Someone is going to be up all night chain vaping those two.
I'm up late anyway.. might as well enjoy myself!
Someone is going to be up all night chain vaping those two.
So, now ECF is stating that sub-ohm vaping is a danger to your health on the sub-ohm threads. .................. is calling it BS. I think ECF makes it's case, at least enough to take pause and do more reading. VU says ECF has no scientific proof to back up their statement. Well, VU hasn't got any proof it's not a danger to our health. I am becoming a bit leery of this Vapor Joe guy. I've listened to his show and I think he has some knee-jerk reactions to some issues. His vaping Deals page is a decent source for sales and discounts but it's always been 50% Fastech. I think I'll stay at 1.3 ohms until I hear more.
That Voo Doo Queen has nuances upon nuances and the top note is really hard to describe. One of my favorites.
So, now ECF is stating that sub-ohm vaping is a danger to your health on the sub-ohm threads. .................. is calling it BS. I think ECF makes it's case, at least enough to take pause and do more reading. VU says ECF has no scientific proof to back up their statement. Well, VU hasn't got any proof it's not a danger to our health. I am becoming a bit leery of this Vapor Joe guy. I've listened to his show and I think he has some knee-jerk reactions to some issues. His Vaping Deals page is a decent source for sales and discounts but it's always been 50% Fastech. I think I'll stay at 1.3 ohms until I hear more.
Well, I feel there is definitely merit to the advisory, which is all it is -- just like what is in the DIY forum.
Well, the Queen certainly showed me who the boss was this evening. I wicked a KFL with Rayon and about 1/2 hour into it, she went Nah Uh! that's not right.. do it again!
So I did! and we then settled in for a beautiful couple of hours together.
Smokey Latakia..always omnipresent. It surrounds the other lesser players in this juice and carries them within itself. There's harmony happening here. So many different players coming together to make sweet music. Burley, Perique, Virginia making themselves known at a lot lower level. There's no "funk" going on here from the Perique, but it's there. It's definitely there. You can feel it's presence on your tongue.
Mocha?! I don't get that at all. Maybe something lost in translation from tobacco to extract, perhaps.
I like this one a lot, but am I going to be able to handle the Queen for long periods of time? I really don't know..
Every tobacco lover should try this one at least once.. a week!
Thank you for introducing me to the Queen, Boomer!
Oh, the mocha will show up don't you worry. In about another week you'll taste it and damned if you can't almost distinguish the different burleys in there. One is nutty but there's a woodsy kind of flavor, the only way I can describe as green or wet wood campfire smoke.
Dusty,
I don't remember a company ever being mentioned by name in either Part of the thread, but that doesn't mean that you're wrong. My brain is just as likely to be fuzzy as yours is.
By the way, I have no interest in buying any steam-distilled natural tobacco extract. I ask about HHV's source purely from the standpoint of wanting fuller disclosure of what's in the retail liquids we vape. Some of what motivates that wish comes from the health standpoint, since we don't know the long-term health implications of vaping natural tobacco extracts, but more of it is linked to my curiosity about the specific tobaccos used to make the extracts that flavor our NETs. Another part is philosophical---I favor and lean more toward "open source" than toward "proprietary secrets." That's one of the practices I appreciate from Diane at MVJ. She lists the tobaccos used for each of her 2nd and 3rd generation cigar and pipe NETs.
As an aside, I feel much the same way about non-tobacco flavorings, whether natural or lab-based. The vaping consumer interested in DIY has access to the major players in the flavoring industry as it adapts to vaping: TPA/TFA, FlavourArt, Capella, LorAnn, Hangsen and other Chinese flavoring lines, Inawera, Nature's Flavors Organics, Decadent Vapours, and a bunch of other smaller outfits. And yes, some juice vendors use these companies to flavor their retail eliquids. But other companies use flavorings from more arcane sources. Who are these other companies that generally remain invisible to the retail DIY vaping consumer? How did vendors find them? And how do we find them?
It's poorly written and there's way too much that can be left open to interpretation. I don't really want to touch it because of how some of the mods are, but I'm sure I'll have a fun chat with you about it in the future.![]()
It's poorly written and there's way too much that can be left open to interpretation. I don't really want to touch it because of how some of the mods are, but I'm sure I'll have a fun chat with you about it in the future.![]()
Black Gold is a rich, smooth smoking marriage of Black and Aged Maduro Cavendish mixed with a light vanilla casing, mahogany colored Burley, and just the right touch of Virginia Flake for added sweetness. This blend has a pleasant room note and offers up some tasty nuances, including dark chocolate, black coffee, and subtle hints of vanilla. Black Gold pairs very nicely with a cup of coffee!
It's poorly written and there's way too much that can be left open to interpretation. I don't really want to touch it because of how some of the mods are, but I'm sure I'll have a fun chat with you about it in the future.![]()
So, what you're saying is that I need to finish this bottle in under a week if I don't want to confuse the heck out of myself.![]()
Ray, of course I am not invoking your voice or saying you don't understand the issues, but too many people are quick to say "dude, its perfectly safe" when many of them have no clue about what's even being addressed. Frankly, I know enough of the science to tell me I don't know enough about the science to say that. At least that advisory makes it possible for those that didn't know to see what some of the possible issues are (even though it left a lot open).
Dusty,
I don't remember a company ever being mentioned by name in either Part of the thread, but that doesn't mean that you're wrong. My brain is just as likely to be fuzzy as yours is.
By the way, I have no interest in buying any steam-distilled natural tobacco extract. I ask about HHV's source purely from the standpoint of wanting fuller disclosure of what's in the retail liquids we vape. Some of what motivates that wish comes from the health standpoint, since we don't know the long-term health implications of vaping natural tobacco extracts, but more of it is linked to my curiosity about the specific tobaccos used to make the extracts that flavor our NETs. Another part is philosophical---I favor and lean more toward "open source" than toward "proprietary secrets." That's one of the practices I appreciate from Diane at MVJ. She lists the tobaccos used for each of her 2nd and 3rd generation cigar and pipe NETs.
As an aside, I feel much the same way about non-tobacco flavorings, whether natural or lab-based. The vaping consumer interested in DIY has access to the major players in the flavoring industry as it adapts to vaping: TPA/TFA, FlavourArt, Capella, LorAnn, Hangsen and other Chinese flavoring lines, Inawera, Nature's Flavors Organics, Decadent Vapours, and a bunch of other smaller outfits. And yes, some juice vendors use these companies to flavor their retail eliquids. But other companies use flavorings from more arcane sources. Who are these other companies that generally remain invisible to the retail DIY vaping consumer? How did vendors find them? And how do we find them?
The other big source of organic flavors (besides NF) is Medicine Flower. Expensive but super potent (but still expensive even compensating for that) I recognize their flavors in a number of vendor juices. The have a CO2 extracted organic tobacco sourced from bulgaria. I found that steeping it in VG and then filtering it cut out the problem of cloudy liquid and it vapes pretty clean after that.
I have found that most alternative flavor houses have minimum order quantities that would cut most DIYers out. Who needs a gallon of one flavor?