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  1. Cannabis is the most widely used illegal drug in New Zealand and the fourth-most widely used recreational drug after caffeine, alcohol and tobacco. The usage by those aged between 16–64 is 13.4%, the ninth-highest level of consumption in the world, and 15.1% of those who smoked cannabis used it ten times or more per month.

  2. Blue Dream. Industry trade name for sativa -dominant hybrid strain. [59] Blue Goo. Industry trade name for sativa -dominant hybrid strain, a mix of Blue Dream and Agoo, a combination of which gives it its name. [59] [69] Bruce Banner. Industry trade name for cannabis strain.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HashishHashish - Wikipedia

    Hashish ( Arabic: حشيش, ( IPA: [ħæʃiːʃ] )), commonly shortened to hash, is an oleoresin made by compressing and processing parts of the cannabis plant, typically focusing on flowering buds (female flowers) containing the most trichomes. [2] [3] It is consumed as a psychoactive drug by smoking, typically in a pipe, bong, vaporizer or ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SebsiSebsi - Wikipedia

    Sebsi. A sebsi or sibsi ( Berber: ⵙⴱⵙⵉ) is a traditional Moroccan cannabis pipe with a narrow clay bowl called a skuff (or shkaff ), with a fine metal screen. To this a hardwood stem is attached, which may be up to 46 cm (18 in) long. The sebsi has traditionally been used to smoke kief, which in Morocco refers to the best parts of the ...

  5. Cannabis in New Mexico is legal for recreational use as of June 29, 2021. A bill to legalize recreational use – House Bill 2, the Cannabis Regulation Act – was signed by Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham on April 12, 2021. The first licensed sales of recreational cannabis began on April 1, 2022. Medical use was legalized in 2007 through a ...

  6. The 2006 UN World Drug Report estimated that 2.6% of Guyanese age 15-64 had used cannabis that year, and as of 2009 it was reported as the most prevalent drug in the country. Production. Cannabis is generally sold within Guyana, rather than trafficked abroad.

  7. History. In the Irish Free State, cannabis and cannabis resin were first prohibited by the Dangerous Drugs Act 1934, which came into force on 1 April 1937. The 1934 act replaced the Dangerous Drugs Act 1920 (a UK act passed before the Free State's creation) and fulfilled the state's obligations under the 1925 revision of the International Opium Convention, which had added Indian hemp to the ...

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