I found this article in my surfing, I thought to pass it on.
Ron Ward, the lawyer with the Parkville vape shop, tries to be tolerant about cloud chasers. Im libertarian by nature, he explains, so, I have no problem with it at all. But he clearly does, based on what he says next: If you do blow industrial size clouds of vapor in public, its going to ruin it for the rest of us. Its going to be what they point to when they say these things should be banned indoors, because people are being disrespectful. It honestly creates such a...n immense amount of vapor that it could be offensive to a lot of people. Its offensive to me, and Im a vaper.
Cloud chasing started in the Phillipines, Ward continues, Id say its been a year and a half, and its become very, very popular. Culturally, it seems to be mostly young people and hobbyists, people in their 20s who like to rebuild things and want to build something that makes the most vapor. Or people like 48-year-old Hoff, who says he wore a blue Mohawk for part of his six years on the police force, and the last thing most people would think when looking at him is ex-cop. But Willard, who looks every bit the ex-cop, echoes Wards concerns. While cloud chasers do it everywhere because its fun and they enjoy it, Willard says, sometimes people arent responsible. If they really thought about the future of vaping, they wouldnt sit in a Chuck-E-Cheese and sub-ohm and blow a cloud, because the perception of that cloud, after years of indoctrination of what smoke is, people dont understand it. And then they get fearful for their kids.
I do like the idea of having clouds, but, I guess I will keep an eye on it.
Ron Ward, the lawyer with the Parkville vape shop, tries to be tolerant about cloud chasers. Im libertarian by nature, he explains, so, I have no problem with it at all. But he clearly does, based on what he says next: If you do blow industrial size clouds of vapor in public, its going to ruin it for the rest of us. Its going to be what they point to when they say these things should be banned indoors, because people are being disrespectful. It honestly creates such a...n immense amount of vapor that it could be offensive to a lot of people. Its offensive to me, and Im a vaper.
Cloud chasing started in the Phillipines, Ward continues, Id say its been a year and a half, and its become very, very popular. Culturally, it seems to be mostly young people and hobbyists, people in their 20s who like to rebuild things and want to build something that makes the most vapor. Or people like 48-year-old Hoff, who says he wore a blue Mohawk for part of his six years on the police force, and the last thing most people would think when looking at him is ex-cop. But Willard, who looks every bit the ex-cop, echoes Wards concerns. While cloud chasers do it everywhere because its fun and they enjoy it, Willard says, sometimes people arent responsible. If they really thought about the future of vaping, they wouldnt sit in a Chuck-E-Cheese and sub-ohm and blow a cloud, because the perception of that cloud, after years of indoctrination of what smoke is, people dont understand it. And then they get fearful for their kids.
I do like the idea of having clouds, but, I guess I will keep an eye on it.