I had the ohaus, lol ..... family businessCan anyone top this for "old-school? LOL
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And the guy you bought it from had the expensive triple-beam scale
A quarter bag was about a quarter of a fold-n-close sandwich bag, and an ounce or "lid" you had to weigh by the flap because you couldn't close the "lid"I had the ohaus, lol ..... family business
Those were handy though, double check the calibration with a nickel 5g. lol
Damn that reminds me of high school and the 80’s. I’m trippin, haven’t seen a finger scale in a minute! Thanks for the trip down memory lane. I’m happy to not have to worry about weight anymore. But nowadays 20 bucks will get you a scale that’s as accurate and a fraction of the time to use, digital. How times have changed, the ohaus I had was a $350 scale. If I remember right i got one of those finger scales at a headshop for like 15 or 20 bucks back in the day.
Back when dudes selling had class and rep for the most part.A quarter bag was about a quarter of a fold-n-close sandwich bag, and an ounce or "lid" you had to weigh by the flap because you couldn't close the "lid"All the mail-scale was for was to make sure it was "at least" LOL
Ever have the beaded-feathered roach clip dangling from the rear-view? The one your girl clipped in her hair if you got pulled over LOLBack when dudes selling had class and rep for the most part.
I got 3 & 4 finger bags back in the day for 30 & 40 bucks, That was old schoolA quarter bag was about a quarter of a fold-n-close sandwich bag, and an ounce or "lid" you had to weigh by the flap because you couldn't close the "lid"All the mail-scale was for was to make sure it was "at least" LOL
In school late 70's early 80's, a nickel, dime, quarter etc. was what you were paying ($5, $10, $25), not what it weighed. A quarter was usually about a quarter of a sandwich bag. And when you rolled it up it better be more like a burrito than a cigarI got 3 & 4 finger bags back in the day for 30 & 40 bucks, That was old school
I wasn’t connected to the general market as I only sold some to certain homies, I grew up in grow families so I got lowers and larf from outdoor for free. I only sold nickels and dimes, but it wasn’t usual to sell it honestly. Mostly if I needed some cash in a pinch and the agreement was free weed as long as I kept it to my self. They didn’t want it to show up locally.In school late 70's early 80's, a nickel, dime, quarter etc. was what you were paying ($5, $10, $25), not what it weighed. A quarter was usually about a quarter of a sandwich bag. And when you rolled it up it better be more like a burrito than a cigar[the cigar was a dime LOL].
I think it took about $5 to fill the tank on my Nova though, so it's all relative.
No one grew where I was, except for your odd plant in the woods. I was the entrepreneur that had an after school job in construction since before high school, so I bought a pound when I found a good one and never really paid again. I'd smoke the profit and buy more.I wasn’t connected to the general market as I only sold some to certain homies, I grew up in grow families so I got lowers and larf from outdoor for free. I only sold nickels and dimes, but it wasn’t usual to sell it honestly. Mostly if I needed some cash in a pinch and the agreement was free weed as long as I kept it to my self. They didn’t want it to show up locally.