T
Teen_Juicer
Guest
no no nopdaddyII said:A nice Cuban would be good. i don't think the fruity blunt 'wraps' would be all that great. Kind of like choosing a fruity girly drink at the bar over a tasty home-brew
don't buy a good cigar for gettin blunted, they aren't rolled the same as cheapos and fall apart when split.
i made that mistake and wasted $12 on a good cigar.
i was a blunthead for about 3 months, right after i graduated college.
i worked with a bunch of ruffians who only smoked blunts on account of the low quality weed they blazed...i didn't like the harshness at first, but i soon grew accustomed to it and got megablazed even off dirt weed. it got to the point where i was buying a pack of phillies before work and smoking up the whole pack before the day was thru (with other people). needless to say i felt like shit and my lungs were shot. so i promptly quit and got me a pack of white girls instead. haven't touched a blunt in a few yrs, proly never again.
how to twist a blunt varies with brand. like i said before premium cigs just don't work, they are to fraile and fall apart. i suppose you could try the hollow out method but i wouldn't fug with it. phillies are the easiest to twist IMO. slice it down the middle, peel off the outside layer. this ladder step is extremely important, that outside layer is cheap garbage and is harsh as hell. no need to inhale more tobacco than necessary, though many forego this step, fuggin rookies. as well, in the mouth piece of cheap cigars is a piece of carboard to keep the butt from collapsing. remove this promptly, disgusting to smoke, it's goddamn carboard. moisten the outside and inside of the blunt, not too much though, too soggy and it will tear. personally i never used more than a gram or two of weed, pack it gently with your forefinger and work your way left to right or vice versa. if it feels a little loose when finished pinch one end and lightly shake untill it feels firm. tear off the excess tobacco and bam, you getting blazed.
another good brand is backwoods, good flavor and they stay nice and fresh in the seal pack. the techinque is different though, you have to unroll these instead of the slice method and it's a bit more difficult. the tobacco leaves have veins in them and you don't want this in your blunt, too harsh and they have a tendency to tear. so if you got a long enough leaf, tear and discard the vein.
something for the blunted