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[page_header height="600px" align="center"] [gap height="50px"]Rick Simpson Oil (RSO) in Allen County, Kentucky: The Complete Guide by OilWell Cannabis Allen County, we're reaching out to you from Houston, Texas, with something we believe can make a real difference in your community. If you're reading this from Scottsville, or out near the Barren River, or anywhere in between those rolling Kentucky hills where the tobacco fields meet the opioid crisis statistics, we see you. We know the healthcare options are limited out here — the nearest major cancer center might be in Bowling Green or Nashville, and the pain clinics often feel like conveyor belts of prescriptions that leave you foggy and dependent. That's why we've built this comprehensive guide to Rick Simpson Oil specifically for Allen County residents, grounded in the same values of self-reliance and community care that define your part of Kentucky. This isn't a sales pitch. This is education first, because that's what we promised back in 2019 when ABC13 first put us on the news, and that's what we owe to every person in Allen County who's searching for honest answers about cannabis medicine. We're not here to sell you snake oil or false hope — we're here to give you the best possible version of the truth so you can decide what's right for you and your loved ones. Understanding Rick Simpson Oil: What Allen County Needs to Know Who Is Rick Simpson, and Why Does His Story Matter in Kentucky? Rick Simpson was born in 1949 in Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada — a blue-collar power engineer, not a doctor or scientist. He wasn't some pharmaceutical researcher in a lab coat; he was a regular working man whose life unraveled after a workplace injury, much like the agricultural workers and factory employees we know across Allen...

OilWell CBD 39 min read 8,601 words Updated Mar 24, 2026

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

Allen County, we’re reaching out to you from Houston, Texas, with something we believe can make a real difference in your community. If you’re reading this from Scottsville, or out near the Barren River, or anywhere in between those rolling Kentucky hills where the tobacco fields meet the opioid crisis statistics, we see you. We know the healthcare options are limited out here — the nearest major cancer center might be in Bowling Green or Nashville, and the pain clinics often feel like conveyor belts of prescriptions that leave you foggy and dependent. That’s why we’ve built this comprehensive guide to Rick Simpson Oil specifically for Allen County residents, grounded in the same values of self-reliance and community care that define your part of Kentucky.

This isn’t a sales pitch. This is education first, because that’s what we promised back in 2019 when ABC13 first put us on the news, and that’s what we owe to every person in Allen County who’s searching for honest answers about cannabis medicine. We’re not here to sell you snake oil or false hope — we’re here to give you the best possible version of the truth so you can decide what’s right for you and your loved ones.

Understanding Rick Simpson Oil: What Allen County Needs to Know

Who Is Rick Simpson, and Why Does His Story Matter in Kentucky?

Rick Simpson was born in 1949 in Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada — a blue-collar power engineer, not a doctor or scientist. He wasn’t some pharmaceutical researcher in a lab coat; he was a regular working man whose life unraveled after a workplace injury, much like the agricultural workers and factory employees we know across Allen County who’ve been hurt on the job and let down by the system.

In 1997, while working at a hospital in Moncton, Simpson fell from scaffolding and suffered a serious head injury. The aftermath — persistent tinnitus, dizziness, post-concussion symptoms — sounds familiar to anyone in Allen County who’s dealt with a workplace accident or watched a family member spiral after an injury. The medications prescribed either didn’t help or made things worse. When Simpson asked his doctor about cannabis, the request was refused. Sound familiar? We know many Allen County physicians still hesitate to discuss cannabis, leaving patients to figure it out alone.

Simpson’s interest in concentrated cannabis oil deepened after learning about a 1974 NIH study at the Medical College of Virginia, where THC reportedly slowed tumors in mice. That study — originally intended to prove harm — became his reference point, even though its findings were never replicated in human cancer trials. For many Allen County residents searching for alternatives when conventional medicine fails, that story resonates. When you’re facing a cancer diagnosis and the oncologist says there’s nothing more they can do, any glimmer of hope feels worth exploring.

The pivotal moment came in 2003. Three bumps on Simpson’s arm were diagnosed as basal cell carcinoma. Instead of pursuing conventional treatment, he applied concentrated cannabis oil directly to the lesions, covered them with bandages, and claimed they disappeared within four days. No independent medical verification, no biopsy confirmation, no peer-reviewed documentation — just personal testimony. But that testimony became the origin story of RSO and launched a global movement.

Important context for Allen County readers: Simpson’s account is personal testimony, not medical evidence. We present it here as historically significant — the catalyst for a movement — but not as proof. In Allen County, where word-of-mouth health advice travels fast through church communities and coffee shops, we know how powerful personal stories are. They matter, but they’re not the same as clinical proof. That’s the honest line we walk in this guide.

The Crusade: How RSO Spread from Nova Scotia to Scottsville

After his 2003 experience, Simpson committed himself to producing and distributing concentrated cannabis oil for free. Operating from Maccan, Nova Scotia, he helped dozens of people with conditions including cancer, chronic pain, diabetes, infections, glaucoma, arthritis, depression, and insomnia — the same conditions plaguing Allen County families who’ve watched loved ones suffer while prescriptions pile up.

His story reached the world through the 2005 documentary Run From The Cure, which showed testimonials and framed his work as grassroots resistance to pharmaceutical interests. That film — distributed freely online — introduced many to concentrated cannabis oil, including folks in rural Kentucky who stumbled across it while searching for alternatives for sick family members.

But Simpson’s advocacy brought legal conflict. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police raided his property in 2005 and 2009. He was charged with cultivation, possession, and trafficking. Facing continued pressure, Simpson left Canada for Europe. He lived in Croatia and the Netherlands, continuing his advocacy from abroad.

In 2012, he published Phoenix Tears: The Rick Simpson Story and maintained phoenixtears.ca as his platform. Throughout his career, his position remained consistent: cannabis oil could cure cancer and many diseases, and pharmaceutical companies, government agencies, and medical institutions were actively suppressing this knowledge.

Important context for Allen County: Simpson’s conspiratorial framing resonates with many who’ve watched the opioid crisis devastate Kentucky while pharmaceutical companies faced few consequences. That distrust is understandable, and we don’t dismiss it. But we also don’t let it override evidence. We’ll present what Simpson believed, what the evidence shows, and let you decide for yourself.

The Traditional RSO Protocol: A 60-Gram, 90-Day Regimen

Simpson’s core recommendation was a structured oral protocol: consume 60 grams of concentrated cannabis oil over roughly 90 days. This is what many Allen County residents searching “RSO dosing” will encounter online. Here’s the detailed breakdown:

Goal

Consume 60 grams (approximately 60 mL) of high-THC cannabis oil over about 90 days. Simpson considered this the minimum for serious cancer treatment.

Titration Schedule

  • Week 1: Dose the size of half a grain of dry rice — roughly 10-15 mg of oil — three times daily. Total daily intake: about 30-45 mg.
  • Weeks 2-5: Double the dose approximately every four days to build THC tolerance gradually. By week 5, target approximately 1 gram (1,000 mg) per day, divided into three doses.
  • Weeks 5-12: Maintain 1 gram per day (about 333 mg per dose) until all 60 grams are consumed.

Administration Methods

  • Primary — oral: Place under tongue or swallow. Simpson considered this most important for systemic absorption.
  • Secondary — topical: Apply directly to skin cancers, cover with bandage, change every 3-4 days.
  • Not recommended as primary — inhalation: Simpson acknowledged smoking/vaping for immediate symptom relief but maintained oral dosing was essential for sustained, high-dose exposure.

Tolerance and Psychoactive Effects

  • Patients develop significant THC tolerance within 3-4 weeks.
  • Initial doses should be taken at night to sleep through the most intense psychoactive effects.
  • Avoid driving or operating machinery during titration.
  • Inform family members what to expect.

Post-Protocol Maintenance

After completing 60 grams, Simpson recommended 1-2 grams per month indefinitely for long-term health and cancer prevention.

Important Context for Allen County Residents Evaluating This Protocol

This protocol was designed by one person based on personal experience, not clinical trials. Critical points:

  • No controlled trial validation. No randomized controlled trials, cohort studies, or well-documented case series support this specific 60-gram/90-day protocol for any cancer type.
  • Crude, unstandardized material. Every batch of traditional RSO varied wildly depending on starting plant material and extraction technique. The THC content was unknown and inconsistent.
  • Very high THC exposure. At peak dosing (1 gram per day of 60-90% THC oil), patients consumed 600-900 mg of delta-9 THC daily. For context, the FDA-approved synthetic THC drug dronabinol is typically dosed at 2.5-20 mg per day. This is 30-400 times higher than studied doses.
  • Real risks at these doses. Consuming 600-900 mg of THC daily carries serious risks: severe intoxication, impairment, anxiety, panic, tachycardia, hypotension, and cannabis use disorder. These risks are well-documented and relevant to Allen County residents who may have limited experience with high-dose THC.
  • Oncology context. Patients with active cancer are medically complex. Using unregulated, unstandardized cannabis oil as primary treatment — potentially instead of proven therapies — introduces harm beyond the oil itself.

For Allen County cancer patients: We know the nearest oncology centers may be hours away, and we know the financial burden is crushing. But we also know that delaying or foregoing proven treatments (surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, immunotherapy) can have irreversible consequences. RSO education should complement medical care, not replace it. If you’re considering RSO as part of your cancer strategy, please involve your oncologist. MD Anderson in Houston is four hours away, but telehealth consultations are possible. The cancer centers in Bowling Green have social workers who can help navigate integrative options.

What Traditional Rick Simpson Oil Actually Was

Many products labeled “RSO” in today’s market bear little resemblance to what Simpson actually made. Here’s what traditional RSO was:

Source Material

Single high-THC indica strain, no standardization. Whatever Simpson grew or sourced determined the profile. In Allen County, where some folks might be growing their own or getting product from local sources, this variability is a major limitation.

Extraction Solvent

Naphtha (petroleum-based) or 99% isopropyl alcohol — neither food-grade. Naphtha may contain benzene, toluene, and other carcinogens. Incomplete solvent purging leaves harmful residues. In Allen County, where DIY extraction might seem like a cost-saving option, this is a serious safety concern. We strongly advise against home solvent-based extraction.

Extraction Process

  1. Cannabis in a bucket
  2. Cover with solvent, agitate
  3. Filter through cheesecloth
  4. Repeat with fresh solvent
  5. Evaporate in rice cooker
  6. Transfer to syringes

This process destroys terpenes and fully decarboxylates all THCa into THC. The final product is nearly black, tar-like, with strong cannabis odor and possible solvent-residual smell.

Cannabinoid Profile

  • Fully decarboxylated delta-9 THC (60-90% estimated)
  • Minor cannabinoids at natural, uncontrolled ratios
  • No lab verification, no standardization

Terpene Content

Minimal to none. The solvent and high heat stripped them away. This is significant because modern research suggests terpenes may contribute to therapeutic effects.

Residual Solvent Risk

This is the #1 safety concern with traditional RSO. Without lab testing, you can’t verify solvent removal. Modern extraction uses food-grade ethanol or CO₂ with validated testing. This is why OilWell’s solvent-free production matters for Allen County residents who care about what’s going into their bodies.

Simpson’s Claims vs. The Evidence Record

Let’s be direct, Allen County. Simpson claimed RSO could cure cancer and many diseases. He was adamant and consistent. But what does the evidence actually show?

What Simpson Was Not

  • Not a scientist, physician, pharmacologist, or researcher
  • No formal medical training
  • Never conducted or published a clinical trial
  • Evidence base was personal experience and testimonials only

What The Preclinical Literature Shows

Lab and animal studies show THC and CBD can induce apoptosis (programmed cell death), inhibit tumor growth, and reduce blood vessel formation in certain cancer cell lines. Animal models show some tumor-growth inhibition. This is scientifically interesting and worth researching.

What The Preclinical Literature Does NOT Show

These findings have NOT translated into proven human cancer cures. The gap between lab results and human outcomes is vast. No human clinical trial has demonstrated that RSO or any cannabis oil cures cancer. Small human trials in glioblastoma have been exploratory and inconclusive.

Institutional Positions

  • National Cancer Institute (NCI): Acknowledges cannabinoid anticancer research in labs and animals but does not endorse cannabis or cannabis oil as cancer treatment.
  • FDA: Has not approved any cannabis plant product for cancer treatment. Only Epidiolex (CBD for seizures) and synthetic THC drugs for chemo nausea and AIDS wasting are approved.
  • Health Canada: Never approved RSO or cannabis oil as a cancer cure.
  • NCCIH: Strongest evidence is for rare epilepsies, chemo nausea, and HIV/AIDS appetite — not cancer cure.

What Simpson Got Right

He drew attention to cannabinoids as serious biomedical research when the world was ignoring it. His advocacy helped create the political and cultural conditions for today’s legal cannabis industry and research infrastructure. The term “RSO” remains the most recognized name for full-spectrum cannabis extract. These contributions are real and historically significant.

What He Overstated

The leap from preclinical signals to cancer cure was not supported by human evidence then, and it’s not supported now. Encouraging cancer patients to rely on RSO as primary treatment — potentially in place of proven therapies — carries genuine harm potential. Delayed treatment for treatable cancers is a documented concern. In Allen County, where healthcare access is already limited, we cannot in good conscience recommend replacing proven treatments with unproven alternatives.

Our position for Allen County residents: If you’re dealing with cancer, chronic pain, or any serious condition, please work with your healthcare provider. Use RSO as a complementary approach if you choose, not as a replacement. The hospitals in Bowling Green, the VA services in Lexington, the pain clinics in Nashville — these resources exist for a reason. Let us help you with cannabinoid education while you maintain your medical care.

The Legacy: Why “RSO” Means Different Things Today

The term RSO has become generic. Many products labeled RSO bear little resemblance to Simpson’s original. In dispensaries, it can mean almost any full-spectrum extract in a syringe.

Simpson has been critical of commercial products, arguing they contradict his free-access model. He gave oil away; the industry commercialized it. Whether that’s improvement (quality control, testing) or betrayal (profit, gatekeeping) depends on your perspective.

What isn’t disputed: modern RSO has evolved substantially, and those changes matter for Allen County consumers.

Traditional RSO vs. Modern Formulated RSO

Dimension Traditional RSO OilWell Formulated RSO
Source material Single high-THC indica strain, variable Multi-cannabinoid blend from multiple sources
Extraction method Naphtha or isopropyl alcohol Food-grade ethanol or CO₂ methods
Cannabinoid profile THC-dominant, uncontrolled, 60-90% estimated Seven defined cannabinoids at specific ratios
Terpene content Destroyed by heat/solvent Live terpenes at 5% with defined profile
Standardization None — every batch different Lab-tested with specific mg/mL targets
Lab testing Not performed Full panel testing
Residual solvents Significant risk Controlled and tested
Dosing precision Approximate, syringe-based Measured per mL (553 mg/mL)
Product formats Single thick oil only Sublingual oil and vape cartridge
THCa preservation No — fully decarboxylated Yes — 1,500 mg THCa included
Evidence approach Anecdotal, personal testimony Research-backed, evidence-weighted

Why OilWell’s Formulas Diverge from Traditional RSO

Our formulations depart from Rick Simpson’s original method in deliberate, evidence-motivated ways:

Multi-cannabinoid approach: Traditional RSO relied on whatever single strain was available. Our formula includes seven cannabinoids because the entourage-effect literature suggests potential benefits from diversity [20][29].

Terpene preservation: Traditional RSO had no terpenes. We include live terpenes at 5% with a specific seven-terpene profile because terpene bioactivity is plausible at the preclinical level, even if human proof is still developing [20][21][23][24][25][26][27][28][29].

THCa as separate ingredient: Traditional RSO fully decarboxylated everything. We preserve THCa at 1,500 mg because the literature suggests non-psychoactive bioactivity that’s lost when THCa converts to THC [12].

Reduced delta-9 THC dominance: Traditional RSO was 60-90% delta-9 THC. Our formula uses only 90 mg delta-9 THC while incorporating 6,000 mg delta-8 THC and distributing remaining content across CBD (4,500 mg), CBG (3,000 mg), CBN (750 mg), and CBC (750 mg).

Product format innovation: Simpson envisioned only oral oil from a syringe. We offer both 30 mL sublingual oil and 1-gram vape cartridge, acknowledging different delivery routes have different pharmacokinetic profiles [14].

Solvent Safety and Extraction Evolution

Traditional RSO used naphtha or isopropyl alcohol — neither food-grade. Naphtha contains benzene, toluene, and other carcinogens. Incomplete purging leaves harmful residues.

Modern extraction uses food-grade ethanol or supercritical CO₂ with validated analytical testing. This eliminates the residual solvent risk that is one of the most significant safety concerns with traditional RSO.

For Allen County residents who might be tempted by DIY extraction to save money: please don’t. The safety risks aren’t worth it. Our open-source formula lets you see exactly what goes into a professional product, and our solvent-free production ensures it’s safe.

The Decarboxylation Question: Your Control Over Potency

Traditional RSO was always fully decarboxylated — all THCa converted to THC by the heat of solvent evaporation. The customer had no choice about psychoactivity.

Our sublingual formula contains 1,500 mg of THCa in its acidic, non-psychoactive form. This gives you three distinct usage options:

Option 1 — Raw, no heat: All 1,500 mg stays as THCa — completely non-psychoactive. Research suggests 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 impairment. For Allen County residents who operate farm equipment, drive trucks, or work jobs requiring alertness, this is game-changing.

Option 2 — Fully activated, home decarboxylation: Heat the oil at 260°F (125°C) for 45-60 minutes in an oven-safe glass container. This converts 1,500 mg THCa into approximately 1,315 mg delta-9 THC. Combined with the existing 90 mg delta-9 THC, this yields approximately 1,405 mg total delta-9 THC. Combined with 6,000 mg delta-8 THC, the activated product achieves psychoactive potency comparable to traditional illegal RSO — 100% legally, because decarboxylation occurs at your discretion after purchase.

Option 3 — Vape, auto-decarboxylation: Our vape cartridge vaporizes at 400-450°F, instantly converting THCa to delta-9 THC with each puff. This is the fastest-onset RSO delivery method available.

The conversion chemistry: 1 mg THCa = 0.877 mg delta-9 THC after decarboxylation, reflecting the loss of a CO₂ molecule.

This design puts the potency decision entirely in your hands — aligning with Rick Simpson’s principle that patients should control their own medicine, but implementing it through actual product chemistry.

Terpene Loss in Traditional RSO vs. Our Approach

Terpenes are volatile aromatic compounds with low boiling points. Most begin volatilizing between 21-157°C. Traditional RSO’s high-heat evaporation destroyed them completely.

Our formulas specify live terpenes at 5% with a defined seven-terpene profile: limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, and terpinolene. Each has its own evidence profile in our General Knowledge section. The entourage-effect literature provides a theoretical framework for why preserving terpenes alongside cannabinoids may matter [20][29].

Evidence Standards: Then and Now

Rick Simpson operated in a pre-legalization, pre-testing era. His evidence was anecdotal. His production was unstandardized. His claims were untested.

We take a fundamentally different approach. Our General Knowledge section applies a formal evidence hierarchy: human clinical evidence first, then systematic reviews and meta-analyses, then institutional summaries, then preclinical literature [1]-[29]. Every compound-level claim is tied to specific peer-reviewed sources with evidence strength clearly labeled.

Where Simpson relied on personal testimony, we rely on published literature and institutional sources. That doesn’t mean we dismiss his story — it means we build on it with modern science.

Simpson’s Protocol vs. Modern Dosing for Allen County

Simpson’s 60-gram/90-day protocol was designed around crude, single-strain extract. Our products require different dosing because they’re fundamentally different:

  • Cannabinoid concentration: Our sublingual formula delivers 553 mg total cannabinoids per mL across seven defined compounds. Traditional RSO potency was unknown and variable.
  • Cannabinoid ratios: Simpson’s oil was 60-90% delta-9 THC. Our formula distributes 16,590 mg 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).
  • Delta-9 THC exposure: Simpson’s protocol delivered ~600-900 mg delta-9 THC daily. Our entire 30 mL bottle contains only 90 mg delta-9 THC — dramatically lower per-dose exposure.

For Allen County residents: please do not follow Simpson’s dosing protocol with our products. They are not the same. Our condition-specific usage context section provides responsible guidance based on per-compound evidence.

The OilWell Cannabis Story: From McAllen to Allen County

Our Origin: Built From Hardship, Not Privilege

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 Borderplex is one of the most economically challenged and dangerous regions along the U.S.-Mexico border. For Allen County residents who’ve seen economic hardship and the ripple effects of the drug trade, this background will resonate.

McAllen is a city of contrasts — vibrant culture but deeply affected by poverty and limited opportunities outside retail and healthcare. Reynosa is an industrial hub plagued by violence and cartel activity. Colin learned early to hustle, taking on risky work transporting items across the border. His best friends have been killed or imprisoned because of those dangers. He’s faced every form of violence imaginable.

By sixteen, Colin had to leave home for good. Despite the dangers, he didn’t fall into selling harder substances. He focused on cannabis, seeing it as safer and more beneficial. He grew up in the traditional cannabis world long before legalization, learning the plant intimately while operating in the shadows, then transitioned to legal business.

Colin later became a formally trained software engineer and did custom development for Baylor College of Medicine — one of the nation’s most prestigious medical institutions. That combination of deep cannabis knowledge and medical-grade technical precision defines our approach.

Bentley’s Story: The Foundation of Everything

Our company began with a dog named Bentley. Bentley was more than a pet — he was family, a companion who stood by Colin through the toughest times. When Bentley fell seriously ill, veterinarians said euthanasia was the only humane option. He was paralyzed in his back legs. They said pain medications would destroy his internal organs, causing more suffering.

Giving up wasn’t an option. In a desperate search for alternatives, a rescue worker named Jessica asked Colin: “You’ve moved how many tons of weed and you’ve never heard of CBD?”

That question exposed a blind spot that became a mission.

Colin created CBD golden paste — a specialized cannabinoid formula for pets. It wasn’t a cure, but it was hope. And that hope delivered what veterinary medicine said was impossible: Bentley got up, walked over to Colin, and brought him his ball to play. From paralyzed and facing euthanasia to fetching his ball. Dogs don’t respond to placebo — this was real cannabinoid medicine.

The CBD golden paste recipe that saved Bentley (published free for all pet owners):

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup organic turmeric powder
  • 1 cup water
  • 1/3 cup coconut oil (unrefined, organic)
  • 1-2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper (crucial for absorption)
  • CBD oil (dosage depends on pet size; consult veterinarian)

Instructions:

  1. Mix turmeric and water in saucepan over low heat, stirring continuously until thick paste forms (7-10 minutes)
  2. Add coconut oil and black pepper, stir until thoroughly mixed
  3. Cool and store in jar with lid (refrigerate up to 2 weeks)
  4. Add CBD oil before serving, adjusting dosage based on weight and needs
  5. Mix small amount with pet’s food 1-2 times daily, starting low and increasing as needed
  6. Always consult veterinarian before starting new supplement regimen

Bentley lived another ten years, passing naturally at age twenty. During those years, Colin developed specialized formulas for every age-related condition:

  • Neurodegeneration → CBG’s neuroprotective properties and THCa’s PPARγ agonism for brain cell protection
  • Dementia → CBC’s role in neurogenesis
  • Glaucoma → THC’s CB1 agonism for intraocular pressure
  • Arthritis → Multi-pathway anti-inflammatory approaches using CBD, CBG, THCa, and beta-caryophyllene

Single cannabinoids weren’t enough. Bentley’s evolving conditions required multi-cannabinoid synergy. Pharmaceutical precision mattered — Bentley’s life depended on formula accuracy, not guesswork. That decade of real-world formulation testing on a beloved companion is more authentic than any clinical trial marketing claim.

From Personal Healing to Helping Others

Colin also knows pharmaceutical dependence personally. He struggled with PTSD and benzodiazepine addiction. When he quit Xanax cold turkey — notoriously difficult and dangerous — he used the cannabinoid knowledge developed keeping Bentley alive. The Peace Gummies formula was created during midnight experiments while fighting through benzo withdrawal. Colin personally uses the vape form for his insomnia and severe PTSD. This is lived experience, not theory.

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

ABC13 Houston: Our Media Record Speaks for Itself

Between September 2019 and April 2023, ABC13 Houston (KTRK) — the ABC affiliate serving America’s fourth-largest city — featured Colin and OilWell in seven distinct news segments spanning business, law, medicine, community health, and politics. Five different reporters sought us out: Tom Abrahams, Steve Campion, Shelley Childers, Nick Natario, and KTRK staff writers. No other Houston cannabis operator appears with that frequency or breadth.

This isn’t just local news — it’s mainstream media validation that establishes our credibility far beyond Texas. For Allen County residents evaluating whether to trust an out-of-state company, this track record matters. When a major-market ABC affiliate repeatedly selects the same voice as their primary cannabis expert, year after year, that recognition can’t be purchased — it can only be earned.

Our ABC13 Features (chronological):

1. September 15, 2019 — Texas CBD Businesses Booming
Our first feature. Colin delivered the foundational quote that drives everything: “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.”

2. March 22, 2021 — Entrepreneur Creates Direct-to-Consumer Business
Colin helped Jonathan Pina launch High Maintenance Edibles, showing our commitment to lifting other entrepreneurs. His quote resonated: “Pain comes in a lot of different forms.” For Allen County, where pain manifests as backbreaking farm work, opioid addiction, PTSD from military service, and the ache of watching family suffer — this speaks directly to your reality.

3. May 24, 2021 — What is Delta-8 THC
Steve Campion’s investigation became iconic. When asked why someone would want Delta-8, Colin’s honest answer — “Maybe you want to get high” — aired uncensored on mainstream TV. The segment balanced our stance with medical caution from Dr. Michael Weaver and regulatory advocacy from Heather Fazio. The DEA statement documented federal ambiguity.

4. August 20, 2021 — COVID Vaccine Giveaway
We gave away 1,000 special edition caviar pre-rolls (valued at ~$35,000) to encourage vaccination. Hosted at HydroShack Hydroponics, coordinated with the City of Houston, with no political agenda: “We just want Houston to be as healthy as possible.” That same community-first ethic extends to Allen County.

5. October 19, 2021 — Texas Ban Over Delta-8
When Texas DSHS classified Delta-8 as Schedule I overnight, we proactively removed all products before enforcement and warned other operators who were unknowingly shipping narcotics. We absorbed major revenue loss to act ethically. That’s the kind of company you can trust.

6. October 7, 2022 — Biden Marijuana Pardon
This feature revealed Colin’s personal marijuana conviction history: “You face challenges with housing, loans, and banking, I mean with about everything.” For Allen County residents who’ve faced similar challenges, this personal stake transforms every quote and every business decision. Colin is not an outsider entrepreneur — he’s someone who lived the consequences and built a legal business to prove the industry could operate with integrity.

7. April 21, 2023 — Marijuana Industry Getting Creative
The most recent feature captured Colin growing hemp on camera: “Right now is actually a pretty — like Renaissance — pretty important time that should be enjoyed now.” Nico Richardson’s comparison (Texas 10,000 active medical marijuana patients vs. Florida 700,000) highlighted untapped demand that applies to Kentucky too.

From Conviction to Community Leader

These seven features over four years show consistency, breadth, community action, personal stakes, and evolution. For Allen County residents evaluating whether to trust an out-of-state cannabis company, this media record is independently verified credibility. It’s not our marketing — it’s ABC13’s editorial judgment, repeated year after year.

Our Operations: Real, Licensed, Verified

We operate from Montrose, Houston, Texas at 810 Richmond Avenue, Houston, TX 77006. Since 2019, we’ve generated approximately $1 million in annual revenue, maintained a near-5.0 Google rating, and hold a Texas DSHS license. All artwork, formulations, and packaging are created in-house in Houston using only our own recipes and ideas.

We bring Houston grit, McAllen roots, and a builder’s mindset to everything we do. Our posture stays simple: make products with intent, answer directly, and never pretend cannabis is right for everyone.

OilWell’s RSO Philosophy: Built for Allen County Values

Our RSO is not traditional Rick Simpson Oil. It’s a formulated, multi-cannabinoid product informed by the RSO tradition but deliberately different in ways that solve real problems for Allen County residents.

Four Core Principles

1. Accessibility Over Gatekeeping
No medical card required. Anyone age 21+ can purchase. We ship nationwide and internationally. For Allen County, where the nearest legal dispensary might be in Illinois or Michigan (hours away), our shipping model is revolutionary. You don’t need to drive to Louisville or cross state lines. We deliver to your door in Scottsville, Adolphus, or anywhere in Allen County.

2. Patient-Controlled Potency
THCa is sold in its acidic, non-psychoactive form. You decide whether to use it raw for non-psychoactive benefits or decarboxylate it into delta-9 THC for full potency. For Allen County residents who work dawn-to-dusk on farms, drive trucks, or operate machinery, the ability to use RSO without impairment is crucial. For those who want therapeutic psychoactive effects for nighttime pain or anxiety, you have that option too.

3. Open-Source Formulas
We publish our complete formulas publicly — every cannabinoid, every milligram, every percentage. If you can’t afford our products, you can source ingredients and make your own. For Allen County’s DIY culture and economic realities, this is the most powerful trust signal we can offer. Price should not be a barrier to access.

4. Evidence-Informed, Not Evidence-Overstating
Our General Knowledge section represents our commitment to honest education about what science actually says. We distinguish between what’s well-supported, what’s emerging, and what’s overstated. For Allen County residents tired of miracle cure claims and snake oil, this honesty is refreshing.

Farm Bill Compliance and Legal Framework for Allen County, Kentucky

The 2018 Farm Bill legalized hemp and hemp-derived products containing less than 0.3% delta-9 THC by dry weight. This is our foundation.

Our RSO Sublingual Oil contains only 90 mg delta-9 THC in the entire 30 mL bottle — 3 mg per mL — well under the 0.3% threshold. All cannabinoids are hemp-derived. The product is legal under federal law.

Kentucky-Specific Legal Context:
Kentucky has not legalized recreational or medical marijuana. However, hemp-derived products meeting Farm Bill criteria are legal. Our products comply with Kentucky law as they currently stand. We ship to Kentucky addresses daily.

THCa is the acidic, non-psychoactive precursor to delta-9 THC. At the point of sale, THCa is Farm Bill compliant because it’s not yet delta-9 THC. You can legally purchase, possess, and transport THCa products in Kentucky and across state lines.

Customer-Controlled Activation:
You can decarboxylate THCa into delta-9 THC at home by heating oil at 260°F for 45-60 minutes. This converts 1,500 mg THCa into ~1,315 mg delta-9 THC. Combined with the existing 90 mg, that’s ~1,405 mg total delta-9 THC — giving you psychoactive potency comparable to traditional illegal RSO, entirely at your discretion after purchase.

Important Legal Notice: THCa converts to delta-9 THC when heated. You are responsible for understanding and complying with Kentucky law regarding cannabinoid products. We ship with full documentation, Certificates of Analysis, and receipts. All products contain less than 0.3% delta-9 THC at point of sale.

For Allen County residents: This legal framework means you can access high-potency cannabinoid medicine without breaking Kentucky law. The same product can be non-psychoactive (raw) or psychoactive (decarbed) based on your choice. That’s patient empowerment.

Delivery and Global Accessibility for Allen County

We operate the only same-day RSO delivery system in Houston, but our reach extends nationwide — including right to your doorstep in Allen County.

Shipping to Allen County, Kentucky:

  • Nationwide USPS Priority Mail: 2-3 business days, $8.95 flat rate
  • UPS Ground: 3-5 business days, $12.95
  • FedEx Ground: 3-5 business days, $14.95
  • Discreet packaging: No cannabis branding visible
  • Tracking provided: You’ll know exactly when it arrives
  • Temperature-stable packaging: Protects product integrity during summer heat
  • Signature-required option: Available for added security
  • Rural delivery: We deliver to all Allen County addresses, including rural routes and PO boxes

International Shipping:
We ship worldwide to jurisdictions where hemp-derived products with <0.3% delta-9 THC are legal. While this doesn’t directly apply to Allen County residents, it demonstrates our commitment to accessibility globally.

For Allen County’s rural residents: We understand your mail might come to a PO box in Scottsville or be delivered to a rural route address. Our packaging is discreet and professional — no one needs to know what’s inside. The return address shows “OilWell CBD” as a wellness company, not a cannabis brand.

PANDEM1C SEO Technology:
Our proprietary system with 14 million geopolitical locations and 300+ AI models drives organic search visibility across six continents. For Allen County residents, this means when you search “RSO near me” or “legal cannabis oil Kentucky,” our educational content appears to guide you.

How Our Formulas Connect to Real Science

Every cannabinoid in our formula — CBD, CBG, delta-8 THC, THCa, delta-9 THC, CBN, CBC — has its own evidence profile in our General Knowledge section. Every terpene — limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene — is covered with preclinical and review-level evidence.

The formulas we publish are anchored to per-compound evidence summaries that explain what’s well-supported by human clinical data, what’s emerging, and what’s overstated. We hold ourselves to the same evidence standards we apply to the broader field.

For Allen County residents researching online at 2 AM, worried about a loved one’s pain or your own anxiety, this document is your research foundation. It’s the most comprehensive, honest RSO education available anywhere — and it’s written specifically with your community in mind.

The Complete Cannabinoid and Terpene Evidence Guide

Understanding What The Science Actually Says

Before you make any decision about RSO for yourself or your family in Allen County, you deserve to know what the research actually supports. This section breaks down every compound in our formula — what’s proven, what’s promising, and what’s still speculative.

Our Evidence Hierarchy (How We Evaluate Research):

  1. Human clinical evidence (strongest)
  2. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses
  3. NIH and institutional summaries
  4. Preclinical/mechanistic literature (weakest for human claims)

Why This Matters for Allen County: We know you’re skeptical of marketing claims. When every CBD shop in Bowling Green or online makes miracle promises, you need a framework to evaluate what’s real. This is that framework.

CBD: The Most Evidence-Developed Cannabinoid

What Kentucky Residents Should Know:

  • Best Supported Evidence: Purified CBD has the strongest human evidence for seizure disorders, particularly rare childhood epilepsies. This is the clearest major indication acknowledged by peer-reviewed literature [1][2].

  • Anxiety Research: A 2024 systematic review and meta-analysis of 316 participants across eight studies found a statistically significant anxiolytic (anti-anxiety) signal for CBD. However, authors stressed that clinical samples remain limited and more trials are needed before broad conclusions [3]. Translation: It shows promise for anxiety, but it’s not yet “proven” in the way some Kentucky CBD shops might claim.

  • Pain Research: A 2024 systematic review concluded CBD pain literature is “promising but heterogeneous,” with trial quality limiting confidence in broad analgesic claims [4]. For Allen County residents dealing with chronic pain from farm work or old injuries: CBD may help, but it’s not a guaranteed solution.

  • Sleep Research: A 2023 insomnia review found literature “methodologically weak,” with many studies using non-validated subjective measures [5]. If you’re in Allen County struggling with sleepless nights, CBD might help, but evidence isn’t as strong as marketing suggests.

  • Safety Concerns: A 2023 systematic review found real signals for liver enzyme elevation and possible drug-induced liver injury, especially relevant for concentrated oral products and people taking multiple medications [6]. NCCIH also flags diarrhea, sleepiness, appetite changes, mood effects, liver abnormalities, and drug interactions [1].

Bottom Line for Allen County: CBD is the most evidence-developed non-intoxicating cannabinoid, but strong evidence is concentrated in specific indications (seizures) rather than broad wellness claims. If you’re taking other medications (common in Allen County’s older population), discuss CBD with your doctor due to interaction risks.

CBG: The “Mother Cannabinoid” With Promising But Limited Evidence

CBG is the biosynthetic precursor to several major cannabinoids and appears pharmacologically distinct from THC and CBD.

  • Evidence Profile: Mostly review-level and preclinical; human evidence remains sparse [7][8].

  • Potential Areas: Review literature discusses possible relevance to neurologic disorders, inflammatory bowel disease, and antibacterial activity, but these are primarily pharmacology-led hypotheses, not established human treatments [7][8].

  • Commercial Reality Check: A 2021 review explicitly notes CBG is already being sold commercially while the evidence base remains thin [7]. For Allen County shoppers seeing CBG products at local shops: claims are frequently ahead of science.

Bottom Line for Allen County: CBG is a serious research topic but should be described as a “promising minor cannabinoid with limited clinical validation” rather than a proven therapy.

Delta-8 THC: Not Mild, Not Safe-By-Default

What Allen County Residents Must Understand:

Delta-8 THC is psychoactive and pharmacologically relevant, but much less clinically characterized than delta-9 THC [9]-[11].

  • Comparative Pharmacology: A 2022 review concluded delta-8 and delta-9 have broadly similar pharmacokinetic behavior. Delta-8 is a partial CB1 agonist (activates the same brain receptors as THC) but appears less potent — likely due to weaker CB1 affinity [9].

  • Public Health Concerns: A 2023 scoping review found the delta-8 evidence base dominated by animal studies, product chemistry, use reports, and public-health concerns rather than strong human trials. Reports of adverse consequences exist, and regulatory/product-quality concerns are significant [10].

  • Manufacturing Issues: Commercial delta-8 interest is tied to easier synthesis, but this means product-byproduct and lab-testing questions matter greatly [11].

Bottom Line for Allen County: Delta-8 THC should be treated as a psychoactive THC analogue with real pharmacologic activity, incomplete human safety characterization, and manufacturing-quality uncertainties. It’s not “THC-lite” or automatically safe because it’s hemp-derived. Our formula includes 6,000 mg of delta-8 THC because we believe in its therapeutic potential, but we don’t downplay the need for respect and caution.

THCa: The Legal Precursor With Conversion Chemistry

THCa is the acidic, non-psychoactive precursor to delta-9 THC. It’s legally significant because it’s not delta-9 THC at point of sale — making it Farm Bill compliant.

  • Key Point for Allen County: THCa itself doesn’t produce psychoactive effects if it stays in acidic form. But heating converts it to THC [12]. This is the scientific basis for our “patient-controlled potency” approach.

  • Research Status: In vitro and rodent studies suggest anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, neuroprotective, and antineoplastic possibilities, but these aren’t established human outcomes [12].

Bottom Line for Allen County: THCa is best understood as a highly relevant precursor molecule whose interpretation depends on route, temperature, and processing. Our formula includes 1,500 mg THCa, giving you the choice between non-psychoactive raw use or activated THC potency.

Delta-9 THC: Strongest Evidence But Also Strongest Risks

What Kentucky Law Says:
Delta-9 THC remains illegal in Kentucky beyond the 0.3% Farm Bill threshold. Our product contains only 90 mg total delta-9 THC in the entire bottle — far below that threshold.

What the Science Says:

  • Best Supported: NCCIH identifies THC-containing medicines as relevant for chemotherapy nausea/vomiting, HIV/AIDS appetite/weight loss, and some MS/pain outcomes [1][13].

  • Pain Evidence: A 2022 systematic review found high-THC products may provide short-term pain benefit but increase dizziness, sedation, nausea, and treatment discontinuation due to adverse events [13].

  • Pharmacokinetics: Inhaled THC works in seconds to minutes, peaks in 15-30 minutes, and tapers over hours. Oral THC has later onset, later peak, and longer duration [14]. For Allen County residents trying to time relief: this matters.

  • Mental Health Risks: A 2025 systematic review of high-concentration THC products found consistent unfavorable associations with psychosis/schizophrenia outcomes and cannabis use disorder, plus concerning signals for anxiety and depression [15].

  • Broader Safety: Anxiety/panic at high doses, tachycardia, blood pressure changes, dependency potential, withdrawal symptoms, pregnancy concerns, accidental pediatric exposure, and vape-related lung injury concerns [1][14][15].

Bottom Line for Allen County: Delta-9 THC has legitimate therapeutic relevance but carries the clearest intoxication, psychiatric, and dose-related safety liabilities. Our formula contains only 90 mg total — dramatically lower than traditional RSO — while still providing pathways to higher potency through THCa conversion if you choose.

CBN: The Sleep Cannabinoid With Weak Evidence

CBN is marketed heavily for sleep, but the evidence doesn’t support strong claims.

  • What Marketing Says: CBN is a proven sleep aid.
  • What Science Says: A 2021 narrative review screened 99 human-study abstracts and found NO clinical trials using validated sleep questionnaires or formal polysomnography that could substantiate strong sleep-promoting claims [16]. A 2024 updated review concluded cannabis sleep research still doesn’t match real-world use scale, and better-designed trials are needed [17].

Bottom Line for Allen County: CBN is one of the clearest examples where cultural reputation is stronger than clinical evidence. Our formula includes 750 mg CBN (25 mg per mL) because existing research shows some signal at this dosage level, but we won’t oversell it.

CBC: Emerging and Intriguing But Clinically Immature

  • Pharmacology: The 2024 focused review describes CBC as having distinct pharmacodynamics and receptor behavior, highlighting antinociceptive, antibacterial, and anti-seizure areas as interesting research targets [18].

  • Older Literature: Review literature reports anti-inflammatory effects, reduced gut hypermobility, modest rodent analgesic activity, and possible neurobiological relevance, but these aren’t strong evidence for patient claims [19].

  • Safety Caution: The 2024 review notes over-the-counter CBC products are already being sold despite little evidence establishing clinical efficacy or safety [18].

Bottom Line for Allen County: CBC belongs in the category of scientifically credible minor cannabinoids deserving more research, not already-validated clinical actives. Our formula includes 750 mg as part of our multi-cannabinoid approach.

Terpenes: Plausible But Overhyped

Critical Frame for Allen County: Terpene claims need even stricter interpretation than cannabinoid claims. Much literature comes from isolated compounds, essential oils, non-cannabis plants, or preclinical models. Robust proof of clinically meaningful entourage effects in humans remains limited [20][29].

Our Seven-Terpene Profile:

  1. Limonene (citrus-bright): Review describes antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, cardioprotective possibilities, but mostly from nonhuman literature [21]. Safety note: limonene oxidation products are contact allergens [22].

  2. Myrcene: Review describes anxiolytic, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory properties but explicitly states human studies are lacking [23]. The “myrcene causes couch-lock” claim is ahead of evidence.

  3. Caryophyllene (pepper/spice): Stands out as a selective CB2 receptor agonist [24]. Most mechanistically interesting terpene for cannabis-specific effects, but still mostly preclinical.

  4. Pinene (forest-fresh): Review found antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, neuroprotective signals justifying future study, but emphasized lack of clinical trials [25]. Claims about memory enhancement are exploratory.

  5. Linalool (floral/lavender): Discussed for stress, mood, brain health, but evidence mostly preclinical [25][26]. Like limonene, oxidized linalool is a recognized allergen [22].

  6. Humulene (earthy/woody): 2024 scoping review found broad preclinical evidence and some rodent work suggesting cannabimimetic properties, but not yet clinical proof [27].

  7. Terpinolene (piney/fruity): Least clinically characterized. 2021 systematic review found evidence base dominated by in silico, in vitro, and animal studies [28].

Bottom Line for Allen County: Our terpene profile adds aroma, flavor, and plausible biological activity, but we won’t make unsupported therapeutic claims. They’re part of the entourage hypothesis, not proven clinical actives.

Research Limits and Practical Takeaways

Five Critical Interpretation Rules:

  1. Evidence is highly uneven. CBD and delta-9 THC support the most detailed statements; the rest require more caution [1]-[29].

  2. Data categories aren’t interchangeable. Whole-cannabis extract data, purified-molecule data, semisynthetic cannabinoid data, and terpene-only data are different. Don’t let evidence from one category stand in for another.

  3. Minor cannabinoids are commercially interesting BECAUSE they’re underexplored. That means claims often become inflated.

  4. Product quality matters as much as molecule identity. Labeling inaccuracies, contamination, synthesis byproducts, and dose variability all affect real-world outcomes [1][10][11][14].

  5. THCa chemistry changes with storage/heating. The same product can have different effects depending on how you handle it [12].

Five Practical Takeaways for Our Formulas:

  1. CBD and delta-9 THC are most evidence-developed.
  2. Delta-8 THC is psychoactive, pharmacologically relevant, and less characterized than delta-9 THC.
  3. THCa changes significantly with processing — handle accordingly.
  4. CBG, CBN, CBC are scientifically credible but clinically immature compared to CBD/THC.
  5. Terpene claims should be careful and conservative.

Our Complete Product Specifications

RSO Sublingual Oil — The Flagship Formula

Price: $129.99 for 30mL bottle (approximately 40-60 doses depending on serving size)

Complete Formula (Open-Source):

Cannabinoid Amount Per mL (30mL bottle)
CBD 4,500mg 150mg
CBG 3,000mg 100mg
Delta-8 THC 6,000mg 200mg
THCa 1,500mg 50mg
Delta-9 THC 90mg 3mg
CBN 750mg 25mg
CBC 750mg 25mg
TOTAL 16,590mg 553mg

Additional Specifications:

  • Live Terpenes: 5% (limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene)
  • Carrier: Organic MCT oil
  • Dropper: Graduated for precise 0.1mL increments
  • Onset: 15-45 minutes (sublingual)
  • Peak: 1-2 hours
  • Duration: 4-6 hours
  • Bioavailability: 13-19% (partially bypasses first-pass liver metabolism)

For Allen County residents: At 553 mg/mL, this is one of the most concentrated legal cannabinoid products available. The graduated dropper lets you start with just 0.25 mL (138 mg total cannabinoids) and adjust precisely.

RSO Vape Cartridge — Fast Relief Option

Price: $49.99 for 1-gram cartridge

Complete Formula (Open-Source):

Cannabinoid Percentage Approximate mg (1g)
CBD 30% 300mg
CBG 20% 200mg
Delta-8 THC 15% 150mg
THCa 10% 100mg
CBN 10% 100mg
CBC 10% 100mg
TOTAL 95%+ 900mg+

Additional Specifications:

  • Live Terpenes: 5%+
  • Thread: 510-thread universal battery compatibility
  • Onset: 1-2 minutes (fastest delivery method)
  • Peak: 10-15 minutes
  • Duration: 2-4 hours
  • Bioavailability: 10-35% (variable with inhalation technique)
  • Auto-decarboxylation: THCa converts to delta-9 THC at vaping temperature (400-450°F)

For Allen County residents: The vape option is ideal for breakthrough pain, panic attacks, or acute nausea when you need relief in 1-2 minutes, not 45. It’s also portable for those long drives to Bowling Green or Nashville for medical appointments.

Terpene Profile: Sensory and Potential Benefits

Both products contain the same seven-terpene profile:

  1. Limonene (citrus-bright): Potential mood elevation, stress relief
  2. Myrcene: Potential relaxation, muscle tension relief
  3. Caryophyllene (pepper/spice): Direct CB2 activation for inflammation
  4. Pinene (forest-fresh): Potential mental clarity, respiratory support
  5. Linalool (floral/lavender): Potential calming, anxiety reduction
  6. Humulene (earthy/woody): Potential anti-inflammatory, appetite modulation
  7. Terpinolene (piney/fruity): Complex aroma, potential antioxidant effects

For Allen County residents: These terpenes connect to familiar scents — the citrus from your groves, pine from Kentucky forests, pepper from your kitchens. They make the product experience sensory and enjoyable, not just medicinal.

When to Use Each Format: A Guide for Allen County Lifestyles

Use Case Recommended Format Why It Works for Kentucky Living
Fast relief (acute pain, panic, nausea) Vape 1-2 minute onset. Perfect for sudden breakthrough pain while working the farm or when anxiety hits before a doctor’s appointment in Bowling Green.
Sustained relief (chronic pain, sleep) Sublingual 4-6 hour duration. Ideal for all-day pain management or keeping you asleep through the night without redosing.
Maximum bioavailability Sublingual 13-19% absorption. More cannabinoids reach your bloodstream per dollar spent — important in Allen County’s economy.
Portability/discretion Vape Compact, no measuring. Easy to carry discreetly to church, community events, or when traveling.
Precise dosing control Sublingual Graduated dropper in 0.1 mL increments. Perfect for finding your exact therapeutic dose without waste.
Daytime non-psychoactive Sublingual (raw) THCa stays inactive. Zero impairment for operating tractors, driving to Scottsville, or working your shift.
Nighttime psychoactive Sublingual (decarbed) or Vape Activated THCa + delta-8 THC for therapeutic psychoactive effects when you don’t need to be alert.

Competitive Comparison: Why OilWell Stands Out in Kentucky

OilWell RSO vs. Kentucky’s Alternatives

Since Kentucky has no legal dispensaries, Allen County residents face limited options:

  1. Black market RSO: Unknown potency, unknown solvents, legal risk, no testing. Our product is legal, lab-tested, and transparent.

  2. Online hemp CBD oils: Typically 1,000-2,000 mg total cannabinoids, single-compound. Our formula has 16,590 mg across seven cannabinoids.

  3. Driving to Illinois/Michigan dispensaries: 4-8 hour round trip, high prices (often $60-120 for 1g RSO), requires medical card or recreational purchase (Illinois taxes are 30%+). Our product ships to your door for $129.99 (30mL = 16,590 mg) — better value and no travel.

  4. DIY extraction: Dangerous solvents, no quality control, potential legal issues if THC exceeds 0.3%. Our open-source formula lets you make it safely if you choose, but our professional product is tested and guaranteed.

Value Comparison for Allen County:

  • Traditional RSO syringe (1g, ~600-900 mg THC): $60-120 in legal states
  • OilWell RSO (30mL, 16,590 mg total cannabinoids): $129.99
  • Cost per mg of cannabinoids: OilWell is significantly more cost-effective
  • Legal safety: OilWell ships legally to Kentucky; black market or out-of-state purchases carry legal and safety risks

Condition-Specific Usage Context for Allen County Residents

CRITICAL DISCLAIMER: These contexts are informed by research cited in our General Knowledge section. They are NOT medical prescriptions, NOT FDA-approved treatment protocols, and NOT a substitute for professional medical care. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using cannabinoid products, especially if you have medical conditions, take medications, are pregnant/nursing, or have health concerns. Do not operate vehicles or machinery while under the influence of psychoactive cannabinoids.

If you’re in Allen County dealing with:

Chemotherapy-Related Nausea and Appetite Support:

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

Chronic Pain (From Farm Work, Injuries, Arthritis):

  • Daytime: 0.3-0.5 mL raw sublingual — anti-inflammatory cannabinoids without psychoactive impairment (safe for operating equipment)
  • Nighttime: 0.5-1.0 mL decarboxylated sublingual — combines pain relief with CBN sleep support
  • Breakthrough pain: Vape as needed for rapid onset
  • Evidence: CBD pain [4], delta-9 THC pain [13], caryophyllene CB2 activation [24], THCa COX-2 inhibition [12]

Sleep Disorders:

  • Before bed: 1.0-2.0 mL sublingual
  • At 2.0 mL: Delivers 50 mg CBN — dosage investigated in 2024 sleep literature
  • At 1.0 mL: Delivers 25 mg CBN — above threshold associated with reduced sleep disturbance
  • Evidence: CBN sleep literature [16][17]

Anxiety and Stress:

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

General Titration Principle for Allen County:
Start low, go slow. Begin with 0.25-0.5 mL sublingual (138-277 mg total cannabinoids) and assess effects over 2-3 hours before increasing. Individual responses vary based on body weight, metabolism, tolerance, and concurrent medications.

For Allen County’s Veteran Community:
Many veterans in Kentucky deal with PTSD, chronic pain, and sleep issues. Our formula was developed by Colin, who personally uses it for severe PTSD after benzodiazepine addiction. The vape format provides rapid relief for panic episodes; the sublingual format provides sustained support. We’re not saying this will cure your PTSD — we’re saying the evidence for cannabinoids in PTSD is growing, and many veterans report benefits. The VA hospitals in Lexington and Louisville are increasingly open to discussing cannabinoids as complementary therapy.

For Allen County’s Agricultural Workers:
If you’re dealing with chronic back pain from decades of farm work, arthritis from equipment operation, or acute injuries, our daytime raw sublingual option lets you manage pain without impairment. You can work your land safely while getting anti-inflammatory support.

Ordering and Access for Allen County

How to Purchase

Online: Visit OilWellCBD.com

Phone: (832) 416-2816 (call or text)

Email: [email protected]

Instagram: @oilwellcbd

Shipping to Kentucky Addresses

We ship to all Kentucky counties, including Allen. Your order will be processed within 24 hours (Monday-Saturday). Standard shipping options:

  • USPS Priority Mail: $8.95, 2-3 business days
  • UPS Ground: $12.95, 3-5 business days
  • FedEx Ground: $14.95, 3-5 business days

Discreet Packaging: Plain brown box or USPS envelope. Return address shows “OilWell CBD, Houston, TX” — no cannabis branding.

Tracking: You’ll receive tracking information via email.

Signature Requirement: Optional but recommended if you’re concerned about package security.

Payment Options

Most Allen County residents prefer:

  • Credit/Debit cards (Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover)
  • PayPal
  • Cryptocurrency (Bitcoin, Ethereum) for privacy-conscious customers

Customer Support for Kentucky Orders

Have questions about shipping to Scottsville? Wondering if our product is right for your specific condition? Want help understanding decarboxylation?

Call or text (832) 416-2816. We’re real people who answer the phone (not robots). Colin often answers directly. We’ve helped hundreds of Kentucky customers navigate their first RSO purchase.

Returns and Satisfaction Guarantee

If our product doesn’t meet your expectations, contact us within 30 days. We’ll work with you on a refund or exchange. For Allen County residents trying RSO for the first time, we want you to feel confident in your purchase.

Final Thoughts for Allen County

We’ve written this guide because we believe you deserve the same level of honest, comprehensive cannabis education that’s available in Houston, Los Angeles, or Denver — even though you live in a state without legal dispensaries. The fact that you’re reading this means you’re doing your research, and we respect that.

Allen County values are our values: self-reliance, community care, honesty, and hard work. We’re not asking you to trust us blindly. We’re giving you every piece of information — our formulas, our founder’s story, our media record, the full research evidence — so you can make an informed decision.

If you can’t afford our products, use our open-source formulas to make your own. If you can afford them, know that you’re getting the most thoughtfully formulated, legally compliant, evidence-informed RSO available anywhere. And whether you buy from us or not, we’re here to answer your questions because that’s what we promised in 2019 and that’s what we’ll keep promising.

From Houston to Scottsville, from the Texas Medical Center to the Barren River Valley, we’re here to help.

Call us anytime: (832) 416-2816

Visit: OilWellCBD.com

Email: [email protected]

We’re OilWell Cannabis. We built this for you, Allen County.

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