I'd rather have I'd rather crushed ice,
but yeah you can do.
Speaker 1 (01:52:17):
You could put crushed ice in with it, make it
like I can.
Speaker 2 (01:52:20):
I can. I have an ice cream machine and I
can make smoothies with it. You just like I can
dump in some juice and it run it and it
just makes a nice smoothie. I don't have a smoothie
maker though, if I had one, would I would I.
You know, you just need to grind up, grind up,
blender rawberries and stuff. I don't think so. But if
(01:52:42):
it was frozen maybe.
Speaker 1 (01:52:44):
Yeah, so that's okay. If you cut up your like fruit,
like say Kiwi strawberries and banana and throw it in
a ziploc, throw it in the freezer. You literally take
that out, pop it into a blender with some crushed
ice or just water, and then you have you know,
Timmy puts chocolate dark ninety or eighty percent cocoa right in.
Speaker 2 (01:53:05):
I like dark chocolate. Yeah, I prefer it.
Speaker 1 (01:53:08):
You can put it right in there and make it
more like a dessert thing. But it's the fruit, the
benefits of the fruit.
Speaker 3 (01:53:14):
I put yogurt ice crea.
Speaker 2 (01:53:17):
Gets my almost instantly. Yogurt will will just my.
Speaker 1 (01:53:21):
I just yeah, you don't have to use yogurt.
Speaker 2 (01:53:24):
No, but Dale Dale just said that yogurt fruit every
morning he has.
Speaker 3 (01:53:29):
That's what he minus.
Speaker 2 (01:53:31):
You have yogurt and fruit.
Speaker 3 (01:53:33):
I do minus two tubes of ice cream, uh, two
tablespoons of instant coffee, a day tablespoon of espresso, half
a cup of hot water, and it makes it up
of cream.
Speaker 2 (01:53:53):
And I couldn't take the cream. But if it was
if it.
Speaker 3 (01:53:56):
Was gong like chunks of ice, yeah, I like ice
and that is and a tablespoon of brown sugar that
is over though, got to medicate it red eye ice cup.
Speaker 2 (01:54:12):
Yeah, but for a diabetic that a little extra sugar
because of all that natural sugar.
Speaker 3 (01:54:18):
Right, might be a bit much natural sugar.
Speaker 2 (01:54:23):
Natural sugar is actually yeah, but it's it's it's it's different.
Speaker 3 (01:54:32):
What's different?
Speaker 2 (01:54:33):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:54:37):
I was like, where's the natural sugar.
Speaker 2 (01:54:40):
Trying to.
Speaker 3 (01:54:42):
Better for you than white sugar?
Speaker 2 (01:54:44):
Is it? But you know the only difference between white
sugar and brown sugar is molasses. Yes, so you're getting
white sugar as well. How is that more better for
you because of the molasses?
Speaker 3 (01:54:57):
Molasses? It starts? Come on, let's all, it's almost time stopped.
Thank god.
Speaker 2 (01:55:08):
What's my name? My name's Bob Molasses. Nice to meet you.
I want to buy a car.
Speaker 1 (01:55:16):
What have you been smoking?
Speaker 3 (01:55:18):
That was?
Speaker 2 (01:55:18):
That was my car? Car salesman, I think you.
Speaker 1 (01:55:21):
Had too much hash, too much water, not enough water.
Speaker 2 (01:55:27):
I love the water here, man, it is so cold,
it's frosty right out of the tap, coming from from
down younger there in the in the lake.
Speaker 3 (01:55:36):
I can't drink water.
Speaker 2 (01:55:39):
Oh, I love it, dude.
Speaker 3 (01:55:40):
There.
Speaker 2 (01:55:40):
They're the only time I don't like it, and you
just leave the water out for five minutes or so
is when they bleach it, right when they when they
came up, it's no, you can taste it. When when
they douse it. When we get we get a lot
of boiled water alerts getting when it gets it's warmer,
right yea. And and you can you can smell it.
(01:56:08):
You can smell the bleach, you can taste it. But
if you just leave your water bottle out for five
ten minutes gone.
Speaker 1 (01:56:17):
I'm surprised you don't have a well.
Speaker 2 (01:56:20):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:56:21):
I'm on town right, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:56:24):
I have sewage.
Speaker 1 (01:56:25):
I lived that far north.
Speaker 3 (01:56:27):
I guess I'm sorry, but that they would have you've
been missing well.
Speaker 1 (01:56:34):
Yeah, I went up past Highway seven and they had
wells up there.
Speaker 3 (01:56:37):
So yeah. But if you're in a small little community,
it's only a guy a dozen houses.
Speaker 2 (01:56:44):
I had, Well, like the farm you were at the
farm I had. I had to bring hydro in at
the farm, and I had to to get the big
jugs there that I had at the farm for water, right,
but here, No, I'm on, it's a water and sewage.
(01:57:06):
I pay water and sewage and all that.
Speaker 1 (01:57:09):
Thanks for coming again. Oh that sounded bad. Thanks for
coming back the sweish fuddy weeds. No you dare pull
out as a SoundBite. Ha geez, I walked into that one, dude, didn't.
Speaker 3 (01:57:25):
I Thanks for giving us a thank.
Speaker 2 (01:57:29):
You come again?
Speaker 1 (01:57:31):
Yeah, thank you for coming.
Speaker 2 (01:57:36):
You made him blush, all right, SA, good night.
Speaker 3 (01:57:40):
Guys, just cost my way out