![]() Possibly a joint with a lot of seeds in it, and it gets a smell like burned plastic when you smoke it. BummerĪ derogatory term for cheap, inferior, regular-grade cannabis. Nor are we interested in cannabis with questionable taste, effectiveness and look. None of us are really ok with buying from an illicit marketplace where the risk of inhaling mold or a deadly pesticide are acceptable because Reggie is cheaper than legal weed. To some, it may do the job it’s intended for, while others are interested in a better quality with known effects and regulated growth. Reggie does not represent a specific strain or label, but in fact is usually grown outdoors in questionable surroundings with questionable techniques, and then it’s packaged in a very generic way. It’s not worthy of a special name…we just look at it as “regular weed.” Compare “Grey Goose” to no name vodka…Nothing distinctive but it gets you buzzed. It’s regular weed that is considered the bottom of the barrel in today’s cannabis markets. Reggie weed is a successor to brick weed. Remember “brick weed?” Dealers used to package marijuana "bricks" with questionable quality and an unexplained origin in plastic. It’s like some whiskey drinkers prefer cheap whisky, even the home-grown variety, for some reason to the good stuff. But frankly, those users are very much in the minority. Reggie weed is often a decision made because of budget, although in fairness, some users like the Reggie weed flavor and texture when compared to high-quality weed. But if these same users were to sample high quality weed vs Reggie weed for only a small difference in price, they would immediately make a decision to never use Reggie weed again. Reggie weed, also known as "ordinary weed," "trash," or similar terms, is frequently used by young people or first-time marijuana users since it is less expensive and simple to obtain. Its quality is called into question because of the terrible way it looks and feels and especially…tastes. Reggie is a street name given to very low-quality weed of questionable origin. If you are going to ingest or smoke weed, it should be of good quality and somehow regulated. Why would you substitute an unregulated, questionable quality cannabis, when for very little more money, you can be totally satisfied that you have a good product that adheres to health and government standards and is regulated by the government. Although Reggie weed is not unsafe, it is of very questionable quality. ![]() Today’s legalized regulations and standards are not applied to people selling Reggie weed. The smell can be strange, often like skunk or cheap perfume. Its quality is poor and has no standards or regulations that it must adhere to. Reggie weed does not meet those expectations. In fact, state governments are actually setting official standards for a much higher quality and regulated cannabis product. Today, as legal cannabis markets expand, users expect a much higher standard of quality in their cannabis. The legitimizing of cannabis, and both medical and recreational legalization in many states has created a new expectation for cannabis users. Medical cannabis is now legal in 37 states, and recreational cannabis is legal in 19 states. Over the past ten years, the entire cannabis market has changed. ![]() Reggie weed is short for regular weed – cannabis of questionable origin and quality. In a financial pinch and want to get a little high? That’s probably the only reason to buy Reggie weed. Reggie weed is usually grown outdoors with negligeable supplies like fertilizer and growth enhancers and very little quality control. It’s of low quality and generally not worth your hard-earned money. Reggie weed is actually an abbreviation for “regular weed.” It is probably something that you should not seek out and definitely not use.
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