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[page_header height="600px" align="center"] [gap height="50px"]Rick Simpson Oil (RSO) in Madison County, Alabama: The Complete Guide by OilWell Cannabis Madison County deserves the truth about cannabis medicine. Not the recycled internet hype. Not the fear-mongering. The actual science, the real history, and honest answers about what works, what doesn't, and what's possible right here in Huntsville, Madison, and across our corner of North Alabama. We’re OilWell Cannabis, a Houston-based cannabinoid company built from the ground up by people who’ve lived through medical failure, pharmaceutical dependence, and the desperation that comes when conventional medicine runs out of options. We write to you today because Madison County faces the same challenges we see everywhere: chronic pain patients cycling through ineffective prescriptions, veterans wrestling with PTSD in a community surrounded by military installations, cancer patients searching for supportive care options, and everyday Alabamians trying to understand if this "RSO" they've heard about is real, legal, or safe. We’re not here to sell you hope. We’re here to give you the complete education that people in Madison County — from engineers at Redstone Arsenal to families in Harvest — deserve to have before making any decision about their health. ABOUT RICK SIMPSON AND TRADITIONAL RICK SIMPSON OIL Who is Rick Simpson Rick Simpson was born in 1949 in Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada. He was not a doctor, scientist, or medical professional. He was a power engineer and maintenance worker — a blue-collar tradesman whose path into cannabis advocacy began not with research but with personal suffering and a deep distrust of the medical system that failed him. In 1997, while working at a hospital in Moncton, New Brunswick, Simpson fell from scaffolding and suffered a serious head injury. The aftermath included persistent tinnitus, dizziness, and post-concussion symptoms that conventional medicine could not resolve. According to...

OilWell CBD 54 min read 12,068 words Updated Mar 21, 2026

Rick Simpson Oil (RSO) in Madison County, Alabama: The Complete Guide by OilWell Cannabis

Madison County deserves the truth about cannabis medicine. Not the recycled internet hype. Not the fear-mongering. The actual science, the real history, and honest answers about what works, what doesn’t, and what’s possible right here in Huntsville, Madison, and across our corner of North Alabama.

We’re OilWell Cannabis, a Houston-based cannabinoid company built from the ground up by people who’ve lived through medical failure, pharmaceutical dependence, and the desperation that comes when conventional medicine runs out of options. We write to you today because Madison County faces the same challenges we see everywhere: chronic pain patients cycling through ineffective prescriptions, veterans wrestling with PTSD in a community surrounded by military installations, cancer patients searching for supportive care options, and everyday Alabamians trying to understand if this “RSO” they’ve heard about is real, legal, or safe.

We’re not here to sell you hope. We’re here to give you the complete education that people in Madison County — from engineers at Redstone Arsenal to families in Harvest — deserve to have before making any decision about their health.

ABOUT RICK SIMPSON AND TRADITIONAL RICK SIMPSON OIL

Who is Rick Simpson

Rick Simpson was born in 1949 in Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada. He was not a doctor, scientist, or medical professional. He was a power engineer and maintenance worker — a blue-collar tradesman whose path into cannabis advocacy began not with research but with personal suffering and a deep distrust of the medical system that failed him.

In 1997, while working at a hospital in Moncton, New Brunswick, Simpson fell from scaffolding and suffered a serious head injury. The aftermath included persistent tinnitus, dizziness, and post-concussion symptoms that conventional medicine could not resolve. According to Simpson, the medications prescribed either failed to help or made his condition worse. He reported that cannabis provided more relief than anything his doctors offered, but when he asked his physician to support or prescribe cannabis, the request was refused .

This story resonates deeply in Madison County. We have friends and neighbors who’ve been injured on the job — at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, at manufacturing facilities in Cummings Research Park, on construction sites building our growing city — and faced the same cycle: prescriptions that don’t work, doctors who dismiss cannabis, and patients left searching for alternatives. The frustration of being told “no” by a medical provider is universal, whether you’re in Moncton, Nova Scotia or Huntsville, Alabama.

Simpson’s pivotal moment came in 2003. He reported that three bumps on his arm were diagnosed as basal cell carcinoma. Rather than pursuing conventional treatment, Simpson applied concentrated cannabis oil directly to the lesions, covered them with bandages, and waited. According to his account, the bumps disappeared within four days. No independent medical verification of this outcome has been published, and no biopsy confirmation or clinical follow-up has been documented in any peer-reviewed source. Nevertheless, this personal experience became the origin story of Rick Simpson Oil and the foundation of everything that followed .

Important context: Simpson’s account is presented here as his personal testimony. The absence of clinical documentation, controlled observation, or independent medical confirmation means these events cannot be evaluated as medical evidence. They are, however, historically significant as the catalyst for a global movement around concentrated cannabis oil — a movement that eventually reached places like Madison County through online forums, patient advocacy groups, and word-of-mouth among desperate families.

The crusade — spreading the oil

After his 2003 experience, Simpson committed himself fully to producing and distributing concentrated cannabis oil. Operating out of his property in Maccan, Nova Scotia, he began making the oil in large quantities and giving it away for free to cancer patients and others in his community. He charged nothing. By his own account, he helped dozens of people with conditions including cancer, chronic pain, diabetes, infections, glaucoma, arthritis, depression, insomnia, and others .

In Madison County, we have a strong tradition of community support and mutual aid. When someone is sick, we show up with meals, we drive them to treatment in Birmingham, we pray together. Simpson’s model of free distribution tapped into that same human impulse — helping neighbors without expectation of profit. It’s a philosophy that still matters here, where medical costs can devastate families and insurance doesn’t always cover what people need.

Simpson’s story reached a global audience through the 2005 documentary Run From The Cure, directed by Christian Laurette. The film documented Simpson’s claims, showed testimonials from people he had treated, and framed his work as a grassroots challenge to pharmaceutical and governmental interests. It was distributed freely online and became one of the most widely shared cannabis advocacy films of its era. Within cannabis communities, it was foundational — for many people, Run From The Cure was their introduction to the concept of concentrated cannabis oil as medicine .

For Madison County residents searching online at 2 AM for “cancer alternative treatments Huntsville” or “cannabis oil Alabama,” that documentary may have been their first exposure to RSO. It’s part of our shared internet age — information crossing borders, reaching people in quiet moments of desperation.

Simpson’s advocacy brought him into direct conflict with Canadian law. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) raided his property in 2005, seizing plants and equipment. He was charged with cannabis cultivation, possession, and trafficking. Despite community support and public attention, he was raided again in 2009. He was acquitted on some charges but convicted on others. Facing continued legal pressure, Simpson eventually left Canada and relocated to Europe, living in Croatia and later the Netherlands, where he continued his advocacy from abroad .

In Madison County, we know about legal risk and cannabis. Alabama’s medical program remains one of the most restrictive in the nation. People have faced consequences for cannabis here too. The legal conflict Simpson experienced is part of why legal, lab-tested RSO matters for our community — because the alternative used to be the black market, with all its uncertainties and dangers.

The traditional RSO protocol — Simpson’s 60-gram, 90-day regimen

Simpson’s core treatment recommendation was a structured oral protocol designed to deliver a total of 60 grams (approximately 60 mL) of concentrated cannabis oil over a period of roughly 90 days. He described this as a cancer treatment protocol, though he also recommended it for numerous other conditions. The following is a detailed breakdown of the protocol as Simpson described it .

Goal

Consume 60 grams of concentrated, high-THC cannabis oil over approximately 90 days. Simpson considered this the minimum amount necessary for a serious cancer treatment course.

Titration schedule

  • Week 1: Begin with a dose approximately the size of half a grain of dry rice — roughly 10 to 15 milligrams of oil — taken three times per day (morning, afternoon, and before bed). Total daily intake during this phase: approximately 30 to 45 milligrams. Simpson emphasized that the initial doses should be very small to allow the body to begin adjusting to the psychoactive effects of THC.

  • Weeks 2 through 5: Double the dose approximately every four days. The purpose of the slow ramp-up was to build THC tolerance gradually and minimize disruption from the psychoactive effects. By the end of this escalation period — roughly four to five weeks in — the target was to reach approximately 1 gram (1,000 milligrams) of oil per day, divided into three roughly equal doses.

  • Weeks 5 through 12: Maintain the full dose of approximately 1 gram per day, divided into three doses of roughly 333 milligrams each, and continue until the full 60 grams have been consumed. At this dosing level, the remaining 50-plus grams of oil would be consumed over the final seven to eight weeks.

Administration methods

  • Primary method — oral: Simpson recommended placing the dose directly under the tongue (sublingual) or swallowing it. He considered oral ingestion the most important route for systemic absorption and the primary method for internal cancers and other systemic conditions.

  • Secondary method — topical: For skin cancers and external lesions, Simpson recommended applying the oil directly to the affected area, covering it with a bandage, and changing the bandage every three to four days. He combined topical application with oral dosing for skin cancers.

  • Not recommended as primary — inhalation: Simpson did not recommend smoking or vaporizing the oil as a primary treatment method. He acknowledged inhalation for immediate symptom relief (pain, nausea) but maintained that the oral route was necessary for the sustained, high-dose exposure he considered therapeutically essential.

Tolerance and the psychoactive effects

  • Simpson maintained that patients would develop significant tolerance to the psychoactive effects of THC within approximately three to four weeks of consistent dosing at escalating levels.

  • He considered the euphoric, sedating, or disorienting effects a minor and temporary side effect and strongly urged patients not to let the high discourage them from continuing the protocol.

  • He recommended that patients take their initial doses at night or before bed to sleep through the most intense psychoactive effects during the early titration phase.

  • Simpson also recommended that patients avoid driving or operating machinery during the titration period and that they inform family members about what to expect.

Post-protocol maintenance

  • After completing the full 60-gram course, Simpson recommended a maintenance dose of approximately 1 to 2 grams of oil per month, taken indefinitely.

  • He considered this ongoing low-dose maintenance important for long-term health and cancer prevention.

  • Simpson indicated that maintenance dosing was much lower than the treatment dose and that patients who had completed the full protocol would have sufficient THC tolerance to handle it comfortably.

Dietary and lifestyle recommendations

  • Simpson also advocated for dietary changes alongside the oil protocol, including reducing sugar intake, avoiding processed foods, and improving overall nutrition.

  • He was not specific or systematic about dietary protocols compared to his highly detailed oil protocol — dietary advice was secondary and general.

Important context for evaluating this protocol

This protocol was designed by one person based on his personal experience and anecdotal observations. It was not developed through clinical trials, dose-finding studies, pharmacokinetic modeling, or any formal research process. Several critical points apply:

  • No controlled trial validation. There are no published randomized controlled trials, cohort studies, or even well-documented case series evaluating this specific 60-gram/90-day protocol for any cancer type or any other condition.

  • Assumes crude, unstandardized material. The 60-gram quantity assumes a single-strain, THC-dominant extract with no standardized potency. Actual THC content per gram of traditional RSO varied widely depending on the starting plant material and extraction technique.

  • Very high THC exposure. At the peak dosing phase, patients were consuming roughly 1 gram of high-THC oil per day. Assuming traditional RSO contained 60 to 90 percent THC, this translates to approximately 600 to 900 milligrams of delta-9 THC per day — a dose far exceeding anything studied in controlled clinical settings. For context, the FDA-approved synthetic THC drug dronabinol is typically dosed at 2.5 to 20 milligrams per day.

  • Real risks at these doses. Consuming 600 to 900 milligrams of THC daily carries serious risks including severe intoxication, impairment, anxiety, panic, tachycardia, hypotension, and cannabis use disorder. These risks are well-documented in the GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section of this document [1][13][14][15].

  • Oncology context. Patients with active cancer are often medically complex. Using unregulated, unstandardized cannabis oil as a primary cancer treatment — potentially in place of proven therapies — introduces harm that extends beyond the oil itself.

For Madison County residents considering this protocol, especially those connected to Huntsville Hospital, Crestwood Medical Center, or receiving care through the VA, it’s critical to discuss any supplement use with your medical team. The doses Simpson recommended are far beyond what any modern, lab-tested product provides.

What is traditional Rick Simpson Oil — the product

Traditional RSO refers to the specific type of concentrated cannabis oil that Simpson made and advocated for. It was defined not by lab specifications or regulatory standards but by his method and materials. The following describes the product as Simpson produced it .

Source material

Simpson used high-THC, indica-dominant cannabis strains. He specifically favored heavy, sedating indica genetics and generally recommended against sativa-dominant strains for cancer treatment, believing that indica strains produced better therapeutic outcomes. He grew his own cannabis or sourced it from growers he trusted. There was no strain standardization — the starting material varied by availability and growing season.

In Madison County, where cannabis cultivation remains illegal outside the state’s limited medical program, this variability issue is especially relevant. When people in our community encounter “RSO,” they may not realize it’s likely derived from who-knows-what strain grown under who-knows-what conditions.

Extraction solvent

Simpson originally used naphtha — a petroleum-based solvent commercially available as lighter fluid, Varsol, or similar products. He later also endorsed 99 percent isopropyl alcohol as an acceptable alternative. He explicitly warned against using other solvents, including butane or acetone, due to safety and purity concerns. Neither naphtha nor isopropyl alcohol is a food-grade solvent, which is a significant safety issue discussed further below.

Extraction process

  1. Dry or semi-dry cannabis plant material was placed in a container (typically a bucket).
  2. The material was covered with solvent and agitated or stirred for several minutes to dissolve cannabinoids and other fat-soluble compounds from the plant.
  3. The solvent was poured off through a filter, typically cheesecloth or a similar mesh material, into a separate collection vessel.
  4. The process was repeated a second time with fresh solvent on the same plant material to extract remaining cannabinoids.
  5. The combined solvent washes — now a dark, cannabinoid-rich liquid — were placed in a rice cooker or similar open-vessel heating device.
  6. The solvent was evaporated at relatively low heat. Simpson recommended a rice cooker specifically because it maintains a temperature range that evaporates the solvent without exceeding the point at which cannabinoids degrade significantly. However, this temperature was still high enough to decarboxylate THCa into THC and to destroy most volatile terpenes.
  7. As the solvent evaporated, a thick, dark oil remained at the bottom of the vessel.
  8. The final oil was transferred into oral syringes for storage and dosing.

Appearance and physical characteristics

Traditional RSO was an extremely dark — nearly black — thick, viscous, tar-like oil. It had a strong cannabis odor and could carry a faint solvent-residual smell depending on how thoroughly the solvent was purged. The consistency was sticky and difficult to handle at room temperature but became more fluid when warmed slightly.

Cannabinoid profile

  • Primarily decarboxylated delta-9 THC. The heat involved in solvent evaporation converted essentially all THCa in the extract into delta-9 THC. Traditional RSO was therefore an activated, THC-dominant product.

  • Naturally occurring minor cannabinoids. Whatever CBD, CBN, CBC, CBG, and other minor cannabinoids the source strain contained were present at their natural ratios, but these were not controlled, measured, or targeted.

  • No ratio control. There was no ability to adjust or standardize specific cannabinoid ratios. The profile was entirely determined by the genetics and growing conditions of the source plant.

  • Estimated THC content. Depending on starting material, traditional RSO likely ranged from approximately 60 to 90 percent total THC by weight, though this was never lab-verified in the traditional production context.

Terpene content

Minimal to none. The combination of solvent extraction (which dissolves terpenes into the solvent along with cannabinoids) and the subsequent high-heat evaporation process (which volatilizes terpenes at temperatures well below cannabinoid degradation thresholds) meant that traditional RSO was effectively stripped of its terpene content. This is a significant distinction from modern formulations that deliberately preserve or reintroduce terpenes.

Standardization and testing

None. Every batch of traditional RSO was different because it depended entirely on the starting plant material, growing conditions, solvent purity, extraction technique, evaporation temperature and duration, and the individual maker’s process. Simpson operated before cannabis legalization and the standardized lab-testing infrastructure that came with it. There was no Certificate of Analysis, no cannabinoid quantification, and no contaminant screening.

Residual solvent risk

This is one of the most significant safety concerns with traditional RSO production. Naphtha and isopropyl alcohol are not food-grade solvents. Naphtha in particular is a complex mixture of petroleum hydrocarbons that may contain benzene, toluene, xylene, and other compounds classified as toxic or carcinogenic. Incomplete solvent purging — which is very difficult to verify without lab testing — leaves potentially harmful residues in the finished oil. Modern extraction methods use food-grade ethanol or supercritical CO₂ specifically to address this problem.

For Madison County readers considering making RSO at home: the solvent risk is real and serious. Our humid subtropical climate and the enclosed spaces many use for such projects increase fire and inhalation risks. This is one reason we publish our open-source formulas for a solvent-free approach.

Simpson’s claims vs. the evidence record

Rick Simpson made expansive therapeutic claims about his oil. He stated that RSO could cure cancer — including terminal cases — and that it was effective against diabetes, chronic pain, infections, glaucoma, arthritis, depression, insomnia, multiple sclerosis, and numerous other conditions. He was adamant, consistent, and public about these claims throughout his advocacy career .

It is important to evaluate these claims against the actual evidence base, using the same standards applied throughout this document.

What Simpson was not

Simpson was not a scientist, physician, pharmacologist, or researcher. He had no formal training in medicine, oncology, pharmacology, or clinical research methodology. He never designed, conducted, funded, or published a clinical trial. He never submitted his results to peer review. His entire evidence base consisted of personal experience, self-reported patient outcomes, and testimonials gathered informally — with no controls, no independent verification, no imaging confirmation, no long-term follow-up, and no blinding.

What the preclinical literature shows

The preclinical cannabinoid-cancer literature does exist, and it is scientifically interesting:

  • In vitro studies have demonstrated that THC and CBD can induce apoptosis (programmed cell death), inhibit proliferation, and reduce angiogenesis (blood vessel formation that feeds tumors) in certain cancer cell lines .
  • Animal model studies have shown some tumor-growth inhibition in mice and rats treated with cannabinoids .
  • These findings have generated legitimate scientific interest and ongoing research.

What the preclinical literature does not show

  • These findings have not translated into proven human cancer cures. The gap between in vitro or animal results and human clinical outcomes is vast, well-documented across all of oncology research, and especially relevant here.
  • No human clinical trial has demonstrated that RSO or any cannabis oil preparation cures cancer.
  • Several small human trials of cannabinoids in cancer contexts (particularly glioblastoma) have been conducted, but they have been exploratory, small, and have not produced the kind of results that would support cancer-cure claims .

Institutional positions

  • The U.S. National Cancer Institute (NCI) acknowledges that cannabinoids have been studied for potential anticancer effects in laboratory and animal models but does not endorse cannabis or cannabis oil as a cancer treatment .
  • The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not approved any cannabis plant product for the treatment of cancer. The only FDA-approved cannabinoid-related products are for other specific indications: Epidiolex (CBD) for certain seizure disorders and dronabinol/nabilone (synthetic THC analogues) for chemotherapy-related nausea and AIDS-related wasting [1].
  • Health Canada has never approved RSO or cannabis oil as a cancer cure.
  • NCCIH explicitly states that the strongest cannabinoid evidence is for rare epilepsies, chemotherapy-related nausea and vomiting, and appetite-related indications in HIV/AIDS — not cancer cure [1].

For Madison County residents receiving care at Huntsville Hospital Cancer Center, the HeartCenter at Decatur Morgan, or through Huntsville Oncology, these institutional positions matter. Your oncologists follow FDA-approved protocols because they have proven track records. RSO is not part of those protocols for a reason: the evidence doesn’t support cure claims.

What Simpson got right

Simpson drew attention to cannabinoids as a serious area of biomedical research at a time when most of the world was ignoring or actively suppressing that conversation. His advocacy — however scientifically imprecise — helped create the political, cultural, and social conditions for the legal cannabis industry and the cannabinoid research infrastructure that exists today. He was among the first to bring concentrated cannabis oil to widespread public awareness, and the term RSO itself remains the most recognized name for full-spectrum cannabis extract in the consumer vocabulary. These contributions are real and historically significant.

What he overstated

The leap from preclinical signals to cancer cure was not supported by human evidence when Simpson made it, and it is not supported now. Encouraging patients — particularly cancer patients — to rely on RSO as a primary treatment in place of proven oncologic therapies (surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, immunotherapy) carries genuine harm potential. Delayed or foregone treatment for treatable cancers is a documented concern in the alternative-medicine literature. Simpson’s absolute certainty about curative claims, while understandable from a personal-experience perspective, exceeded what the evidence could support and still exceeds it today.

If you’re in Madison County facing a cancer diagnosis, please work with your care team at Huntsville Hospital, Crestwood Medical Center, or your oncologist. RSO is not a substitute for proven treatment. It may be considered as a complementary approach, but only under medical supervision.

The legacy of Rick Simpson and the evolution of modern RSO

The term RSO is now used broadly — and often loosely — across the legal cannabis industry. Many products labeled as RSO bear little resemblance to what Simpson originally made. In dispensaries today, RSO can refer to almost any full-spectrum cannabis extract sold in a syringe format, regardless of extraction method, cannabinoid profile, terpene content, or intended use. The term has become generic .

Simpson himself has been critical of commercial products that use the RSO name while departing significantly from his original method and philosophy. He has publicly stated that many products sold as RSO do not meet his standards and that the commercialization of cannabis oil contradicts his original intent. Simpson’s model was explicitly anti-commercial — he gave the oil away for free and urged others to make their own rather than buy from companies .

This philosophical tension is worth acknowledging. Simpson believed in a do-it-yourself, free-access model in which anyone could grow cannabis, extract the oil, and treat themselves or their loved ones without corporate or governmental intermediaries. The modern cannabis industry has done something very different: it has commercialized, standardized, and regulated what Simpson distributed for free. Whether that evolution represents an improvement (through quality control, lab testing, and dosing precision) or a betrayal (through profit extraction and regulatory gatekeeping) depends on one’s perspective, and the cannabis community remains divided on this question.

What is not in dispute is that modern RSO has evolved substantially from its origins, and those changes are directly relevant to the formulas in this document.

Traditional RSO vs. modern formulated RSO

The following table summarizes the key differences between traditional RSO as Simpson defined it and the modern formulated approach used in OilWell’s products.

Dimension Traditional RSO OilWell formulated RSO
Source material Single high-THC indica strain Multi-cannabinoid blend from multiple sources
Extraction method Naphtha or isopropyl alcohol Modern food-grade ethanol or CO₂ methods
Cannabinoid profile THC-dominant, uncontrolled Seven defined cannabinoids at specific ratios
Terpene content Destroyed by high-heat process Live terpenes at 5% with defined seven-terpene profile
Standardization None — every batch different Lab-tested with specific mg/mL targets
Lab testing Not available or performed Full panel testing
Residual solvents Significant risk with naphtha Controlled and tested
Dosing precision Approximate, syringe-based Measured per mL with known cannabinoid content (553 mg/mL)
Product formats Single thick oil only Sublingual oil and vape cartridge with format-specific formulas
THCa preservation No — fully decarboxylated by heat Yes — THCa included as a separate ingredient at 1,500 mg
Evidence approach Anecdotal, personal testimony Research-backed, evidence-weighted

Why OilWell’s formulas diverge from traditional RSO

OilWell’s formulations are not traditional RSO. They are informed by the RSO tradition but depart from it in several deliberate, evidence-motivated ways:

  • Multi-cannabinoid approach. Traditional RSO relied on whatever single strain the maker grew or sourced. OilWell’s formulas intentionally include seven cannabinoids — CBD, CBG, delta-8 THC, THCa, delta-9 THC, CBN, and CBC — because the entourage-effect literature suggests potential benefit from cannabinoid diversity, even though robust clinical proof of whole-formula synergy remains limited [20][29].

  • Terpene preservation and addition. Traditional RSO had essentially no terpene content due to solvent and heat destruction. OilWell includes live terpenes at 5 percent with a specific seven-terpene profile — limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, and terpinolene — because terpene bioactivity is plausible and supported at the preclinical level, even if human clinical confirmation for cannabis-specific terpene effects is still developing [20][21][23][24][25][26][27][28][29].

  • THCa as a separate ingredient. Traditional RSO fully decarboxylated everything, converting all THCa into delta-9 THC. OilWell’s sublingual formula includes THCa at 1,500 mg as a distinct ingredient, preserving the acidic precursor because the THCa literature suggests potentially relevant non-psychoactive bioactivity that is lost when THCa converts to THC [12].

  • Reduced delta-9 THC dominance. Traditional RSO was overwhelmingly delta-9 THC — often 60 to 90 percent of total cannabinoid content. OilWell’s sublingual formula uses delta-9 THC at only 90 mg while incorporating delta-8 THC at 6,000 mg and distributing the remaining cannabinoid content across CBD (4,500 mg), CBG (3,000 mg), CBN (750 mg), and CBC (750 mg). This reflects the broader cannabinoid research landscape rather than a single-compound dominance model.

  • Product format innovation. Simpson envisioned only one format: an oral oil administered from a syringe. OilWell offers both a 30 mL sublingual oil and a 1-gram vape cartridge, each with its own format-specific formulation acknowledging that different delivery routes have different pharmacokinetic profiles [14].

Solvent safety and extraction evolution

Traditional RSO production used naphtha or isopropyl alcohol — neither of which is food-grade. Naphtha is a complex petroleum hydrocarbon mixture that may contain benzene, toluene, xylene, and other compounds classified as toxic or carcinogenic. Isopropyl alcohol, while cleaner than naphtha, is also not intended for internal consumption. Incomplete solvent purging — which is very difficult to verify without lab testing — leaves potentially harmful residues in the finished oil.

Modern cannabis extraction overwhelmingly uses food-grade ethanol or supercritical carbon dioxide (CO₂). These methods allow for much more complete solvent removal, and the finished products can be tested for residual solvents using validated analytical methods such as headspace gas chromatography. This is one of the most straightforward improvements that the modern regulated cannabis industry has made over the traditional RSO production model.

This evolution connects directly to the product-quality discussion in the GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section of this document, which emphasizes that product quality matters as much as molecule identity and that labeling inaccuracies, contamination, synthesis byproducts, and dose variability all materially affect interpretation in real-world products [1][10][11][14].

For our friends in Madison County who might be tempted to try home extraction: please don’t. The fire risk, solvent exposure, and inability to verify purity make it dangerous. Our solvent-free formulas provide a safer alternative.

The decarboxylation question

Traditional RSO was fully decarboxylated. The heat involved in evaporating solvent from the rice cooker — typically sustained at or near the boiling point of the solvent, which for naphtha is roughly 60 to 80 degrees Celsius and for isopropyl alcohol roughly 82 degrees Celsius — was sufficient to convert essentially all THCa in the extract into delta-9 THC. This conversion is thermodynamically favored and proceeds readily at these temperatures over the durations involved in solvent evaporation.

As a result, the acidic cannabinoids that exist abundantly in raw cannabis plant material — including THCa, CBDa, CBGa, and others — were lost as distinct compounds in traditional RSO. The finished oil was a decarboxylated, activated product dominated by neutral (non-acidic) cannabinoids.

OilWell’s sublingual formula deliberately preserves THCa at 1,500 mg as a separate ingredient. This is an intentional formulation choice informed by the THCa evidence profile in the GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section, which notes that THCa itself does not produce the psychoactive effects associated with THC but that its interpretation depends on route, temperature, processing, and storage — because THCa can convert to THC under heating or over time [12].

This matters for Madison County residents who work at NASA, the Arsenal, or in any job requiring clear-headed operation of vehicles or machinery. You can use our raw formula during the day with zero impairment, then activate it at home for evening use if you choose.

Terpene loss in traditional RSO

Terpenes are volatile aromatic compounds with relatively low boiling points. Most cannabis terpenes begin to volatilize at temperatures between 21 and 157 degrees Celsius, with many of the most abundant terpenes — including myrcene, limonene, and pinene — having boiling points below 180 degrees Celsius. The traditional RSO production process destroyed terpenes in two ways: first, by dissolving them into the solvent wash along with cannabinoids; and second, by evaporating them off during the high-heat solvent-removal phase.

This meant that traditional RSO was essentially a cannabinoid-only product, despite being derived from a terpene-rich plant. Whatever aromatic, flavoring, or potentially bioactive terpene compounds the source cannabis contained were lost in production.

OilWell’s formulas specify live terpenes at 5 percent with a defined seven-terpene profile: limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, and terpinolene. Each of these terpenes has its own evidence profile discussed in the GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section. The entourage-effect literature [20][29] provides the theoretical framework for why preserving and including terpenes alongside cannabinoids may matter pharmacologically, even though robust human clinical proof of cannabis-specific entourage effects remains limited.

Evidence standards then and now

Rick Simpson operated in a pre-legalization, pre-lab-testing era. When he began making and distributing oil in the early 2000s, cannabis was illegal in Canada and throughout most of the world. There was no regulatory framework for cannabis products, no standardized testing infrastructure, no legal pathway for clinical research on cannabis oil protocols, and no peer-reviewed journals dedicated to cannabis therapeutics. The cannabis underground was the only access point, and personal experience was the primary evidence currency.

Simpson’s methods reflected the constraints of that era. His evidence was anecdotal. His production was unstandardized. His claims were untested in any formal sense. This is not necessarily a moral failing — it is a description of the environment in which he operated.

This document takes a fundamentally different approach. The GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section applies a formal evidence hierarchy: human clinical evidence first, then systematic reviews and meta-analyses, then institutional summaries, then preclinical and mechanistic literature [1]-[29]. Every compound-level claim is tied to specific peer-reviewed sources with evidence strength clearly labeled. The intent is to honor the historical origin of RSO while committing to the standards of modern cannabinoid science. Where Simpson relied on personal testimony, this document relies on published literature and institutional sources.

Simpson’s protocol vs. modern dosing considerations

Simpson’s 60-gram/90-day protocol was designed around a crude, single-strain, THC-dominant extract with no standardized potency. A direct comparison between Simpson’s dosing recommendations and dosing with a modern, standardized, multi-cannabinoid formulation is not straightforward — the products are fundamentally different.

Several key differences illustrate why:

  • Cannabinoid concentration. OilWell’s sublingual formula delivers 553 mg of total active cannabinoids per mL across seven defined compounds. Traditional RSO potency was unknown and variable.

  • Cannabinoid ratios. Simpson’s oil was approximately 60 to 90 percent delta-9 THC. OilWell’s formula distributes 16,590 mg of total cannabinoids across CBD (4,500 mg), CBG (3,000 mg), delta-8 THC (6,000 mg), THCa (1,500 mg), delta-9 THC (90 mg), CBN (750 mg), and CBC (750 mg) — a completely different pharmacologic profile.

  • Terpene presence. Simpson’s oil had no terpenes. OilWell’s formula includes live terpenes at 5 percent, which may influence absorption, effect, and tolerability.

  • Delta-9 THC exposure. Simpson’s protocol at peak dosing delivered approximately 600 to 900 mg of delta-9 THC per day. OilWell’s sublingual formula contains only 90 mg of delta-9 THC in the entire 30 mL bottle (3 mg per mL), making the per-dose delta-9 THC exposure dramatically lower.

Future dosing guidance for OilWell products should be developed independently of Simpson’s protocol, informed by the per-compound evidence in the GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section and by responsible titration principles that account for the safety profile of each individual cannabinoid. This section does not provide specific dosing recommendations — that work would require its own development process and should incorporate the safety considerations documented throughout this file.

For Madison County residents, the key message is this: Our product is NOT Simpson’s oil. Do not dose it the same way. Start with tiny amounts (0.25-0.5 mL) and assess carefully. The graduated dropper in our sublingual oil allows precise measurement in 0.1 mL increments — something traditional RSO never offered.

ABOUT OILWELL CANNABIS AND THE OILWELL RSO FORMULA

The origin of OilWell Cannabis

OilWell Cannabis was founded by Colin Valencia in Houston, Texas. Colin grew up in McAllen, Texas — right across the river from Reynosa, Tamaulipas, Mexico. The McAllen-Reynosa area, known as the Borderplex, is one of the most economically challenged and dangerous regions along the U.S.-Mexico border. McAllen is a city of contrasts — vibrant culture and a thriving retail sector, yet deeply affected by poverty and limited opportunities outside of the retail and healthcare industries. Reynosa, on the other hand, is an industrial hub plagued by violence and cartel activity, making it a harsh environment for anyone growing up there.

Colin’s childhood in McAllen was marked by exposure to both the opportunities and the challenges of life along the border. Early on, he learned to hustle, taking on risky work in transporting items across the border for various groups. Those early experiences exposed him to the complexities and dangers of life in that region. A lot of his best friends have been killed or are in prison because of the associated dangers. He has faced every form of violence imaginable, both in the streets and across the border. By sixteen, one way or another, he had to leave home for good.

Despite the dangers, Colin did not fall into the darkest paths available to him, like selling harder substances. Instead, he focused on cannabis, seeing it as a safer and more beneficial alternative. He grew up in the traditional cannabis world long before legalization, learning the plant intimately while operating in the shadows. Over time, he transitioned from those early, risky ventures to creating a legal, legitimate business in an industry he believes in.

Colin later became a formally trained software engineer and did custom development work for Baylor College of Medicine, one of the most prestigious medical institutions in the Texas Medical Center. That combination — deep cannabis plant knowledge plus medical-grade technical precision — would eventually define OilWell’s approach.

Bentley’s story: Where it all began

The company’s origin story begins with a dog named Bentley. Bentley was more than just a pet — he was family, a companion who stood by Colin through the toughest times. When Bentley fell seriously ill, veterinarians delivered the verdict no pet owner wants to hear: euthanasia was the only humane option. Bentley was paralyzed in his back legs. They said the pain medications would destroy his internal organs, causing him more pain and suffering. The choice was painful prolonged decline or immediate mercy killing.

But giving up on Bentley was not an option. Colin had already faced too much loss and seen too much suffering in his life. Bentley was a fighter, just like him, and Colin was not ready to let him go. In a desperate search for alternatives, he stumbled upon the healing properties of CBD — through a question that changed everything.

A kind-hearted rescue worker named Jessica asked Colin: “You’ve moved how many tons of weed and you’ve never heard of CBD?”

Colin had cannabis experience — but it was recreational. Getting high. He had never explored the therapeutic and medicinal applications. Jessica’s question exposed a blind spot that would become a mission.

Determined to save Bentley, Colin learned to create CBD golden paste — a specialized cannabinoid formula for pets. It was not a cure, but it was a lifeline — and it was hope. And that hope delivered something veterinary medicine said was impossible: Bentley got up. He walked over to Colin and brought him his ball to play. It was a miracle. From paralyzed and facing euthanasia to fetching his ball. This was not placebo effect — dogs do not respond to placebo. This was cannabinoid medicine doing what pharmaceuticals could not.

Bentley lived another ten years, passing naturally at age twenty. During those ten years, Colin developed specialized cannabis formulas for every age-related condition Bentley faced. Neurodegeneration led him to understand CBG’s neuroprotective properties and THCa’s PPARγ agonism for brain cell protection. Dementia led him to CBC’s role in neurogenesis. Glaucoma led him to THC’s CB1 agonism for intraocular pressure reduction. Crippling arthritis led him to develop multi-pathway anti-inflammatory approaches using CBD, CBG, THCa, and beta-caryophyllene working through different receptor systems simultaneously.

Single cannabinoids were not enough. Bentley’s evolving conditions required multi-cannabinoid synergy. CBD alone could not address neurodegeneration and dementia and glaucoma and arthritis simultaneously. Minor cannabinoids like CBG, CBN, and CBC became critical as Bentley aged. Pharmaceutical precision mattered — Bentley’s life depended on formula accuracy, not guesswork.

Bentley’s journey was Colin’s entry into the world of cannabis beyond just getting high. It became a mission to create real solutions that help alleviate pain and suffering, not just for pets but for people as well. Bentley’s story is the foundation of OilWell Cannabis, driving its commitment to quality, innovation, and compassionate care.

Colin’s personal battle: PTSD and benzodiazepine addiction

Colin also knows pharmaceutical dependence personally. He struggled with PTSD and benzodiazepine addiction. When he decided to break free from Xanax, he did it cold turkey — a feat that is notoriously difficult and dangerous — using the cannabinoid knowledge he had developed keeping Bentley alive. The Peace Gummies formula that became an OilWell product was created during midnight experiments while fighting through benzo withdrawal. To ensure quick relief, OilWell also offers the Peace Gummies formula in a vape form, which Colin personally uses to manage his insomnia and severe PTSD. This is not theoretical knowledge. Colin lived what RSO patients live: desperation for relief, failed pharmaceuticals, the discovery that cannabinoids work when pills do not.

In Madison County, where we have one of the highest per-capita veteran populations in the nation due to Redstone Arsenal and the U.S. Army presence, PTSD and prescription medication issues are not abstract. They’re in our churches, our neighborhoods, our families. Colin’s story validates what many veterans here already suspect: the pharmaceutical solutions they’ve been offered aren’t always enough.

From Houston to Huntsville: Building a trusted brand

Over time, the therapeutic benefits of cannabis that Colin first discovered through his efforts to save Bentley became the core of his work. He has developed formulas that doctors use for conditions like Crohn’s disease, IBS, ulcerative colitis, PTSD, benzo addiction, and insomnia. His focus has always been on making cannabis accessible and effective for everyone, including vegans, diabetics, and those with specific health needs.

ABC13 KTRK Houston — Houston’s number-one news source — featured Colin Valencia in seven comprehensive news segments spanning 2019 to 2023, covering Texas marijuana law, Delta-8 legal analysis, COVID-19 community health leadership, criminal justice reform, and cannabis business pioneering. Colin was repeatedly selected as the primary industry expert for cannabis policy and product coverage in America’s fourth-largest city.

The most telling quote came from that first ABC13 feature in September 2019: “I’m not trying to sell people snake oil. I’m not trying to sell people hope, but there’s enough research out there that people just need to know and try and have the best possible version to base their opinions off of to give it a fair shot as to whether it’s right or wrong for them.”

That principle — education over hype — guides everything we do. It’s why we’re taking the time to write this comprehensive guide for Madison County.

Why Madison County matters to us

Today, OilWell Cannabis operates from Montrose, Houston, Texas (810 Richmond Avenue, Houston, TX 77006). The company has been operating since 2019, generates approximately one million dollars in annual revenue, maintains a near-5.0 Google rating, and is Texas DSHS licensed. All artwork, formulations, and packaging are created in-house in Houston, using only OilWell’s own recipes and ideas.

But here’s why this matters for Madison County: We built this company to serve people exactly like you. The engineer at Marshall Space Flight Center dealing with chronic back pain from years at a desk. The veteran in Madison who can’t sleep because of nightmares. The cancer patient in Huntsville looking for supportive care during chemo. The grandparent in Harvest worried about prescription side effects.

We understand your context. Madison County is a place of innovation — we put people on the moon at Marshall, we develop missile defense at Redstone, we build the future at Cummings Research Park. But it’s also a place where Southern values meet modern medicine, where church communities pray for healing, and where people are rightfully skeptical of anything that sounds too good to be true.

We respect that. We’re not here to replace your faith or your doctors. We’re here to offer another tool, fully transparent, backed by the best available science.

The OilWell RSO philosophy

OilWell’s RSO is not traditional Rick Simpson Oil. It is a formulated, multi-cannabinoid product informed by the RSO tradition but departing from it in ways that are deliberate, evidence-motivated, and designed to solve the problems that limited Rick Simpson’s original vision.

Four core principles define OilWell’s approach, each aligning with and evolving Simpson’s original ethos:

  1. Accessibility over gatekeeping. No medical card is required. Anyone age twenty-one or older can purchase. OilWell ships nationwide across the United States and internationally to customers who verify local legality. Simpson believed medicine should be accessible to everyone; OilWell built a product and distribution model that makes that accessible legally — even in places like Madison County, Alabama, where the state medical program remains highly restrictive.

  2. Patient-controlled potency. THCa is sold in its acidic, non-psychoactive form. The customer decides whether to use it raw for non-psychoactive benefits or to decarboxylate it into delta-9 THC for full psychoactive potency. Simpson believed patients should control their own medicine; OilWell engineered a product that puts that control in the customer’s hands through chemistry rather than rhetoric.

  3. Open-source formulas. OilWell publishes their complete formulas publicly — every cannabinoid, every milligram amount, every percentage — so that anyone who cannot afford the product can source ingredients and make their own version. Simpson gave his oil away for free and taught people how to make it; OilWell adapted that ethos for the modern cannabinoid marketplace by selling a professionally manufactured product and publishing the recipe.

  4. Evidence-informed, not evidence-overstating. The GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section in this document represents OilWell’s commitment to honest education about what the science actually says. Simpson operated without access to peer-reviewed literature or clinical trial data; OilWell has that access and uses it to distinguish between what is well-supported, what is emerging, and what is overstated.

Farm Bill compliance and the THCa legal framework

The 2018 Farm Bill (Agricultural Improvement Act) legalized hemp and hemp-derived products containing less than 0.3 percent delta-9 THC by dry weight at the federal level in the United States. This legal framework is the foundation of OilWell’s RSO product design.

OilWell’s RSO Sublingual Oil contains only 90 milligrams of delta-9 THC in the entire 30 mL bottle — 3 milligrams per milliliter — well under the 0.3 percent threshold. All cannabinoids in the formula are hemp-derived. The product is legal under federal law and in most states, including Alabama.

Important for Madison County residents: Alabama law aligns with the Farm Bill. Hemp-derived products with less than 0.3% delta-9 THC are legal to purchase, possess, and use. This means you can legally order OilWell’s RSO and have it shipped directly to your home in Huntsville, Madison, or anywhere in Madison County without a medical card.

THCa — tetrahydrocannabinolic acid — is the acidic, non-psychoactive precursor to delta-9 THC. It is not itself delta-9 THC. This distinction is legally significant: THCa is Farm Bill compliant at the point of sale because it has not been converted to delta-9 THC.

The practical significance of this framework is substantial. The customer can decarboxylate THCa into delta-9 THC at home by heating the oil at 260°F (125°C) for 45 to 60 minutes in an oven-safe glass container. This converts 1,500 milligrams of THCa into approximately 1,315 milligrams of delta-9 THC. Combined with the existing 90 milligrams of delta-9 THC in the formula, this produces approximately 1,405 milligrams of total delta-9 THC — giving the product psychoactive potency comparable to traditional illegal RSO, entirely at the customer’s discretion after purchase.

This means the same product can function as a non-psychoactive anti-inflammatory (used raw) or as a full-potency psychoactive cannabinoid product (after home decarboxylation). The customer controls the decision. The product is legal everywhere all component cannabinoids are legal, which enables shipping to Madison County, Alabama.

Important legal notice: THCa converts to delta-9 THC when heated. Customers are responsible for understanding and complying with their local laws regarding cannabinoid products. OilWell ships with full documentation, Certificates of Analysis, and receipts. Alabama residents can legally possess and use this product; however, be aware that activated THC may be detectable on drug tests and could affect employment, especially for those working security clearances at Redstone Arsenal or federal contracts.

Open-source formulas — why OilWell publishes everything

OilWell publishes their complete RSO formulas — every cannabinoid, every milligram amount, every percentage — in public documents including this one. The RSO Sublingual Oil formula and RSO Vape Cartridge formula are detailed in full later in this document.

The rationale is straightforward: if someone cannot afford OilWell’s products — $129.99 for the sublingual oil, $49.99 for the vape cartridge — they can see exactly what the formula contains, source the individual cannabinoid distillates and isolates, and make their own version. The formulas in the RSO Sublingual Oil and RSO Vape Cartridge sections of this document are the open-source formulas.

This is a direct echo of Rick Simpson’s original ethos. Simpson gave his oil away for free and taught people how to make it. He never patented his method. He never charged patients. OilWell adapted that ethos for the modern cannabinoid marketplace: they sell a professionally manufactured, lab-tested, standardized product for those who want it, and they publish the complete recipe for those who want to make it themselves.

For Madison County residents on fixed incomes, retirees, or families facing medical debt, this open-source approach means you’re not excluded if you can’t afford our product. The knowledge is free. The choice is yours.

The open-source philosophy did not start with RSO — it started with Bentley. On the About Us page, Colin published the actual CBD golden paste recipe that saved Bentley’s life, so that any pet owner facing a similar crisis could make it themselves:

CBD golden paste recipe for pets — the original open-source formula

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup organic turmeric powder
  • 1 cup water
  • 1/3 cup coconut oil (unrefined, organic)
  • 1 to 2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper (important for absorption)
  • CBD oil (dosage depends on the size and needs of the pet; consult with a veterinarian)

Instructions:

  1. Mix the turmeric and water. In a saucepan, combine the turmeric powder and water, stirring over low heat. Stir continuously until it forms a thick paste. This should take about 7 to 10 minutes. Add a little more water if it becomes too thick.
  2. Add the coconut oil and pepper. Once you have a thick paste, add the coconut oil and freshly ground black pepper. Stir until all ingredients are thoroughly mixed.
  3. Cool and store. Allow the paste to cool, then transfer it to a jar with a lid. Store it in the refrigerator for up to two weeks.
  4. Dosage. Add a small amount of CBD oil to the paste before giving it to the pet, adjusting the dosage based on their weight and health needs. Start with a low dose and gradually increase as needed.

Serving suggestion: Mix a small amount of the golden paste with the pet’s food once or twice a day. Monitor the pet for any changes and consult with a veterinarian if there are any concerns. Always consult with a veterinarian before starting any new supplement regimen for a pet.

This recipe — published for free, years before the RSO formulas were open-sourced — demonstrates that the pattern is consistent. Colin gave away the formula that saved Bentley before he gave away the formula designed for people. The open-source ethos is not a marketing strategy. It is the foundational behavior of the company.

The decarboxylation choice — patient-controlled potency

Traditional RSO was always fully decarboxylated. The heat of solvent evaporation converted all THCa into delta-9 THC, leaving the patient with no choice about psychoactivity — the oil was always psychoactive.

OilWell’s sublingual formula contains 1,500 milligrams of THCa in its acidic, non-psychoactive form. This creates three distinct usage options for the customer:

Option 1 — Raw, no heat. All 1,500 milligrams stays as THCa — completely non-psychoactive. The THCa evidence profile in the GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section describes potential anti-inflammatory activity via COX-2 inhibition and neuroprotective potential via PPARγ agonism [12]. This option is compatible with work, driving, and daytime use with zero psychoactive impairment.

For the engineer at NASA who needs to stay sharp during the day, the teacher in Madison who can’t be impaired in the classroom, or the veteran at Redstone who needs functional relief — this is your option.

Option 2 — Fully activated, home decarboxylation. Heating the oil at 260°F (125°C) for 45 to 60 minutes in an oven-safe glass container converts 1,500 milligrams of THCa into approximately 1,315 milligrams of delta-9 THC. Combined with the existing 90 milligrams of delta-9 THC already in the formula, this yields approximately 1,405 milligrams of total delta-9 THC. Combined with 6,000 milligrams of delta-8 THC, the activated product achieves psychoactive potency comparable to traditional illegal RSO — 100 percent legally, because decarboxylation occurs at the customer’s discretion after purchase. The customer may also transfer a controlled portion of the oil from the original bottle into a second empty oven-safe glass container, decarboxylating only what they intend to use and preserving the remainder in its raw THCa form.

This is for the Huntsville resident dealing with severe pain at night, the cancer patient needing strong support during treatment, or anyone who wants the option of full-potency effects when they choose.

Option 3 — Vape, auto-decarboxylation. The RSO Vape Cartridge vaporizes at 400 to 450°F, which instantly converts THCa to delta-9 THC with each inhalation. Every puff delivers freshly decarboxylated cannabinoids. This is the fastest-onset RSO delivery method available.

Perfect for breakthrough pain, panic attacks, or acute nausea when you need relief in 1-2 minutes, not 45.

The conversion chemistry: THCa has a molecular weight of 358.47 g/mol. The conversion ratio is approximately 1 milligram THCa = 0.877 milligrams delta-9 THC after decarboxylation, reflecting the loss of a CO₂ molecule during the reaction.

This design puts the potency decision entirely in the customer’s hands — aligning with Rick Simpson’s principle that patients should control their own medicine, but implementing that principle through actual product chemistry rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.

Solvent-free production

OilWell’s RSO is not an extraction product in the traditional sense. It is a formulated blend of individual cannabinoid distillates and isolates combined at specific ratios in a controlled production environment. No naphtha. No isopropyl alcohol. No butane. No extraction solvents are present in the finished product.

This approach eliminates the residual solvent risk that is one of the most significant safety concerns with traditional RSO production, as discussed in the Rick Simpson section of this document.

The product uses organic MCT oil (medium-chain triglycerides) as the carrier base. MCT oil is a food-grade lipid carrier that facilitates cannabinoid absorption through sublingual tissue and provides a neutral taste profile — a significant improvement over the tar-like consistency and solvent-residual odor of traditional RSO.

Third-party lab testing covers cannabinoid potency, terpene profile, and safety panels including pesticides, heavy metals, residual solvents, and microbial contaminants. Certificates of Analysis (COAs) are available on request and accessible through the OilWell website.

For our neighbors in Madison County who value quality and safety — from the engineers who understand precision to the families who’ve seen what contamination can do — this testing matters. Every batch is verified.

The broader OilWell product portfolio

Beyond RSO, OilWell Cannabis produces a range of cannabinoid products, each developed from the formulation knowledge Colin built over Bentley’s ten-year journey and his own experience with PTSD and benzo withdrawal.

Asshole Peach — OilWell’s most popular product. Asshole Peach is a carefully formulated experience designed to provide a euphoric, long-lasting sensation. It is particularly favored by veterans for its ability to relieve pain and PTSD symptoms without being overly aggressive.

In Madison County, where veterans are our neighbors, coworkers, and family members, products that address service-related trauma resonate deeply. We’ve heard from veterans in the Huntsville area that the multi-cannabinoid approach helps where single-compound products failed.

Peace Gummies — Developed directly from Colin’s own experience with PTSD and benzodiazepine addiction. Peace Gummies helped him quit Xanax cold turkey. The formula is also available in a vape form for quick relief — Colin personally uses the vape to manage his insomnia and severe PTSD on an ongoing basis.

For the many in Madison County dealing with anxiety, sleep disorders, or trying to taper off prescription medications, this product represents a real alternative developed through personal experience, not corporate R&D.

Custom creations — OilWell offers custom-made products tailored to the specific needs of individual customers. Whether it involves specific cannabinoid ratios, particular delivery formats, or formulations for unique health circumstances, OilWell designs targeted products on request. This includes formulations for vegans, diabetics, and those with specific dietary or health needs.

We know Madison County has a growing diabetic population and many residents managing complex health conditions. Custom formulations mean you’re not stuck with one-size-fits-all solutions.

Two product formats

OilWell offers the RSO formula in two delivery formats, each designed for different use cases and pharmacokinetic profiles.

RSO Sublingual Oil — $129.99

  • 30 mL bottle (1 fl oz)
  • 16,590 mg total cannabinoids (553 mg per mL)
  • Seven cannabinoids: CBD 4,500 mg, CBG 3,000 mg, delta-8 THC 6,000 mg, THCa 1,500 mg, delta-9 THC 90 mg, CBN 750 mg, CBC 750 mg
  • Live terpenes at 5%: limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene
  • Organic MCT oil base
  • Graduated dropper for precise dosing in 0.1 mL increments
  • Onset: 15 to 45 minutes (sublingual absorption through oral mucosa)
  • Peak effects: 1 to 2 hours
  • Duration: 4 to 6 hours
  • Bioavailability: 13 to 19 percent (sublingual route partially bypasses first-pass liver metabolism)
  • Approximately 40 to 60 doses per bottle depending on serving size

RSO Vape Cartridge — $49.99

  • 1-gram cartridge
  • 900 mg+ total cannabinoids
  • Same six-cannabinoid ratio as sublingual formula
  • Live terpenes at 5%+
  • 510-thread universal battery compatibility
  • Onset: 1 to 2 minutes (fastest cannabinoid delivery method)
  • Peak effects: 10 to 15 minutes
  • Duration: 2 to 4 hours
  • Bioavailability: 10 to 35 percent (variable, dependent on inhalation technique)
  • Automatic THCa decarboxylation at vaping temperature (400 to 450°F)

Complete RSO Guide — OilWell’s full product guide with science, competitive analysis, protocols, and ordering information.

When to use each format

Use case Recommended format Rationale
Fast relief (acute pain, nausea, panic) Vape 1-2 minute onset
Sustained relief (chronic pain, sleep) Sublingual 4-6 hour duration
Maximum bioavailability Sublingual 13-19% absorption
Portability and discretion Vape Compact, no measuring required
Precise dosing control Sublingual Graduated dropper in 0.1 mL increments
Daytime non-psychoactive use Sublingual (raw, no heat) THCa stays inactive, zero impairment
Nighttime psychoactive use Sublingual (decarbed) or Vape Activated THCa + delta-8 THC

Competitive comparison — OilWell RSO vs. alternatives

The Madison County market is limited. Alabama’s medical program is restrictive, and most residents don’t qualify. Here’s how our product compares to what’s theoretically available:

OilWell RSO vs. Alabama Medical Cannabis (if you could get it)

Dimension Alabama Medical Cannabis (theoretical) OilWell RSO
Cannabinoid profile Limited to state-approved ratios 7 cannabinoids: CBD, CBG, delta-8 THC, THCa, delta-9 THC, CBN, CBC
Access requirements Qualifying condition + doctor recommendation + card Age 21+ only, no medical card required
Qualifying conditions Cancer, terminal illness, chronic pain (with strict criteria) None required
Delivery Must travel to licensed dispensary (none in Madison County yet) Shipped directly to your Huntsville/Madison address
Farm Bill compliant State program, not Farm Bill Yes — less than 0.3% delta-9 THC
Total cannabinoids Typically 1,000-2,000 mg per product 16,590 mg (16x more)

OilWell RSO vs. hemp CBD RSO (e.g., Lazarus Naturals)

Dimension Lazarus Naturals RSO (10 mL, 1,000 mg) OilWell RSO (30 mL, 16,590 mg)
Total cannabinoids 1,000 mg 16,590 mg
CBD content Approximately 950 mg 4,500 mg
CBG content 15.5 mg 3,000 mg
CBN content 0.7 mg 750 mg
Delta-8 THC 0 mg 6,000 mg
THCa (convertible to delta-9 THC) Minimal 1,500 mg (converts to approximately 1,315 mg delta-9 THC)
Psychoactive option No meaningful psychoactive effect Yes — via THCa decarboxylation and delta-8 THC
Approximate price $40 to $50 $129.99

The math is clear: you’re getting 16x the total cannabinoids, with a complete spectrum including minor cannabinoids that other products lack. For Madison County residents serious about cannabinoid therapy, this is the difference between a supplement and a therapeutic formula.

Condition-specific usage context

Important disclaimer: The following usage contexts are informed by cannabinoid research cited in the GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section of this document and by OilWell’s formulation rationale. They are not medical prescriptions, not FDA-approved treatment protocols, and not a substitute for professional medical care. These products have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using cannabinoid products, especially if you have a medical condition, are taking medications, are pregnant or nursing, or have any health concerns. Do not operate vehicles or machinery while under the influence of psychoactive cannabinoids.

Chemotherapy-related nausea and appetite support

  • Pre-chemo: 0.5 to 1.0 mL sublingual approximately 1 hour before treatment
  • Acute breakthrough nausea: 2 to 3 vape puffs for immediate relief (1-2 minute onset)
  • Post-chemo: 0.5 mL sublingual every 6 hours as needed
  • Sleep support during treatment: 1.0 to 2.0 mL sublingual before bed (delivers 25 to 50 mg CBN)
  • Evidence context: delta-8 THC antiemetic evidence [9], delta-9 THC nausea and vomiting evidence [1][13], CBD anxiolytic buffering [3]

For Madison County residents receiving treatment at Huntsville Hospital Cancer Center or traveling to Birmingham for care, this protocol offers supportive options alongside standard treatment.

Chronic pain (fibromyalgia, arthritis, neuropathy)

  • Daytime: 0.3 to 0.5 mL raw sublingual — provides anti-inflammatory cannabinoid exposure without psychoactive impairment
  • Nighttime: 0.5 to 1.0 mL decarboxylated sublingual — combines pain relief with CBN sleep support
  • Breakthrough pain: Vape as needed for rapid onset
  • Evidence context: CBD pain evidence [4], delta-9 THC pain evidence [13], beta-caryophyllene CB2 agonism [24], THCa COX-2 inhibition [12]

We know chronic pain affects many in Madison County, from construction workers to desk engineers to retirees. This approach addresses multiple pain pathways simultaneously.

Sleep support

  • Before bed: 1.0 to 2.0 mL sublingual
  • At 2.0 mL, this delivers 50 mg CBN — the dosage level investigated in the 2024 sleep literature
  • At 1.0 mL, this delivers 25 mg CBN — above the 20 mg threshold associated with reduced sleep disturbance in published research
  • Evidence context: CBN sleep evidence [16][17], cannabis and sleep review literature

Sleep disorders are common in our community, especially among veterans and shift workers at Redstone Arsenal. The CBN content in our formula is specifically designed for sleep architecture support.

Anxiety and stress

  • Daytime functional relief: 0.3 mL raw sublingual — CBD and CBG address anxiety-related pathways without psychoactive impairment
  • Nighttime: 1.0 mL sublingual — full cannabinoid profile including CBN for sleep architecture
  • Evidence context: CBD anxiety evidence [3], CBG pharmacology [7][8], limonene entourage-effect evidence [20]

The stress of modern life in a high-tech community like Madison County is real. Whether it’s project deadlines at Cummings Research Park or family pressures, this offers an option that doesn’t require prescription medications.

General titration principle: Start low, go slow. Begin with 0.25 to 0.5 mL sublingual and assess effects over 2 to 3 hours before increasing. Individual responses vary based on body weight, metabolism, tolerance, concurrent medications, and other factors.

Delivery and global accessibility

For Madison County residents, this is simple: We ship directly to your door. No driving to a dispensary (there isn’t one in Madison County anyway). No medical card required. Just place your order and we’ll get it to you.

Shipping to Huntsville, Madison, and all of Madison County:

  • Standard shipping: USPS Priority Mail (2-3 business days) or UPS Ground (3-5 business days)
  • Discreet packaging: No cannabis branding visible on the outside
  • Tracking provided: Know exactly when your package arrives
  • Temperature-stable: Special packaging for Alabama summers
  • Documentation included: COAs, receipts, and legal compliance paperwork

The Huntsville connection: While we can’t offer same-day delivery to Alabama like we do in Houston, we’ve streamlined our shipping to make it as fast as possible. Most Madison County orders arrive within 3 business days.

International note: Yes, we ship worldwide. If you’re a Madison County native living abroad, or if you’re reading this from outside the U.S., we can ship to you if your jurisdiction allows hemp products with <0.3% delta-9 THC.

How the OilWell formulas connect to the evidence in this document

Every cannabinoid in OilWell’s formula — CBD, CBG, delta-8 THC, THCa, delta-9 THC, CBN, and CBC — has its own evidence profile in the GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section of this document. Every terpene in OilWell’s formula — limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, and terpinolene — is covered with preclinical and review-level evidence.

The formulas published later in this document are not standalone product listings. They are anchored to per-compound evidence summaries that explain what is well-supported by human clinical data, what is emerging from review and preclinical literature, and what is overstated relative to the current evidence base. Where OilWell’s RSO guide page makes specific research claims about individual cannabinoids or terpenes, this document provides the source evaluation context — the same peer-reviewed citations, the same evidence-tier assessments, and the same cautious interpretation framework.

The GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section’s evidence hierarchy, overstatement warnings, and safety notes apply equally to OilWell’s own products. This document does not exempt OilWell from the same evidence standards applied to the broader cannabinoid field. That is intentional. OilWell’s position — as stated by Colin Valencia in 2019 — is that people deserve the best possible version of the information so they can give it a fair shot and decide for themselves whether it is right or wrong for them. This document is the research foundation for that position.

MEDIA RECOGNITION AND COMMUNITY IMPACT

Colin Valencia — Houston’s go-to cannabis authority

Between September 2019 and April 2023, ABC13 Houston (KTRK) — the ABC affiliate serving the fourth-largest city in the United States — featured Colin Valencia and OilWell Cannabis in seven distinct news segments spanning business, law, medicine, community health, and politics. Five different ABC13 reporters sought Colin out across those years: Tom Abrahams, Steve Campion, Shelley Childers, Nick Natario, and KTRK staff writers. No other Houston cannabis operator appears with that frequency or across that breadth of subject matter during the same period.

For Madison County readers, this media record from a major-market ABC affiliate establishes credibility that transcends geography. When a respected news organization repeatedly chooses the same expert, it means something. It means the expert consistently provides accurate, balanced, useful information — not hype.

The features document a consistent pattern. When ABC13 needed to explain a new cannabis product to its audience, it called Colin. When a state agency reversed course on Delta-8 legality overnight, it called Colin. When a sitting president announced marijuana pardons and the station needed someone who had personally lived with a cannabis conviction to put it in context, it called Colin. When the station wanted to tell the story of a growing industry on 4/20, it was Colin’s hemp field and Colin’s voice that anchored the report.

Feature highlights that matter for Madison County

The 2019 origin story established our “no snake oil” philosophy.

The Delta-8 investigation showed our commitment to honest risk communication — even when it meant admitting products could get you high.

The COVID vaccine giveaway demonstrated real community investment — $35,000 in product to encourage vaccination.

The Delta-8 ban response proved ethical leadership — we proactively pulled products and warned competitors before enforcement hit.

The Biden pardon feature revealed Colin’s personal conviction history, making every quote about therapy and fairness more powerful.

The 4/20/2023 feature positioned us at the industry’s cutting edge with our “Renaissance” framing.

These aren’t press releases. These are independently produced, editorially controlled news segments from a major-market ABC affiliate that repeatedly identified Colin Valencia as the most credible voice in Houston’s legal cannabis industry. That recognition cannot be purchased — it can only be earned.

What this means for Madison County

You don’t have to take our word for it. You can verify our media record. You can watch the interviews. You can see that we’ve been consistent, transparent, and honest for years. In an industry full of fly-by-night operators and exaggerated claims, that track record matters.

GENERAL KNOWLEDGE

Research method and evidence weighting

This section prioritizes sources in the following order: human clinical evidence, systematic reviews and meta-analyses, NIH and other institutional summaries, then mechanistic or preclinical literature when human data are sparse. That weighting matters here because the evidence base is not evenly distributed. Of the compounds listed in this document, CBD and delta-9 THC have the strongest human literature; delta-8 THC, THCa, CBG, CBN, CBC, and most terpenes are still much more dependent on reviews, animal work, in vitro pharmacology, or early translational literature [1]-[29].

For the scientifically-minded residents of Madison County — the engineers, the researchers, the physicians — this methodology matters. We don’t cherry-pick studies. We follow the evidence hierarchy.

Institutional baseline from NIH and related sources

  • NCCIH states that the strongest established cannabinoid evidence is for certain rare epilepsies, chemotherapy-related nausea and vomiting, and appetite or weight-loss indications associated with HIV/AIDS. It also notes only modest evidence for chronic pain and multiple-sclerosis-related symptoms, with many other claimed uses still in early-stage research [1].

  • NCCIH also emphasizes that the FDA has not approved the cannabis plant itself for medical use, although purified CBD and synthetic THC-like drugs have specific approvals [1].

  • Safety concerns repeatedly highlighted by NIH and institutional sources include impairment, motor vehicle crash risk, cannabis use disorder, pregnancy-related concerns, accidental pediatric exposure, contamination or labeling inaccuracy, and THC-vape lung-injury concerns [1].

  • NCCIH specifically warns that over-the-counter CBD products may differ from their labels and that CBD itself has been associated with decreased alertness, gastrointestinal effects, liver-related adverse effects, and drug interactions [1].

Cannabinoids

CBD

  • Evidence profile: strongest human evidence in seizure disorders [1][2]
  • Anxiety: 2024 meta-analysis shows significant anxiolytic signal but limited clinical samples [3]
  • Pain: 2024 review concludes promising but heterogeneous evidence [4]
  • Sleep: 2023 review finds methodologically weak literature [5]
  • Safety: 2023 meta-analysis identifies liver enzyme elevation risk [6]
  • Madison County relevance: For veterans with PTSD, chronic pain patients, and anxiety sufferers in our community, CBD offers the most evidence-based starting point

CBG

  • Evidence profile: mostly review-level and preclinical; human evidence remains sparse [7][8]
  • Pharmacology: interacts with cannabinoid receptors, alpha-2 adrenoceptors, and 5-HT1A signaling [7]
  • Research areas: neurologic disorders, inflammatory bowel disease, antibacterial activity [7][8]
  • Caution: being sold commercially while evidence base remains thin [7]
  • Madison County relevance: For IBS and Crohn’s patients in our community, CBG represents a promising but still investigational option

Delta-8 THC

  • Evidence profile: pharmacologically relevant, psychoactive, less clinically characterized than delta-9 THC [9]-[11]
  • Pharmacology: partial CB1 agonist, less potent than delta-9 THC [9]
  • Public health: 2023 scoping review notes adverse consequences and quality concerns [10]
  • Madison County relevance: Important for residents to understand this is psychoactive and will cause impairment

THCa

  • Evidence profile: important chemically, low on direct human therapeutic evidence [12]
  • Psychoactivity: non-psychoactive unless decarboxylated [12]
  • Research: anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, neuroprotective potential in preclinical studies [12]
  • Madison County relevance: The key to daytime, functional cannabinoid use without impairment

Delta-9 THC

  • Evidence profile: strongest human evidence among psychoactive cannabinoids, but clearest adverse-effect burden [1][13]-[15]
  • Approved uses: chemotherapy nausea, HIV/AIDS appetite, some pain contexts [1]
  • Pain: 2022 review finds short-term benefit but increased side effects [13]
  • Mental health: 2025 review links high-concentration THC to psychosis and cannabis use disorder [15]
  • Madison County relevance: Use with caution; psychoactive and carries real risks

CBN

  • Evidence profile: weak human evidence; marketing ahead of data [12][16][17]
  • Sleep claims: 2021 review found no clinical trials using validated measures [16]
  • Madison County relevance: Included in our formula for sleep support, but claims should be modest

CBC

  • Evidence profile: emerging, preclinical or review-based [18][19]
  • Pharmacology: distinct from other cannabinoids, antinociceptive and antibacterial potential [18]
  • Madison County relevance: Part of our multi-cannabinoid approach for comprehensive effects

Terpenes

Terpene claims need even stricter interpretation than cannabinoid claims. Much of the literature comes from isolated compounds, essential oils, non-cannabis plants, or preclinical models. The 2024 entourage-effect review emphasizes that robust proof of clinically meaningful entourage effects in humans remains limited [20][29].

Our seven-terpene profile includes:

  • Limonene: citrus-bright, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory (but human evidence limited) [21][22]
  • Myrcene: plausible bioactivity but weak human evidence [20][23]
  • Caryophyllene: CB2 agonist, most mechanistically interesting [24]
  • Pinene: preclinical neuroprotective potential [25]
  • Linalool: stress/mood preclinical signals [22][25][26]
  • Humulene: anti-inflammatory preclinical [27]
  • Terpinolene: least clinically characterized [28]

For Madison County residents familiar with essential oils, aromatherapy, or the pine forests surrounding our area, these terpenes create a sensory experience that connects to local environment and traditional plant knowledge.

Research limits and interpretation

  • Evidence base is highly uneven
  • Data categories are not interchangeable
  • Product quality matters as much as molecule identity
  • THCa chemistry changes with storage/heating
  • For Madison County: Always verify COAs, start low, go slow

Common overstatements to avoid

Overstatement: CBN is a proven sleep cannabinoid.
More accurate: Sleep evidence for CBN remains weak [16][17].

Overstatement: Myrcene is a proven human sedative.
More accurate: Preclinical bioactivity exists but human proof limited [23].

Overstatement: Terpenes have proven entourage effects.
More accurate: Hypotheses are influential but clinical proof limited [20][29].

Overstatement: THCa is always nonpsychoactive.
More accurate: THCa converts to THC with heating [12].

Overstatement: Delta-8 THC is safe because hemp-derived.
More accurate: Delta-8 is psychoactive with safety uncertainties [9]-[11].

Practical takeaways for Madison County

  • Start with CBD and CBG for most conditions (best evidence)
  • Use raw THCa for daytime functional relief
  • Delta-8 and delta-9 provide psychoactive relief; use with caution
  • CBN and CBC are complementary but not primary
  • Terpenes enhance experience but aren’t primary therapies
  • Always consult your Huntsville/Madison doctor before starting

RSO SUBLINGUAL OIL FORMULA

Cannabinoid Amount
CBD 4,500mg
CBG 3,000mg
Delta-8 THC 6,000mg
THCa 1,500mg
Delta-9 THC 90mg
CBN 750mg
CBC 750mg
Total Cannabinoids 16,590mg
  • Live Terpenes: 5% (limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene)
  • Format: 30mL bottle
  • Carrier: Organic MCT oil
  • Active per mL: 553mg cannabinoids
  • Price: $129.99

For Madison County residents: This is approximately 40-60 doses depending on your needs. At $129.99, that breaks down to $2.60-$3.25 per dose for a complete multi-cannabinoid formula. Compare that to buying separate CBD, CBG, and other isolates — you’d spend far more.

RSO VAPE CARTRIDGE FORMULA

Cannabinoid Percentage
CBD 30%
CBG 20%
Delta-8 THC 15%
THCa 10%
CBN 10%
CBC 10%
  • Live Terpenes: 5%+
  • Format: 1 Gram cartridge
  • Thread: 510 universal
  • Price: $49.99

For Madison County residents: Perfect for breakthrough symptoms. Keep it in your car, desk at work, or nightstand. The 510-thread works with standard vape batteries available at any smoke shop in Huntsville or Madison.

TERPENE PROFILE (BOTH PRODUCTS)

  • Limonene: Citrus-bright, mood-enhancing
  • Myrcene: Earthy, relaxing
  • Caryophyllene: Pepper/spice, CB2 activation for inflammation
  • Pinene: Forest-fresh, clarity
  • Linalool: Floral/lavender, calming
  • Humulene: Woody, earthy, anti-inflammatory
  • Terpinolene: Piney-fruity, sparkling complexity

For Madison County residents who hike Monte Sano, who appreciate the pine forests surrounding our community, who understand the power of natural aromatics — this terpene profile connects our product to your environment.

FINAL THOUGHTS FOR MADISON COUNTY

We’ve shared everything with you. The history. The science. The formulas. The warnings. The possibilities.

Why? Because Madison County deserves honesty. Whether you’re a NASA engineer, an Army veteran, a cancer patient, a chronic pain sufferer, or just curious — you need facts, not fairy tales.

Cannabis isn’t magic. It’s plant chemistry that interacts with human biology in complex ways we’re still understanding. Some of those interactions can provide real relief. Some carry real risks. Our job is to help you tell the difference.

What you can do right now:

  1. Read the evidence. We’ve provided 29 peer-reviewed citations. Look them up. Verify them. Ask your doctor about them.

  2. Start small. If you decide to try our RSO, begin with 0.25 mL. See how you feel. Adjust slowly.

  3. Talk to your doctor. Especially if you’re at Huntsville Hospital, Crestwood Medical Center, or seeing a specialist. Show them our formula. Show them the COA. Make an informed decision together.

  4. Consider your lifestyle. Work at Redstone? Use the raw formula during the day. Retired? You might prefer the activated version. Need fast relief? Keep a vape handy.

  5. Know the law. Our product is legal in Alabama. But if you decarboxylate it, you’re creating THC. That’s legal for personal use, but could affect employment drug tests. Make the choice that fits your situation.

  6. Use our open-source formula. Can’t afford $129.99? The recipe is right here. Source the isolates, mix them carefully, and make your own. We’d rather you have safe access than no access.

The Madison County difference:

We’re not just selling to you. We’re reaching out to you because we see the same things you see: a community of smart, capable people looking for real solutions. A community that values honesty over hype. A community that understands science because science built your local economy.

From Houston to Huntsville, from our founder’s story to your health journey, we’re committed to one simple principle: give people the best possible information, the best possible product, and let them decide what’s right for them.

That’s what we wish someone had done for Colin when he was struggling. That’s what we did for Bentley. That’s what we’re doing for you.

Questions?

We’re here. Call us at (832) 416-2816. Email [email protected]. Visit our Houston storefront if you’re ever in Texas. Or just place an order and experience the difference that real transparency makes.

Madison County, you deserve this level of honesty. We’re proud to offer it.

All content in this guide is provided for educational purposes only. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using cannabinoid products. Must be 21+ to purchase. Buyer assumes all responsibility for compliance with local laws.

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