When it was sold as herbal incense, it was JWH-18 (invented by a Clemson professor years ago). Since the DEA suspension of JWH-18, it is sold as potpourri and the main chemical is a variation of JWH-18.
Bayou Blaster was created in 2000.
Bayou Blaster ended in 2005.
Yes. Bayou Blaster is a type of synthetic marijuana( which doesn't contain THC) so you can pass a urine test or any other type of drug testing.
If your referring to the potpourri, it says on the package not meant for human consumption.
bayou blaster is an herbal blend of aromatic potpourri. The results of the first very small toke were just like weed. Second toke resulted in extreme lightheadedness, dizziness's, then 30 minutes of vomiting until my wife fed me some Imitrex to stop the nausea which worked. $15 for 1.5grams of hell....no thank you
The houses in the bayou are called stilt houses or pile houses. Bayou waters can rise very high in the summer months durring the monsoon and rainy seasons.
no it shouldent as of right now there is only one company making a drug test for it and it is very inconvientient and you have to test spicifically for it so no worries
blaster any time any were i can beat a 250 raptor with my 240 blaster by 18 links and now the kid wont even race me any more because he gets mad.
bayou is the same thing in Spanish: bayou
The blue bayou dahlia grows to about 4 feet high. It has a blue lavender set of outer petals and a darker lavender pin cushion center.
Bayou Blast: 1/2 tbsp Paprika; 2 tbsp Salt; 2 tbsp Garlic powder; 1 tbsp Black pepper; 1 tbsp Onion powder; 1 tbsp Cayenne pepper; 1 tbsp Dried oregano; 1 tbsp Dried thyme. Combine all ingredients thoroughly.
One famous bayou is the Bayou Teche in Louisiana.