Ka Kali Kaya KB Kentucky Blue KGB Khalifa Ki Killa Kilter King Louie Kona Gold Kumba Kush. Jamaican Gold Jamaican Red Jane Jive Jon-Jem Joy Smoke Juanita Jungle Juice. Hairy Ones Hash Hawaiian Hay Hemp Herb Hierba Homegrown Hooch Humo Hydro Indian Boy Indian Hay. Gallito Garden Gauge Gangster Ganja Gash Gato Ghana Gigi Giggle Smoke Giggle Weed Girl Scout Cookies Gloria Gold Gold Leaf Gold Star Gong Good Giggles Gorilla Gorilla Glue Grand Daddy Purp Grass Grasshopper Green Green-Eyed Girl Green Eyes Green Goblin Green Goddess Green Mercedes-Benz Green Paint Green Skunk Grenuda Greta Guardada Gummy Bears Gunga. Eįine Stu Fire Flower Flower Tops Flu y Fuzzy Lady. Cĭank Dew Diesel Dimba Dinkie Dow Dirt Grass Ditch Weed Dizz Djamba Dody Dojo Domestic Donna Juana Doobie Downtown Brown Drag Weed Dro Droski Dry High. Bīaby Bale Bambalachacha Barbara Jean Bareta Bash BC Budd Bernie Bhang. Toklas All-Star Angola Animal Cookies Arizona Ashes Aunt Mary. AĪcapulco Gold Acapulco Red Ace African Black African Bush Airplane Alfombra Alice B. Of course, the list starts with a number, which could be the most popular: 420. That said, the DEA’s latest field bulletin on “Drug Slang Code Words,” released by the National Drug Early Warning System (a project funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse), will have you laughing and be sure to help connoisseurs of cannabis with their lexicon. In alphabetical order, here are slang terms that may not have ever heard or used, and others that you probably won’t ever use, period. That’s due to the ‘E’ in the acronym, along with the blatant ignorance that the agency has shown cannabis and its users, despite the evidence that shows how much good the herb can do. We couldn’t recommend something so cheaply constructed.OK, when it comes to weed (and most things, actually), the DEA isn’t what anyone would call a friendly face. The adhesive ring remained firmly stuck to the dashboard, but otherwise that floppy rubber mat was barely holding on. What was even more annoying, however, was that the anti-slip rubber mat on the bottom kept getting detached from the rubber base. However, it also limits access to the buttons on the side of your phone. The Boysnoy Dashboard Car Phone Holder was the only horizontal model we tested where the phone didn’t buckle under the pressure from our fingers. The iPow Anti-Slip Silicone Dashboard Pad suffered from a similar problem-although it came with a few custom rubber bracket options that you can adjust to fit different phones, they all turned out to be too wobbly. If you just want to look at horizontal maps, it could be great, but any other interaction with the phone was basically impossible. The Loncaster Car Phone Holder was probably the best of the batch we looked at unfortunately, the lightweight silicone base didn’t support phones very well against the pressure of a tapping finger. ![]() ![]() While they were all impressively stable across different dashboards, they each proved difficult to use in their own unique ways. We’d noticed that readers seemed to be interested in horizontally-oriented dashboard mounts, so we tested out several models that were either top sellers, or otherwise intriguing.
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