Full Black Ruthenium, Gold Plated 24k. Wooden gift box and theme cover. Certificate with a serial number. 2nd Coin in successful series BURNING MARIJUANA.
Symbolic mintage of the coin is 420 pcs. 1 oz of pure 99.99% silver. Innovative unique design coin with full Ruthenium and partial Gold finishing.
Its uniqueness is guaranteed by the extremely low mintage. We are happy to present the 2nd coin of the BURNING MARIJUANA Series. This silver coin has been fully plated with Black Ruthenium, and color. This series is going to have an extremely low mintage of 420 coins.420, 4:20, or 4/20 (pronounced four-twenty) is a code-term that refers to the consumption of cannabis, especially smoking cannabis around the time 4:20 p. And smoking and celebrating cannabis on the date April 20 4/20 in U. A group of people in San Rafael, California, calling themselves the Waldos because "their chosen hang-out spot was a wall outside the school", used the term in connection with a fall 1971 plan to search for an abandoned cannabis crop that they had learned about, based on a treasure map made by the grower.
The Waldos designated the Louis Pasteur statue on the grounds of San Rafael High School as their meeting place, and 4:20 p. The Waldos referred to this plan with the phrase "4:20 Louis". Several failed attempts to find the crop eventually shortened their phrase to simply "4:20", which ultimately evolved into a codeword that the teens used to mean marijuana-smoking in general. Mike Edison says that Steven Hager of High Times was responsible for taking the story about the Waldos to "mind-boggling, cult-like extremes" and "suppressing" all other stories about the origin of the term.
Hager wrote Stoner Smart or Stoner Stupid? In which he called for 4:20 p. To be the socially accepted hour of the day to consume cannabis. He attributes the early spread of the phrase to Grateful Dead followers, who were also linked to the city of San Rafael. Formally known as Cannabis sativa forma indica, is an annual plant in the Cannabaceae family.
A putative species of the genus Cannabis. In 1785, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck published a description of a second species of Cannabis, which he named Cannabis indica. Lamarck based his description of the newly named species on plant specimens collected in India. Richard Evans Schultes described C. Indica as relatively short, conical, and densely branched, whereas C.Sativa was described as tall and laxly branched. Indica plants as having short, broad leaflets whereas those of C. Sativa were characterized as relatively long and narrow. Cannabis indica plants conforming to Schultes's and Anderson's descriptions may have originated from the Hindu Kush mountain range.
Because of the often harsh and variable (extremely cold winters, and warm summers) climate of those parts, C. Indica is well-suited for cultivation in temperate climates.