• Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Write For Us
  • Our Team
Extraction Magazine
No Result
View All Result
  • Botanical Extraction
    • Cannabinoids
    • Psychedelics
    • Nutraceutical
    • Product Refinement
  • Industry News
    • Business
    • Sustainability
    • Safety & Compliance
    • Partners
  • Extraction Technology
    • Equipment
    • Methods
    • Solvents
    • DIY Extraction
    • Analytical Techniques
  • Medical Research
  • Glossary
  • Business Directory
  • Botanical Extraction
    • Cannabinoids
    • Psychedelics
    • Nutraceutical
    • Product Refinement
  • Industry News
    • Business
    • Sustainability
    • Safety & Compliance
    • Partners
  • Extraction Technology
    • Equipment
    • Methods
    • Solvents
    • DIY Extraction
    • Analytical Techniques
  • Medical Research
  • Glossary
  • Business Directory
No Result
View All Result
Extraction Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home Industry News

Cannabis Concentrates are Getting More Accessible. Before Taking Your First Dab, Here’s What You Should Know

Shared Content by Shared Content
September 26, 2018
in Industry News
Cannabis Concentrates are Getting More Accessible. Before Taking Your First Dab, Here’s What You Should Know

READ ALSO

How AI-Designed Formulas Just Cracked the $2.3B Terpene Code

Cannabis Extracts Market Projected at US $16.6 B in 2025

Data show that cannabis concentrates are getting increasingly more popular in Oregon.

For the casual weed consumer, dabbing can seem like the final frontier.

In the purest terms, it involves inhaling highly concentrated doses of THC, leading to a much more potent high than smoking raw flower. To the uninitiated, the process—involving a blowtorch, metal “nails” and oil-like substances with names like “shatter,” “wax” and “crumble”—brings to mind much more illicit forms of drug consumption, and the potential for getting way more stoned than desired seems high. In short, it’s intimidating.

But data show that cannabis concentrates are getting increasingly more popular in Oregon. While vapes still control that corner of the market, sales of live resin and wax are up 242 and 138 percent, respectively, from last year, and concentrates overall command the second-highest percentage of market share.

It is perhaps a sign that, as the state’s recreational cannabis industry matures, elevated forms of consumption, such as dabbing, are growing more accessible. But how do you know if you’re ready to make the leap? We asked Jordan Jacobsen, founder of extraction lab and dispensary Portland Extracts, a few basic questions about how to get started.

WW: How do I know if I’m ready to dab?

Jordan Jacobsen: I think it happens with people in two different ways. Someone who has smoked a lot of flower and is interested in new types of cannabis products—maybe they’ve smoked flower for a long period of time and maybe it’s not giving them the desired effect it once was. It could also be pure health. Some people don’t like to combust. They don’t like to have actual smoke from a flame go into their lungs, so they vape it. And that’s what dabbing is—it’s just vaping.

How does the high differ?

It [depends on] whether or not the company then adds back the natural terpenes for that product. Your extracts, your shatters, your live resins—those are all going to be very flavorful. All those terpenes, all those oils, those have also been concentrated in the extraction process, so the flavors of those oils and the effects of those terpenes are much more prevalent in a shatter or an extract.

What are the benefits of dabbing?

It’s going to be much less harsh on your lungs and your body as a whole. Other benefits, obviously, are medicinal. If someone is truly using a product for medicinal purposes, usually flower doesn’t get them to that medicinal level they need to be at, so that’s why they turn to a more concentrated product, like an extract, so they can receive their medicine appropriately rather than having to smoke massive amounts of flower. From a flavor aspect and a health aspect, I think it’s a wise choice, if used appropriately.

What’s your recommendation for starting out?

We like to say, and we’re supposed to say, there’s 25 servings per gram. It’s a very small portion of the gram—1/25th.

In terms of shopping for a dab rig, what should I be looking for?

Don’t spend the much money at first. Get basic stuff and don’t go too crazy, and make sure it’s something you want to invest in. But what I usually suggest to people is go small, test it out, and if it’s something you feel can enhance your life, look at things like Instagram, poke your head into glass shops. There are great little pieces out there people can get for under $100.

Are there ways to smoke without a dab rig?

Pens are sold everywhere—those are very popular for on-the-go dabs. I don’t recommend combusting oil. I can’t tell you how many people come in to buy a gram for their bowls. Depending on the consistency, you can [combust]—especially with solventless products. You can get a crumble and sprinkle that on a bowl and it’ll combust decently. But then you can also get a very runny or sappy-type extract and something like that will just get your weed wet and probably ruin your joint.

Is it possible to bake into an edible?

That’s a big thing a lot of people do. They might not even dab or vape, but they will come in, buy 5 grams of oil and make 100 edibles. Not a lot of people understand that all you have to do is throw a gram of shatter or oil on the cooking tray, and once you decarb it, it’s fully live and active. You can put that right into your butter. If you want your money to go a long way, that’s how to stretch it with cannabis.

Have you ever accidentally gotten too high yourself?

Maybe when I was kid, when I just smoking flower back then. When I was a little 16-year-old, I’ve probably been too high. But that’s neither here nor there.

A Consumer’s Guide to Cannabis Consumption

A Beginner’s Guide to Eating Edibles

Liv Vasquez Wants Her Highbrow Edibles to Show the World That Stoner Culture Isn’t Just Brownies and Basements

Three Easy Cannabis-Infused Recipes for Fall

In Portland, You Can Drink CBD-Infused Beverages From Morning Till Night. So We Did

Should You Give Your Dog CBD? We Asked Portland Veterinarians

From the Bath to the Bedroom, Here are Seven Cannabis-Infused Topicals You’ve Got to Try

Cannabis Concentrates are Getting More Accessible. Before Taking Your First Dab, Here’s What You Should Know

Original Article: https://www.wweek.com/culture/2018/09/25/cannabis-concentrates-are-getting-more-accessible-before-taking-your-first-dab-heres-what-you-should-know/

Related Posts

AI-powered cannabis cultivation system optimizing terpene and cannabinoid production with real-time data analytics
Business

How AI-Designed Formulas Just Cracked the $2.3B Terpene Code

July 14, 2025
Cannabis oil and concentrates representing the booming extracts market projected at $16.6 billion in 2025
Business

Cannabis Extracts Market Projected at US $16.6 B in 2025

July 7, 2025
Transparent cannabis leave, sci-fi, futuristic-looking, in a lab setting.
Business

AI & IoT‑Powered Process Control in Cannabis Extraction Is Here

July 1, 2025
Green Extraction Techniques
Sustainability

Green Extraction Techniques and Smart Solvents for Bioactive Recovery

June 25, 2025
Industrial supercritical CO2 extraction equipment in modern processing facility showing market growth to $75 million in 2025
Industry News

CO₂ Reigns Supreme: How a “Magic” Gas Just Conquered a $75M Market

June 2, 2025
A vision for the cannabis business
Business

Cannabis Business In South America

May 1, 2025
Next Post
Water-Soluble Cannabinoids

Water-Soluble Cannabinoids

LATEST ARTICLES

Modern CBD extraction equipment in a commercial cannabis processing facility

CBD‑Specific Gear Hits US $65 M Market Milestone

September 22, 2025
Buffalo Hybrid Extraction System

Multi‑Tech Platforms: Hybrid Extraction On Tap

July 20, 2025
AI-powered cannabis cultivation system optimizing terpene and cannabinoid production with real-time data analytics

How AI-Designed Formulas Just Cracked the $2.3B Terpene Code

July 14, 2025
Cannabis oil and concentrates representing the booming extracts market projected at $16.6 billion in 2025

Cannabis Extracts Market Projected at US $16.6 B in 2025

July 7, 2025

Subscribe Now

Subscribe to our newsletter now to receive quick updates from us



    Background
    About

    Extraction Magazine is the trusted provider of botanical extraction news, ever-changing politics, cool gadgets and technologies, and methods for producing safe, ethical, and compliant formulations.

    Advertisers
    Navigation
    • Botanical Extraction
    • Industry News
    • Extraction Technology
    • Medical Research
    • Glossary
    • Business Directory
    Recent Posts
    • CBD‑Specific Gear Hits US $65 M Market Milestone
    • Multi‑Tech Platforms: Hybrid Extraction On Tap
    • How AI-Designed Formulas Just Cracked the $2.3B Terpene Code
    • Cannabis Extracts Market Projected at US $16.6 B in 2025
    Subscribe to our Newsletter
    loader

    Sitemap

    © 2025 Extraction Magazine is the trusted provider of botanical extraction news and the leading media in the ever-changing extraction industry.

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Industry News
    • Botanical Extraction
    • Medical Research
    • Medical Research
    • Glossary
    • Our Team
    • Write For Us

    © 2023 Extraction Magazine is the trusted provider of botanical extraction news and the leading media in the ever-changing extraction industry.