A Few Rules of the Thumb to Vaporize the Correct Way
Weed Vaporizers April 29th, 2008A Few Rules of the Thumb to Vaporize the Correct Way
Hot Element: It is important to draw quickly so as to not burn the herbs. As the element cools down, you may decrease the speed of your draw.
Slow Element: To create the vapor, you need to draw slow, ensuring that it is not too slow, which will burn the herbs, creating smoke.
Even armed with all this knowledge, vaporizing needs a little experimentation, and very soon you will know the style that suits you perfectly. It is all a matter of preference really.
What is the indication that all herbs have been used?
This is one of the most often asked clarifications about vaporizing and there is no perfect answer. It is really hard to say as it depends on the herb vaporizer used.
However, we can give you some pointers:
Color: When the color of the herbs changes from green to brown, it could be an indication that the herbs are spent. If they turn black, you have far exceeded the time.
Flavor: It is common to see herbs changing flavor once their essence has been devoured. Many herbs smell like burnt popcorn at this stage. In order to avoid going to such extremes, you need to learn to detect the changing flavor.
Vapor: Another great indication is, herbs fail to produce vapor at normal temperature, once they are spent. Once this happens, you must make sure you do not force the vapor out of the herbs by resorting to slow drawing on a heated element. This only results in burning the herbs and producing smoke, which is exactly what you are trying to avoid.
Whatever the vaporizer you use, you will get a hang of things after a few uses. Hope this has been a useful guide to vaporizing. Please feel free to contact us for any further information.







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