vintage
Vintage potent and stoner content from the collection.
The Ouija Board - Fact or Fiction?
Introduction The Ouija board is a popular divination tool that has been around for centuries. It is often used as a means of communicating with spirits or getting answers to questions. The board consists of a flat surface with letters of the alphabet, numbers, and the words "yes" and "no" inscribed on it. A planchette, which is a small heart-shaped piece of wood or plastic, is placed on the board, and participants place their fingers on it, allowing the spirits to move it to spell out answers to questions.
By Subin @vocal3 years ago in Potent
Used Pinball Machines for sale
We offer used pinball machines to the public at a low price and great condition, start with Classic Vintage & arcade Pinball games Fully Refurbished Pinball Machines for Sale Online such as Addams Family, Austin Powers, Avatar, Batman The Dark Knight, Baywatch, Big Buck Hunter Pro Pinball, etc. Read more.
By Used pinball for sale3 years ago in Potent
Noble Bronze Art or How Sculptures Are Made
Around 3000 BC, bronze was used in prehistory. The Bronze Age, which got its name from the use of tools made of this metal at the time. It was common to make agricultural tools, but in some areas, such as Greece and Mesopotamia, people also began to create metal art, casting sculptures in bronze. The lost wax method, which is still used today, was one of them.
By Amit Kumar3 years ago in Potent
Water Removal Solutions for Building Sites
Water removal is sometimes needed before construction can commence. Many construction sites have underground water or surface water that can influence the building process and the quality of the structure. And, this is why dewatering techniques are being used to get rid of as many water as possible before construction can start.
By Taufik Olu3 years ago in Potent
This 1969 Pamphlet is the Ultimate Guide to Growing Cannabis. Top Story - May 2017.
Back in the 1960s and 1970s, cannabis cultivation was as taboo as it got. No respected book publisher would talk about how to grow marijuana - let alone describe the steps in detail. For the most part, it was one of those topics that was never broached except in closely guarded circles, in hushed voices.
By Parag Patel9 years ago in Potent
Analysis of Reefer Madness
Few movies are as ridiculous as Reefer Madness, a 1936 "documentary" featuring fictionalized characters who, after smoking marijuana once or twice, behave in a manner that would only appear realistic if you've never seen a person get high in your life before. Which, of course, is probably what happened.
By Anthony Gramuglia9 years ago in Potent
Who Was Fitz Hugh Ludlow?
I was never particularly interested in 19th-century literature. There were so many things our English teachers didn't tell us, especially when it came to the counterculture underground books of the Victorian era. They never mentioned that Charles Dickens, for instance, wrote his last novel stoned. Several key scenes in The Mystery of Edwin Drood were set in an opium den and hash lounge. Or they'd ramble on and on about John Greenleaf Whittier's "Snowbound," never mentioning his interesting little poem "The Haschich." Sometimes we'd get maybe an hour of English class devoted to an excerpt from Thomas De Quincey's Confessions of an English Opium Eater (1822), because it was the first great English drug tale and influenced all the Romantic writers. But we never heard about, America's first great drug writer, Fitz Hugh Ludlow.
By Frank White9 years ago in Potent
What is Yage?
An Amazonian Indian paddles a heavy canoe downriver, deep in the hold of South America. The Tunchis, spirits of the dead, call out to him in the medium of bird whistles from the jungle banks. Chullachi, a monster of unequal legs and horrible face, stalks the rain forest in search of victims. Beneath the canoe, in the murky depths, is Yacuruna—the Emperor of the waters and of the Indian dead. He is the devil of Amazonia, an amphibious creature who reigns from an underwater crystal palace. Yacuruna is ensconced in a tortoise Shell throne. He rests in a den of gazelle feathers, protected by a netting of butterfly wings woven by lightning bugs. His servants are a fleet of dolphins which change into human form so they can lure people to the kingdom of the river bed. Yacuruna, himself, often adopts the guise of a Christian spreading sin among the Indians.
By Frank White9 years ago in Potent
'Easy Rider' Review
The first five minutes of Dennis Hopper's Easy Rider is so perfect that at the end of it you feel like you had watched a whole movie. By the time the music kicks in, "The Pusher" from Steppenwolf, you feel like you are watching a sequel to those first five minutes.
By Mike Mavenful9 years ago in Potent










