The biggest flex in life is literally just not having to work
Nobody really cares how big your house is, what watch you wear, or what kind of car you drive
Nothing makes people more jealous than someone with a mysterious source of income who lives life on their own terms
@paulsaladinomd@paulsaladinomd recommended Segura's butcher shop in Uvita a few years back and that was one of the best steaks I've ever had in my life 10/10
These come from our Limetta Marmalade lines made by our good friend in VA Jolly Pond Farms. he has been killing it with our strains since day one many years ago. It’s really cool to see these project end up in places like this.
🎥 yellowskunkfarms ig
Follow us on IG @LandraceBureau
🚨 LOOK AT THIS CHART
Money supply (M2) growth since 1968:
🇨🇦 Canada: 10,784%
🇩🇪 Germany: 6,273%
🇨🇳 China: 5,844%
🇺🇸 United States: 4,155%
🇯🇵 Japan: 3,811%
Canada printed more money than every major economy on earth.
Every other country started levelling off.
Canada’s line goes VERTICAL.
This is why your dollar is worthless.
This is why homes cost $1 million.
This is why groceries doubled.
This is why food bank visits hit 2.2 million.
This is why your savings buy less every single year.
It’s not “global inflation.”
It’s a printing press that never stopped.
IT’S THE CANADIAN PESO.
The government devalued YOUR MONEY to fund spending it couldn’t afford.
@JiujitsuOtter 😭😭😭🤙🏼...what's equally astounding, is that a boxing or kickboxing athlete with a similar war path would also have these injuries, but internally...
⚡️ This is what pilots sometimes see above thunderstorms.
They’re called Red Sprites — massive electrical discharges that appear 30–50 miles above storms near the edge of space.
They last only milliseconds… which is why capturing them on camera is extremely rare. Nature still has secrets above the clouds.
@scrunkoelbunko@grizzlybizzly@JosonCernel@JiujitsuOtter Trying to engage in movements that would leave you wide open in a mma/self defense situation. Many old school BJJ guys agree, Rickson, Roger, Drysdale, etc... Modern bjj is evolving into something less and less effective for mma/self defense.
@Bodhizattva68@JiujitsuOtter The goal of bjj is to apply a submission, you can do leglocks if you can’t get to someone’s neck or isolate their arm. Yes wrestling is very manly
Pack them tight
Move them often
10-10-10 fertilizer doesn’t build soil, Ruminants do
Trust the native seed bank
Stop spraying your pastures
Build biodiversity in your pastures
Be consistent and trust the process
This is how reduce inputs and increase production
harrell gets up with textbook octopus guard
then smith back rolls to put his hips above harrell's head, get on top, and pound him out
good lesson here in getting up
reclaiming top position is less about absolute head / hip height & more about getting over your opponent's head
@Muskian_Realm@Rainmaker1973 The three cannabis strains studied were Cape Cookie, CBG, and Blue Sky (referred to as strains A, B, and C in the paper). Flavoalkaloids were found mainly in Blue Sky's leaves.
Many growers simply discard cannabis leaves as waste, but a new study suggests they're throwing away something potentially priceless.
Chemists at Stellenbosch University in South Africa used advanced chromatography and high-resolution mass spectrometry to uncover a rare class of compounds in cannabis leaves: flavoalkaloids. These molecules are extremely uncommon in nature and had never before been identified in cannabis. Known for powerful antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, flavoalkaloids show promise for treating cancer, chronic inflammation, and other conditions.
The researchers examined three cultivated cannabis strains and detected a total of 79 phenolic compounds, 25 of which were entirely new to cannabis science. Most strikingly, 16 of these were the rare flavoalkaloids, and they appeared predominantly in the leaves of just one strain.
The real surprise? These valuable compounds weren’t in the prized buds, but in the leaves that are routinely tossed after harvest.
Lead researcher Dr. Magriet Muller noted that cutting-edge analytical techniques made it possible to isolate these scarce molecules from the much more abundant flavonoids and other common compounds. Even seasoned cannabis chemists were taken aback by the findings.
While most research continues to focus on well-known cannabinoids like THC and CBD, this discovery reveals that cannabis chemistry is far richer and more complex than previously thought.
[“Comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatographic analysis of Cannabis phenolics…” Journal of Chromatography A, 2025]
@LandraceBureau I never threw out my leaves. After all the love I give my plants, the leaves are a gold mine.
Concentrates, edibles or at least compost.
Many growers simply discard cannabis leaves as waste, but a new study suggests they're throwing away something potentially priceless.
Chemists at Stellenbosch University in South Africa used advanced chromatography and high-resolution mass spectrometry to uncover a rare class of compounds in cannabis leaves: flavoalkaloids. These molecules are extremely uncommon in nature and had never before been identified in cannabis. Known for powerful antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, flavoalkaloids show promise for treating cancer, chronic inflammation, and other conditions.
The researchers examined three cultivated cannabis strains and detected a total of 79 phenolic compounds, 25 of which were entirely new to cannabis science. Most strikingly, 16 of these were the rare flavoalkaloids, and they appeared predominantly in the leaves of just one strain.
The real surprise? These valuable compounds weren’t in the prized buds, but in the leaves that are routinely tossed after harvest.
Lead researcher Dr. Magriet Muller noted that cutting-edge analytical techniques made it possible to isolate these scarce molecules from the much more abundant flavonoids and other common compounds. Even seasoned cannabis chemists were taken aback by the findings.
While most research continues to focus on well-known cannabinoids like THC and CBD, this discovery reveals that cannabis chemistry is far richer and more complex than previously thought.
[“Comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatographic analysis of Cannabis phenolics…” Journal of Chromatography A, 2025]