Alan Park Interview with ceo from Canada's Smallest Lp, actually Worth a listen?

itsmehigh

Well-Known Member
up tp 4000 per day actually, some weeks..

1000 mg every 4 hours is nothing really
one 00 cap every 4 hours..
Maybe my math is off but 1000mg is roughly 50+ grams of flower. So 4000mg is 200 grams. If you don’t grow how can you afford your meds? Even at $0.20 a gram that’s $1200 a month.

Itsme.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
Maybe my math is off but 1000mg is roughly 50+ grams of flower. So 4000mg is 200 grams. If you don’t grow how can you afford your meds? Even at $0.20 a gram that’s $1200 a month.

Itsme.
a gram of oil is one "00" cap

its MORE per gram buying it lol..geeeesus dude...wake up!
20 cents growin yer own
you get anywhere from 3 to say 5 grams an oz..figure it out

Here’s how to do it:

1 gram of cannabis = 1000 milligrams

10% of 1000 milligrams is 100 milligrams

This means that, assuming we are using “average” marijuana, one gram of cannabis contains 100 milligrams of THC.

Are you with me so far?

Next, let’s calculate how many milligrams are in a batch of marijuana butter.

As an example, let’s say I used one ounce (equaling 28 grams) of average quality marijuana to make one cup of butter. That would mean 2800 milligrams of THC went into that one cup of butter.

Moving on, the amount of THC in a given recipe will depend on the amount of butter used.

If I used 1/2 cup of that butter to make a batch of 36 cookies, then 

the entire batch would contain 1400 milligrams. Divide 1400 mg by the number of servings, in this case 36, to determine that each cookie will contain about 38.8 milligrams of THC.

To recap, first you need to estimate the percentage of THC in your plant material (or use the numbers from the lab test) and divide that into 1000 to get the per milligram amount.

Next, calculate the number of milligrams in your infusion and in the amount of infusion you will use to make your recipe. Divide that by the number of servings your recipe makes, and you will know the per serving dose.

You can use this formula to create recipes that always ensure you are delivering a THC dose that meets your needs.

If you find a given recipe delivers too strong of a dose, cut the amount of cannabutter or oil and dilute with regular butter or oil to make up the difference. Cookies not strong enough? Add more THC to your recipe with some decarboxylated kief, hash or hash oil.

I hope you grasp the dosage calculation concept. If not, don’t worry; click to the free dosing class for another example and access to the dosage calculator tool that will do all the work for you.
 
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itsmehigh

Well-Known Member
Maybe my math is off but 1000mg is roughly 50+ grams of flower. So 4000mg is 200 grams. If you don’t grow how can you afford your meds? Even at $0.20 a gram that’s $1200 a month.

Itsme.
Ya my math was off, I was assuming you were using quality at 20% thc and needing 5g to get 1000mg not 50. So basically an oz - 2 oz per day to achieve 4000mg, depending on quality.

Itsme.
 

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
a gram of oil is one "00" cap

its MORE per gram buying it lol..geeeesus dude...wake up!
20 cents growin yer own
you get anywhere from 3 to say 5 grams an oz..figure it out

Here’s how to do it:

1 gram of cannabis = 1000 milligrams

10% of 1000 milligrams is 100 milligrams

This means that, assuming we are using “average” marijuana, one gram of cannabis contains 100 milligrams of THC.

Are you with me so far?

Next, let’s calculate how many milligrams are in a batch of marijuana butter.

As an example, let’s say I used one ounce (equaling 28 grams) of average quality marijuana to make one cup of butter. That would mean 2800 milligrams of THC went into that one cup of butter.

Moving on, the amount of THC in a given recipe will depend on the amount of butter used.

If I used 1/2 cup of that butter to make a batch of 36 cookies, then 

the entire batch would contain 1400 milligrams. Divide 1400 mg by the number of servings, in this case 36, to determine that each cookie will contain about 38.8 milligrams of THC.

To recap, first you need to estimate the percentage of THC in your plant material (or use the numbers from the lab test) and divide that into 1000 to get the per milligram amount.

Next, calculate the number of milligrams in your infusion and in the amount of infusion you will use to make your recipe. Divide that by the number of servings your recipe makes, and you will know the per serving dose.

You can use this formula to create recipes that always ensure you are delivering a THC dose that meets your needs.

If you find a given recipe delivers too strong of a dose, cut the amount of cannabutter or oil and dilute with regular butter or oil to make up the difference. Cookies not strong enough? Add more THC to your recipe with some decarboxylated kief, hash or hash oil.

I hope you grasp the dosage calculation concept. If not, don’t worry; click to the free dosing class for another example and access to the dosage calculator tool that will do all the work for you.
Wow....the most concise answer I think you've ever given, and it makes sense...lol...
 
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