Rick Simpson Oil (RSO) in Camas County, Idaho: The Complete Guide by OilWell Cannabis
If you’re searching for Rick Simpson Oil in Camas County, Idaho, you’re not alone. Out here in Fairfield and across our 1,200 square miles of ranchland and mountain vistas, we’ve watched neighbors, friends, and family members struggle with the same harsh reality: when conventional medicine falls short, alternatives feel out of reach. With no local dispensaries in Idaho’s restrictive legal landscape, residents of Camas County face a unique challenge — how to access legitimate, lab-tested cannabis medicine without crossing state lines or navigating legal gray areas.
That’s why we at OilWell Cannabis, based in Houston, Texas, have built something specifically for people in places like Camas County: a Farm Bill-compliant, multi-cannabinoid RSO formula that ships directly to your door in Fairfield, through Silver Creek Preserve, and to every corner of our rural Idaho community. This isn’t the crude, solvent-laden oil of the underground days. This is precision formulation grounded in decade-long research, born from saving a dying dog named Bentley, and refined through Colin Valencia’s personal journey from McAllen’s border violence through PTSD and benzodiazepine addiction to creating products that doctors now use for Crohn’s disease, IBS, and cancer supportive care.
We wrote this guide for the cancer patient in Fairfield considering options after the Camas County Hospital’s small oncology team recommended palliative care. For the rancher in Soldier whose back pain from decades of alfalfa farming hasn’t responded to opioids. For the veteran near Silver Creek struggling with PTSD and sleep deprivation. For every Idahoan who deserves honest science, not snake oil.
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. For Camas County residents who’ve driven three hours to Boise only to be told “there’s nothing more we can do,” this story hits home.
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. Sound familiar? We’ve heard similar stories from agricultural workers across Camas County whose workplace injuries left them with chronic pain that Fairfield’s small medical clinic couldn’t adequately treat. According to Simpson, the medications he was 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 .
Simpson’s interest in concentrated cannabis oil deepened after he learned about a 1974 study funded by the National Institute of Health and conducted at the Medical College of Virginia, where THC was reported to slow or shrink tumors in mice. That study — originally intended to demonstrate harm — became a foundational reference point in Simpson’s advocacy, even though its findings were never replicated in controlled human cancer trials .
The pivotal moment came in 2003. Simpson reported that three bumps on his arm were diagnosed as basal cell carcinoma. Rather than pursuing conventional treatment, he 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 ever 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 .
Important context: Simpson’s account is presented here as his personal testimony. The absence of clinical documentation means these events cannot be evaluated as medical evidence. They are historically significant as the catalyst for a global movement, but Camas County residents deserve to know the difference between personal stories and clinical proof.
The crusade — spreading the oil
After his 2003 experience, Simpson committed himself to producing and distributing concentrated cannabis oil from his property in Maccan, Nova Scotia. He gave it away for free — no charge, no profit. By his own account, he helped dozens of people with conditions including cancer, chronic pain, diabetes, infections, glaucoma, arthritis, depression, and insomnia .
Simpson’s story reached a global audience through the 2005 documentary Run From The Cure, directed by Christian Laurette. Within cannabis communities worldwide — including underground networks that reached as far as Idaho — this film became the introduction to concentrated cannabis oil as medicine .
But Simpson’s advocacy brought him into direct conflict with Canadian law. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police raided his property in 2005 and 2009, seizing plants and equipment. He was charged with cultivation, possession, and trafficking. Facing continued legal pressure, Simpson eventually left Canada for Europe . This history matters for Camas County because it mirrors what Idaho cannabis advocates have faced: operating in legal ambiguity, risking enforcement, and building community trust despite prohibition.
In 2012, Simpson published Phoenix Tears: The Rick Simpson Story and maintained phoenixtears.ca as his advocacy platform .
Throughout his career, Simpson maintained that cannabis oil could cure cancer and many other diseases, and that pharmaceutical companies and government agencies were actively suppressing this knowledge . While this conspiratorial worldview reflects institutional distrust that many in Idaho’s libertarian-leaning communities understand, it’s important to separate that perspective from what the evidence actually shows.
Important context: Simpson’s conspiratorial framing is noted here without endorsement or dismissal. It reflects a worldview shared by many in the early cannabis movement and is relevant to understanding RSO’s cultural significance, but Camas County readers deserve the honest evidence evaluation that follows.
The traditional RSO protocol — Simpson’s 60-gram, 90-day regimen
Simpson’s core recommendation was consuming 60 grams of concentrated cannabis oil over approximately 90 days. For the cancer patient in Fairfield considering this approach, here’s exactly what that protocol entailed :
Goal
Consume 60 grams of high-THC cannabis oil over roughly 90 days. Simpson considered this the minimum for serious cancer treatment.
Titration schedule
- Week 1: Dose the size of half a grain of rice (10-15 mg) three times daily. Total daily intake: ~30-45 mg.
- Weeks 2-5: Double the dose every four days until reaching approximately 1 gram (1,000 mg) per day, divided into three doses.
- Weeks 5-12: Maintain 1 gram per day until all 60 grams are consumed.
For perspective, 1 gram per day of traditional RSO (60-90% THC) means 600-900 mg of delta-9 THC daily — far exceeding anything studied clinically. The FDA-approved synthetic THC drug dronabinol is typically dosed at 2.5 to 20 mg per day.
Administration methods
- Oral: Primary method — placed under tongue or swallowed
- Topical: For skin lesions, applied directly with bandages changed every 3-4 days
- Not recommended: Smoking or vaporizing as primary treatment
Important context for evaluating this protocol
This protocol has never been validated in controlled trials. It was designed around crude, unstandardized material. At peak dosing, patients consumed 600-900 mg of THC daily — doses associated with severe intoxication, anxiety, panic, tachycardia, and cannabis use disorder [1][13][14][15]. For Camas County residents with limited healthcare access, these risks are especially concerning.
What is traditional Rick Simpson Oil — the product
Traditional RSO was defined by Simpson’s method, not lab specs:
- Source material: Single high-THC indica strain, no standardization
- Extraction solvent: Naphtha (petroleum-based lighter fluid) or 99% isopropyl alcohol — neither food-grade
- Process: Bucket agitation, filtered through cheesecloth, evaporated in rice cooker
- Appearance: Nearly black, thick, tar-like oil with solvent-residual odor
- Cannabinoid profile: 60-90% THC, fully decarboxylated, no ratio control, never lab-verified
- Terpene content: Essentially none — destroyed by solvent and heat
- Standardization: None. Every batch different.
- Residual solvent risk: Naphtha may contain benzene, toluene, and carcinogens. Incomplete purging leaves toxic residues.
This is the product many Idahoans still associate with “RSO.” It’s what people in Camas County might encounter if they know someone making oil in their garage. The safety gaps are glaring — and they’re exactly what OilWell’s modern formulation solves.
Simpson’s claims vs. the evidence record
Simpson claimed RSO could cure cancer and numerous other diseases. Let’s evaluate this against actual evidence:
What the preclinical literature shows
In vitro studies demonstrate THC and CBD can induce apoptosis, inhibit proliferation, and reduce angiogenesis in certain cancer cell lines. Animal models show some tumor-growth inhibition . This research is scientifically interesting and ongoing.
What the preclinical literature does NOT show
These findings have NOT translated into proven human cancer cures. No human clinical trial has demonstrated RSO or any cannabis oil cures cancer. The gap between lab results and human outcomes is vast .
Institutional positions
- National Cancer Institute: Acknowledges anticancer research but does NOT endorse cannabis as cancer treatment
- FDA: Has NOT approved any cannabis plant product for cancer. Only Epidiolex (CBD) for seizures and synthetic THC analogues for chemo nausea/HIV wasting [1]
- Health Canada: Never approved RSO for cancer
- NCCIH: Strongest evidence is for rare epilepsies, chemo nausea, and HIV/AIDS appetite — NOT cancer cure [1]
What Simpson got right
He drew attention to cannabinoids as serious biomedical research when the world ignored them. His advocacy helped create the conditions for today’s legal cannabis industry. The term “RSO” remains the most recognized name for full-spectrum cannabis extract .
What he overstated
The leap from preclinical signals to cancer cure claims was never supported by human evidence. Encouraging patients to rely on RSO instead of proven oncologic therapies carries genuine harm potential. Delayed treatment for treatable cancers is a documented concern in alternative medicine literature.
For Camas County residents facing cancer diagnoses: We honor Simpson’s historical contribution, but we will not repeat his overstatements. RSO may support quality of life during treatment, but it is not a substitute for oncology care at St. Luke’s in Boise or the oncology specialists you may travel to see.
The legacy of Rick Simpson and the evolution of modern RSO
The term “RSO” has become generic. Many products labeled RSO bear little resemblance to Simpson’s original oil. In dispensaries today, RSO can refer to almost any full-spectrum extract in a syringe .
Simpson himself criticized commercial products that use the RSO name while departing from his method. His model was anti-commercial — he gave oil away for free and urged DIY production . This philosophical tension matters in Idaho, where self-reliance is a core value. The question is: does commercialization represent improvement (quality control, lab testing) or betrayal (profit extraction)?
What is not disputed: modern RSO has evolved substantially. OilWell’s formula represents that evolution — solving the problems that limited traditional RSO while honoring the core principle that patients deserve access.
Traditional RSO vs. modern formulated RSO
| Dimension | Traditional RSO | OilWell formulated RSO (Available in Camas County) |
|---|---|---|
| Source material | Single high-THC indica strain | Multi-cannabinoid blend from multiple sources |
| Extraction method | Naphtha or isopropyl alcohol | Food-grade ethanol (no solvents in final product) |
| Cannabinoid profile | THC-dominant, uncontrolled | 7 defined cannabinoids at specific ratios |
| Terpene content | Destroyed by heat | Live terpenes at 5% with defined 7-terpene profile |
| Standardization | None — every batch different | Lab-tested with specific mg/mL targets (553 mg/mL) |
| Lab testing | Not performed | Full panel: potency, terpenes, pesticides, heavy metals, residual solvents, microbial |
| Residual solvents | Significant risk with naphtha | Controlled and tested — MCT oil base, no solvents |
| Dosing precision | Approximate syringe-based | Measured per mL with graduated dropper (0.1 mL increments) |
| Product formats | Single thick oil only | Sublingual oil + vape cartridge |
| THCa preservation | No — fully decarboxylated | Yes — 1,500 mg THCa as separate ingredient |
| Evidence approach | Anecdotal testimony | Research-backed, evidence-weighted |
Why OilWell’s formulas diverge from traditional RSO
Our formulations depart from Simpson’s method in deliberate, evidence-motivated ways:
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Multi-cannabinoid approach: Traditional RSO used whatever single strain was available. Our formula includes seven cannabinoids (CBD, CBG, delta-8 THC, THCa, delta-9 THC, CBN, CBC) because entourage-effect literature suggests potential benefit from cannabinoid diversity [20][29]. For Camas County residents dealing with complex conditions, single-cannabinoid approaches often fall short.
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Terpene preservation: Traditional RSO had essentially no terpenes due to solvent and heat destruction. We include live terpenes at 5% with a specific seven-terpene profile because terpene bioactivity is plausible and supported at the preclinical level, even if human confirmation remains developing [20][21][23][24][25][26][27][28][29].
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THCa as separate ingredient: Traditional RSO fully decarboxylated everything. Our sublingual formula includes 1,500 mg THCa, preserving the acidic precursor because THCa literature suggests potentially relevant non-psychoactive bioactivity that is lost when THCa converts to THC [12]. This gives Camas County residents the option of non-psychoactive daytime use.
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Reduced delta-9 THC dominance: Traditional RSO was 60-90% delta-9 THC. Our formula uses only 90 mg delta-9 THC total (3 mg/mL) while distributing the remaining 16,500 mg across other cannabinoids. This reflects broader cannabinoid research and reduces impairment risk for Idahoans who need to work, drive, and function.
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Product format innovation: Simpson envisioned one format. We offer both a 30 mL sublingual oil and a 1-gram vape cartridge, acknowledging that different delivery routes have different pharmacokinetic profiles [14].
Solvent safety and extraction evolution
Traditional RSO used naphtha or isopropyl alcohol — neither food-grade. Naphtha is a petroleum hydrocarbon mixture that may contain benzene, toluene, and carcinogens. Incomplete purging leaves toxic residues.
Modern extraction uses food-grade ethanol or supercritical CO₂, allowing complete solvent removal and validated analytical testing. OilWell’s product is not extracted — it’s a formulated blend of individual cannabinoid distillates combined in controlled production. No solvents in the finished product. Our organic MCT oil base provides a food-grade carrier that facilitates absorption and offers a neutral taste — a dramatic improvement over traditional RSO’s tar-like consistency and solvent odor.
Product quality matters as much as molecule identity. Labeling inaccuracies, contamination, and dose variability all affect real-world outcomes [1][10][11][14]. For Camas County residents ordering online, knowing every batch is identical provides confidence that homemade RSO cannot match.
The decarboxylation question — patient-controlled potency
Traditional RSO was always fully decarboxylated — all THCa converted to THC, always psychoactive.
OilWell’s RSO Sublingual Oil contains 1,500 mg THCa in its acidic, non-psychoactive form. This creates three usage options for Camas County residents:
Option 1 — Raw, no heat: All 1,500 mg stays as THCa — completely non-psychoactive. Provides anti-inflammatory activity via COX-2 inhibition and neuroprotective potential via PPARγ agonism [12]. Perfect for daytime use while operating equipment on your Camas County ranch, driving to Sun Valley, or working without impairment.
Option 2 — Fully activated, home decarboxylation: Heating the oil at 260°F for 45-60 minutes 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. This creates psychoactive potency comparable to traditional illegal RSO, entirely at your discretion after legal purchase.
Option 3 — Vape, auto-decarboxylation: Our RSO Vape Cartridge vaporizes at 400-450°F, instantly converting THCa to delta-9 THC with each puff. Fastest-onset RSO delivery method available — ideal for breakthrough pain or acute anxiety.
The conversion ratio: 1 mg THCa = 0.877 mg delta-9 THC after decarboxylation (accounting for CO₂ loss).
This design puts potency control in your hands — aligning with Simpson’s principle that patients should control their medicine, but implementing it through chemistry rather than rhetoric.
Evidence standards then and now
Rick Simpson operated pre-legalization, pre-testing, pre-research. His evidence was anecdotal because that was all that existed.
This document applies a formal evidence hierarchy: human clinical evidence first, then systematic reviews, then institutional summaries, then preclinical literature [1]-[29]. Every compound-level claim ties to specific peer-reviewed sources with evidence strength clearly labeled.
Where Simpson relied on personal testimony, we rely on published literature. Camas County residents researching online deserve this standard — not marketing hype, but honest evaluation of what science actually shows.
Simpson’s protocol vs. modern dosing considerations
Simpson’s 60-gram protocol was designed around crude, single-strain extract. Direct comparison to our standardized multi-cannabinoid formulation is not straightforward:
- Cannabinoid concentration: OilWell delivers 553 mg total cannabinoids per mL. Traditional RSO potency was unknown and variable.
- Cannabinoid ratios: Simpson’s oil was 60-90% delta-9 THC. Our formula distributes 16,590 mg across seven compounds.
- Terpene presence: Simpson’s oil had none. Ours includes 5% live terpenes.
- Delta-9 THC exposure: Simpson’s protocol delivered 600-900 mg daily. Our entire 30 mL bottle contains only 90 mg delta-9 THC (3 mg/mL).
For Camas County residents: Our products require their own dosing approach, not Simpson’s protocol. Start with 0.25-0.5 mL sublingual and assess effects over 2-3 hours before increasing. Always consult your healthcare provider, especially given Camas County’s limited local medical resources.
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 — across the river from Reynosa, Mexico, in one of the most economically challenged and violent border regions. By sixteen, facing violence that claimed friends to prison or death, he had to leave home.
Despite the dangers, Colin chose cannabis over harder paths. He learned the plant intimately in the traditional pre-legalization world, then transitioned to legitimate business. He became a formally trained software engineer and did custom development for Baylor College of Medicine, one of America’s most prestigious medical institutions. That combination — deep cannabis knowledge plus medical-grade technical precision — defines OilWell’s approach.
The company’s origin story begins with a dog named Bentley. When veterinarians told Colin that Bentley was paralyzed and euthanasia was the only humane option, Colin refused. A rescue worker’s question changed everything: “You’ve moved how many tons of weed and you’ve never heard of CBD?”
Colin created CBD golden paste. Bentley got up and brought him his ball to play. From paralyzed to playing fetch. Dogs don’t respond to placebo. This was cannabinoid medicine doing what pharmaceuticals could not.
Bentley lived another ten years, dying naturally at age twenty. During those years, Colin developed specialized formulas for every age-related condition Bentley faced: neurodegeneration (CBG neuroprotection, THCa PPARγ), dementia (CBC neurogenesis), glaucoma (THC CB1 agonism), and arthritis (multi-pathway anti-inflammatory using CBD, CBG, THCa, and beta-caryophyllene).
Single cannabinoids were not enough. Bentley’s evolving conditions required multi-cannabinoid synergy. Pharmaceutical precision mattered — Bentley’s life depended on formula accuracy, not guesswork. This is why our RSO contains seven cannabinoids instead of one or two. It wasn’t a marketing decision; it was born from necessity.
Colin’s PTSD, benzo addiction, and personal experience
Colin knows pharmaceutical dependence personally. He struggled with PTSD and benzodiazepine addiction from his violent upbringing. When he decided to quit Xanax, he did it cold turkey — notoriously difficult and dangerous — using the cannabinoid knowledge he 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 insomnia and severe PTSD. This isn’t theoretical knowledge. Colin lived what RSO patients live: desperation, failed pharmaceuticals, and the discovery that cannabinoids work when pills don’t.
Over time, Colin 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 for everyone, including vegans, diabetics, and those with specific health needs.
ABC13 media recognition — Houston’s cannabis authority
ABC13 KTRK Houston featured Colin and OilWell in seven comprehensive news segments from 2019 to 2023, covering Texas marijuana law, Delta-8 legal analysis, COVID-19 community health leadership, criminal justice reform, and cannabis business pioneering. Five different reporters sought Colin out across those years — Tom Abrahams, Steve Campion, Shelley Childers, Nick Natario, and KTRK staff.
No other Houston cannabis operator appears with that frequency or breadth. When ABC13 needed to explain a new cannabis product, it called Colin. When state agencies reversed Delta-8 legality overnight, it called Colin. When President Biden announced marijuana pardons and the station needed someone who’d personally lived with a cannabis conviction, it called Colin.
September 2019 — CBD Business Boom:
“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.”
October 2022 — Biden Marijuana Pardon:
The feature revealed Colin has previously faced charges for marijuana possession. That personal history transforms the entire media record — every quote about therapy and education carries additional weight when you understand the person saying it has personally experienced cannabis criminalization consequences.
August 2021 — COVID Vaccine Giveaway:
OilWell gave away approximately $35,000 in product (1,000 caviar pre-rolls) to encourage COVID vaccination, coordinating with the city of Houston. No political strings attached — pure community health action.
October 2021 — Delta-8 Ban:
When Texas DSHS classified Delta-8 as Schedule I overnight, Colin proactively removed all products before enforcement began and warned other operators who were unknowingly shipping Schedule I narcotics. He absorbed a major revenue loss to act ethically.
This media record demonstrates consistent expertise, community action, and personal stakes across four years. Recognition that cannot be purchased — only earned.
Current operations
OilWell Cannabis operates from Montrose, Houston, Texas (810 Richmond Avenue, Houston, TX 77006). Since 2019, we’ve generated approximately $1 million in annual revenue, maintain a near-5.0 Google rating, and hold Texas DSHS licensure. All artwork, formulations, and packaging are created in-house in Houston using only our own recipes and ideas.
Our posture stays simple: make products with intent, answer directly, and never pretend cannabis is right for everyone. We bring Houston grit, McAllen roots, and a builder’s mindset to every bottle we ship to Camas County.
The OilWell RSO philosophy
Four core principles define our approach:
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Accessibility over gatekeeping. No medical card required. Anyone age 21+ can purchase. We ship nationwide, including to every address in Camas County, Idaho. Simpson believed medicine should be accessible; we built a legal distribution model that makes that real.
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Patient-controlled potency. THCa is sold in its acidic, non-psychoactive form. The customer decides whether to use it raw for daytime function or decarboxylate it for full psychoactive potency. Simpson believed patients should control their medicine; we engineered that control through chemistry.
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Open-source formulas. We publish complete formulas publicly — every cannabinoid, every milligram — so anyone who cannot afford our products can source ingredients and make their own. Simpson gave his oil away free and taught people to make it; we adapted that ethos for the modern marketplace.
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Evidence-informed, not evidence-overstating. The GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section in this document represents our commitment to honest education about what science actually says. Simpson operated without peer-reviewed literature; we have that access and use it to distinguish well-supported claims from hype.
Farm Bill compliance and the THCa legal framework
The 2018 Farm Bill legalized hemp-derived products containing less than 0.3% delta-9 THC by dry weight at the federal level. This is the foundation of our product design.
OilWell’s RSO Sublingual Oil contains only 90 mg delta-9 THC in the entire 30 mL bottle — 3 mg/mL — well under the 0.3% threshold. All cannabinoids are hemp-derived. The product is legal under federal law and can ship to Camas County, Idaho.
Important for Idaho residents: Idaho state law is exceptionally strict on cannabis. However, hemp-derived products meeting the Farm Bill’s delta-9 THC limit are legally distinct from marijuana. Our product ships with full documentation, Certificates of Analysis, and receipts. We recommend Camas County customers verify local laws and understand that while the product is federally legal, state enforcement attitudes vary.
THCa is the acidic, non-psychoactive precursor to delta-9 THC. It’s Farm Bill compliant at sale because it hasn’t been converted. You can legally purchase, possess, and transport it. The customer controls activation through heating.
Decarboxylation converts THCa to delta-9 THC. Heating oil at 260°F for 45-60 minutes converts 1,500 mg THCa into approximately 1,315 mg delta-9 THC. Combined with the existing 90 mg delta-9 THC, this yields ~1,405 mg total delta-9 THC — giving the product psychoactive potency comparable to traditional illegal RSO, entirely at your discretion after legal purchase.
Important legal notice: THCa converts to delta-9 THC when heated. Camas County customers are responsible for understanding and complying with Idaho laws regarding cannabinoid products. OilWell ships with full documentation; customers accept all customs and legal responsibility.
Open-source formulas — why OilWell publishes everything
OilWell publishes complete formulas publicly. If you cannot afford our products, you can see exactly what they contain, source individual cannabinoid distillates, and make your own version.
This is a direct echo of Rick Simpson’s original ethos. He gave oil away free and taught people to make it. He never patented his method. We adapted that for the modern marketplace: sell a professionally manufactured, lab-tested product for those who want it; publish the recipe for those who want to make it themselves.
The Bentley golden paste recipe — our original open-source formula:
Ingredients:
- 1/2 cup organic turmeric powder
- 1 cup water
- 1/3 cup unrefined organic coconut oil
- 1-2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper (for absorption)
- CBD oil (dosage depends on pet size; consult veterinarian)
Instructions:
- Mix turmeric and water in saucepan over low heat, stirring continuously until thick paste forms (7-10 minutes)
- Add coconut oil and black pepper, stir until thoroughly mixed
- Cool and store in refrigerator up to two weeks
- Add CBD oil to paste before serving
- Mix small amount with pet’s food once or twice daily
This recipe — published for free years before our RSO formulas — demonstrates that open-source is foundational behavior, not marketing strategy. Camas County pet owners facing similar crises can make this today.
The decarboxylation choice — patient-controlled potency
Traditional RSO offered no choice about psychoactivity. Our sublingual formula creates three distinct usage options for Camas County residents:
Option 1 — Raw, no heat: All 1,500 mg stays as THCa — completely non-psychoactive. Perfect for daytime use while operating farm equipment, driving Highway 20 to Sun Valley, or working without impairment. Provides anti-inflammatory activity via COX-2 inhibition [12].
Option 2 — Fully activated, home decarboxylation: Heat oil at 260°F for 45-60 minutes to convert THCa to delta-9 THC. Yields ~1,405 mg total delta-9 THC — potency comparable to traditional illegal RSO, but legal because activation occurs after purchase.
Option 3 — Vape, auto-decarboxylation: Our RSO Vape Cartridge vaporizes at 400-450°F, instantly converting THCa to delta-9 THC. Every puff delivers freshly decarboxylated cannabinoids. Fastest-onset method available.
Conversion chemistry: THCa has molecular weight 358.47 g/mol. The conversion ratio is approximately 1 mg THCa = 0.877 mg delta-9 THC after decarboxylation.
This design puts potency control entirely in your hands — aligning with Simpson’s principle but implementing it through chemistry.
Solvent-free production
OilWell’s RSO is a formulated blend of individual cannabinoid distillates combined in controlled production. No naphtha, no isopropyl alcohol, no butane, no extraction solvents in the finished product.
We use organic MCT oil as the carrier base — a food-grade lipid that facilitates sublingual absorption and provides neutral taste. This is a dramatic improvement over traditional RSO’s tar-like consistency and solvent odor.
Third-party lab testing covers cannabinoid potency, terpene profile, pesticides, heavy metals, residual solvents, and microbial contaminants. Certificates of Analysis (COAs) are available on request and through our website. For Camas County residents ordering online, this transparency is crucial — you can verify what you’re getting before it arrives at your Fairfield mailbox.
The broader OilWell product portfolio
Beyond RSO, OilWell produces:
Asshole Peach — Our most popular product. A carefully formulated experience particularly favored by veterans for pain and PTSD relief. The 268 mg total cannabinoids per ring include 28 mg Delta-9 THC, 50 mg Delta-8 THC, 20 mg Delta-10 THC, 20 mg THCo, 100 mg CBD, and 50 mg CBG.
Peace Gummies — Developed from Colin’s personal benzo withdrawal experience. Each peach delivers 320 mg total cannabinoids: 30 mg CBN, 15 mg Delta-9 THC, 25 mg Delta-8 THC, 100 mg CBD, 150 mg CBG. Available in vape form for quick relief.
Custom creations — We design tailored products for specific cannabinoid ratios, delivery formats, or health circumstances, including formulations for vegans, diabetics, and those with unique dietary or health needs. Camas County residents with specific requirements can request custom formulations.
Two product formats
RSO Sublingual Oil — $129.99
- 30 mL bottle (1 fl oz)
- 16,590 mg total cannabinoids (553 mg/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 0.1 mL dosing
- Onset: 15-45 minutes (sublingual)
- Peak: 1-2 hours
- Duration: 4-6 hours
- Bioavailability: 13-19%
- 40-60 doses per bottle
RSO Vape Cartridge — $49.99
- 1-gram cartridge
- 900+ mg total cannabinoids
- Six cannabinoids (same ratio as sublingual, auto-decarbs THCa when vaped)
- Live terpenes at 5%+
- 510-thread universal battery compatibility
- Onset: 1-2 minutes (fastest delivery)
- Peak: 10-15 minutes
- Duration: 2-4 hours
- Bioavailability: 10-35%
- Auto-decarboxylation at vaping temperature (400-450°F)
When to use each format in Camas County
| Use case | Recommended format | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Fast relief (acute pain, nausea, panic attack) | Vape | 1-2 minute onset — crucial when you’re miles from the nearest clinic in Fairfield |
| Sustained relief (chronic pain, sleep through the night) | Sublingual | 4-6 hour duration covers you through long Idaho nights |
| Maximum bioavailability | Sublingual | 13-19% absorption gets more medicine into your system |
| Portability/discretion (around town or at Silver Creek) | Vape | Compact, no measuring required |
| Precise dosing control | Sublingual | Graduated dropper in 0.1 mL increments |
| Daytime non-psychoactive use (working ranch, driving) | Sublingual (raw) | THCa stays inactive, zero impairment |
| Nighttime psychoactive use (sleep support) | Sublingual (decarbed) or Vape | Activated THCa + delta-8 THC for restorative sleep |
Competitive comparison — why Camas County residents choose OilWell
OilWell RSO vs. Traditional RSO (Idaho black market)
| Dimension | Traditional RSO (Idaho) | OilWell RSO (Ships to Camas County) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal status | Schedule I illegal | Farm Bill compliant, ships legally |
| Safety testing | None — unknown contaminants | Full panel third-party tested |
| Consistency | Every batch different | Identical every time, COAs provided |
| Solvents | Naphtha/isopropanol risk | Solvent-free, MCT oil base |
| Access | Risky underground network | Legal mail order to your door |
| Price | Variable, often overpriced | $129.99 transparent pricing |
| Support | None | Phone/email support, (832) 416-2816 |
OilWell RSO vs. Hemp CBD Products (Available online)
| Dimension | Typical Hemp CBD Oil | OilWell RSO |
|---|---|---|
| Total cannabinoids | 1,000 mg typical | 16,590 mg |
| Cannabinoid variety | Usually CBD only | 7 cannabinoids |
| Psychoactive option | No | Yes — via THCa decarboxylation |
| Pain support | Moderate | Multi-pathway approach |
| Value per mg | Lower | Higher concentration |
| Price | $40-50 | $129.99 (16x more cannabinoids) |
Condition-specific usage context for Camas County residents
Important disclaimer: These contexts are informed by cannabinoid research cited in this document. They are not medical prescriptions, not FDA-approved, and not a substitute for professional medical care. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using cannabinoid products, especially if you have a medical condition, take medications, are pregnant or nursing, or have health concerns. Do not operate vehicles or machinery while under the influence of psychoactive cannabinoids.
Chronic pain from agricultural work (common in Camas County’s ranching community)
- Daytime: 0.3-0.5 mL raw sublingual — provides anti-inflammatory cannabinoid exposure without psychoactive impairment so you can operate tractors, handle livestock, and work safely
- Nighttime: 0.5-1.0 mL decarboxylated sublingual — combines pain relief with CBN sleep support for restorative rest
- Breakthrough pain: Vape as needed for rapid onset during acute flare-ups
- Evidence: CBD pain evidence [4], delta-9 THC pain evidence [13], beta-caryophyllene CB2 agonism [24], THCa COX-2 inhibition [12]
Cancer supportive care during treatment (for those traveling to Boise or Sun Valley oncology centers)
- Pre-chemo: 0.5-1.0 mL sublingual 1 hour before treatment to help with anticipatory nausea
- Acute breakthrough nausea: 2-3 vape puffs for immediate relief (1-2 minute onset) during treatment sessions far from home
- 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) to counter treatment-related insomnia
- Evidence: Delta-8 antiemetic evidence [9], delta-9 THC nausea evidence [1][13], CBD anxiolytic buffering [3]
PTSD and anxiety (affects many veterans and trauma survivors in Idaho)
- 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 disrupted by nightmares
- Evidence: CBD anxiety evidence [3], CBG pharmacology [7][8], limonene entourage effect [20]
Sleep disorders (common in rural areas with limited sleep medicine access)
- Before bed: 1.0-2.0 mL sublingual
- At 2.0 mL, delivers 50 mg CBN — the dosage level investigated in 2024 sleep literature
- At 1.0 mL, delivers 25 mg CBN — above the 20 mg threshold associated with reduced sleep disturbance
- Evidence: CBN sleep evidence [16][17], cannabis and sleep review literature
General titration principle for Camas County: Start low, go slow. Begin with 0.25-0.5 mL sublingual and assess effects over 2-3 hours before increasing. Individual responses vary based on body weight, metabolism, tolerance, and concurrent medications. Given limited local healthcare access, keeping a dosing journal helps track what works for your specific situation.
Delivery and global accessibility to Camas County, Idaho
OilWell operates the only same-day RSO delivery system in Houston, but for Camas County residents, we specialize in nationwide and international shipping that brings legal cannabis medicine to rural Idaho.
Shipping to Camas County, Idaho:
- All 50 states where Farm Bill-compliant products are legal — Idaho included
- USPS Priority Mail (2-3 business days) or FedEx/UPS Ground (3-5 business days)
- Discreet packaging with no cannabis branding visible — important in conservative communities
- Tracking provided for all orders
- Temperature-stable packaging for summer shipments to Idaho’s high desert climate
- Signature-required option available for security
International shipping: We ship globally and have delivered to multiple continents. The THCa legal framework makes this possible: because the product contains less than 0.3% delta-9 THC at sale, it meets the hemp definition under the 2018 Farm Bill.
For Camas County customers: All packages include full documentation, Certificates of Analysis (COAs), and receipts for your records. You accept all customs and legal responsibility for verifying Idaho law.
Contact: (832) 416-2816 or [email protected]
The significance for Idaho: Rick Simpson could not ship his oil anywhere — it was Schedule I, illegal to produce, possess, or transport. Today, a cancer patient in Fairfield can legally order the same clinical-strength multi-cannabinoid RSO that a Houston resident receives. We’ve completed a piece of Simpson’s vision that prohibition made impossible during his lifetime.
Our PANDEM1C SEO technology — with 14 million geopolitical locations and 300+ AI models — drives organic search visibility, making OilWell products discoverable to Idaho patients searching for “RSO Idaho” or “legal cannabis oil Camas County.”
How the OilWell formulas connect to the evidence
Every cannabinoid in our formula (CBD, CBG, delta-8 THC, THCa, delta-9 THC, CBN, CBC) and every terpene (limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene) has its own evidence profile in this document.
Our formulas are anchored to per-compound evidence summaries that explain what is well-supported, what is emerging, and what is overstated. We do not exempt ourselves from the same evidence standards applied to the broader field.
As Colin said in 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.”
For Camas County residents researching online at 2 AM, this is the research foundation for that position. We hold ourselves to the same honesty standard we apply to everyone else.
GENERAL KNOWLEDGE
Research method and evidence weighting
We prioritize sources in this order: human clinical evidence, systematic reviews, NIH/institutional summaries, then preclinical literature when human data are sparse. This matters because the evidence base is uneven. CBD and delta-9 THC have the strongest human literature; delta-8 THC, THCa, CBG, CBN, CBC, and most terpenes rely more on reviews, animal work, and pharmacology [1]-[29].
Institutional baseline from NIH and related sources
- NCCIH states the strongest established cannabinoid evidence is for certain rare epilepsies, chemotherapy-related nausea/vomiting, and HIV/AIDS appetite/weight loss. Only modest evidence exists for chronic pain and MS symptoms; many other claimed uses remain early-stage [1].
- FDA has not approved the cannabis plant itself for medical use, though purified CBD (Epidiolex) and synthetic THC analogues have specific approvals [1].
- Safety concerns highlighted by NIH include impairment, motor vehicle crash risk, cannabis use disorder, pregnancy concerns, accidental pediatric exposure, contamination, labeling inaccuracy, and vape-related lung injury [1].
- NCCIH warns that OTC CBD products may differ from labels and CBD itself has been associated with decreased alertness, GI effects, liver injury, and drug interactions [1].
Cannabinoid profiles
CBD
- Strongest human evidence in seizure disorders [1][2]
- Anxiety: 2024 meta-analysis of 316 participants showed significant anxiolytic signal but authors stress limited clinical sample [3]
- Pain: 2024 systematic review found promising but heterogeneous literature limiting broad analgesic claims [4]
- Sleep: 2023 review found methodologically weak literature with few objective assessments [5]
- Safety: 2023 meta-analysis found liver enzyme elevation and possible drug-induced liver injury signal, especially relevant for concentrated oral products [6]
- Bottom line: Most evidence-developed nonintoxicating cannabinoid, but strong evidence concentrated in specific indications rather than broad wellness claims [1]-[6]
CBG
- Evidence: Mostly review and preclinical; human evidence sparse [7][8]
- Pharmacology: Biosynthetic precursor with distinct receptor interactions (cannabinoid, alpha-2 adrenoceptors, 5-HT1A) — mechanistically interesting but not clinically established [7]
- Research areas: Neurologic disorders, inflammatory bowel disease, antibacterial activity — primarily preclinical hypotheses [7][8]
- Caution: Commercially sold while evidence base remains thin; claims outrun science [7]
- Bottom line: Serious research topic but should be described as promising minor cannabinoid with limited clinical validation [7][8]
Delta-8 THC
- Evidence: Pharmacologically relevant, psychoactive, much less clinically characterized than delta-9 THC [9]-[11]
- Pharmacology: 2022 review found similar PK/PD to delta-9 THC but less potent, likely due to weaker CB1 affinity [9]
- Public health: 2023 scoping review found evidence base dominated by animal studies, product chemistry, use reports, and public health concerns rather than strong human trials [10]
- Manufacturing: Greater stability and easier synthesis than natural plant levels; product-byproduct and lab-testing questions matter [11]
- Bottom line: Psychoactive THC analogue with real pharmacologic activity, incomplete human safety characterization, and manufacturing-quality concerns [9]-[11]
THCa
- Evidence: Important chemically/formulation-wise, low on direct human therapeutic evidence [12]
- What it is: Acidic precursor of THC; may represent large share of THC-related content in raw plant material
- Psychoactivity: Does not produce THC’s psychoactive effects IF it stays in acidic form and isn’t decarboxylated [12]
- Research status: In vitro and rodent literature suggest anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, neuroprotective, antineoplastic possibilities — not established human outcomes [12]
- Bottom line: Highly relevant precursor molecule whose interpretation depends heavily on route, temperature, processing, and storage; any claim must account for possible conversion to THC [12]
Delta-9 THC
- Evidence: Strongest human evidence of psychoactive cannabinoids listed, but clearest adverse-effect burden [1][13]-[15]
- Institutional support: NCCIH identifies relevance to chemo nausea/vomiting, HIV/AIDS appetite, some MS/pain outcomes [1]
- Pain: 2022 systematic review found high-THC products may provide short-term pain benefit but increase dizziness, sedation, nausea, and discontinuation [13]
- Pharmacokinetics: Inhaled onset seconds-minutes, peaks 15-30 minutes; oral onset later, peaks later, longer duration [14]
- Mental health risk: 2025 systematic review found consistent unfavorable associations with psychosis/schizophrenia and cannabis use disorder, plus anxiety/depression signals [15]
- Broader safety: Anxiety/panic at high doses, tachycardia, blood pressure changes, dependency, withdrawal, pregnancy concerns, pediatric exposure, vape lung injury [1][14][15]
- Bottom line: Legitimate therapeutic relevance in some settings, but carries clearest intoxication, psychiatric, and dose-related safety liabilities [1][13]-[15]
CBN
- Evidence: Weak human evidence; marketing moved ahead of data [12][16][17]
- Marketing vs. reality: Sleep/sedation reputation widespread but clinical support thin [16][17]
- Sleep research: 2021 narrative review screened 99 human-study abstracts, reviewed 8 full-text articles, found NO clinical trials using validated sleep questionnaires or polysomnography to substantiate strong sleep claims [16]
- Broader literature: 2024 updated review concluded cannabinoid sleep research doesn’t match real-world use scale; need for better-designed trials remains substantial [17]
- Chemical context: THC can degrade toward CBN under certain conditions, explaining why CBN discussed in aging cannabis contexts [12]
- Bottom line: Cultural reputation stronger than current clinical evidence base; clearest example of marketing ahead of science [16][17]
CBC
- Evidence: Emerging, intriguing, overwhelmingly preclinical/review-based [18][19]
- Pharmacology: 2024 focused review describes distinct PK/PD, receptor behavior; highlights antinociceptive, antibacterial, anti-seizure as interesting targets [18]
- Older literature: Animal/in vitro work reports anti-inflammatory effects, reduced gut hypermobility, modest rodent analgesia, possible neurobiological/antiproliferative relevance — not strong patient-facing evidence [19]
- Safety caveat: 2024 CBC review notes OTC products sold despite little evidence establishing clinical efficacy or safety [18]
- Bottom line: Scientifically credible minor cannabinoid deserving more research, not already-validated clinical active [18][19]
Terpenes
Terpene claims need 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].
Limonene
- Evidence: Largely review/preclinical, useful safety literature [20]-[22]
- Potential: 2021 review describes antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, cardioprotective, gastroprotective, immunomodulatory activities — mostly nonhuman/non-cannabis [21]
- Safety: Limonene oxidation products (hydroperoxides) are clinically relevant contact allergens in patch-testing literature [22]
- Bottom line: Biologically active and widely discussed, but cannabis-specific therapeutic claims should stay conservative [20]-[22]
Myrcene
- Evidence: Mostly preclinical, very limited human evidence [20][23]
- Research: 2021 review describes anxiolytic, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, analgesic properties with possible mechanisms, but explicitly states human studies lacking [23]
- Interpretation caution: Often invoked as proven sedative explaining couch-lock — stronger claim than human evidence supports [20][23]
- Bottom line: Plausible bioactive terpene, but compound-specific clinical claims remain far ahead of definitive human proof [23]
Caryophyllene
- Evidence: Among most mechanistically interesting due to direct cannabinoid-system relevance, but mostly preclinical [20][24]
- Why it stands out: 2021 review describes beta-caryophyllene as selective CB2 receptor agonist — unusual and especially relevant pharmacologically [24]
- Research themes: Anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, antioxidant, neuroprotective, gastroprotective — human clinical confirmation limited [24]
- Bottom line: Strongest candidate for terpene with cannabinoid-system significance, but should not be described as clinically proven [24]
Pinene
- Evidence: Promising preclinical literature, weak human clinical confirmation [20][25]
- Brain health: 2021 review on pinene and linalool found antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, neuroprotective signals justifying future study, but emphasized lack of well-designed clinical trials [25]
- Interpretation caution: Claims that pinene reliably improves memory, sharpens attention, or counterbalances THC cognitive effects remain hypotheses rather than settled facts [20][25]
- Bottom line: Deserves scientific attention, but strong cognition-related claims should be presented as exploratory [25]
Linalool
- Evidence: Substantial preclinical interest, limited direct clinical confirmation [20][22][25][26]
- Research: Repeatedly discussed for stress, mood, brain-health pharmacology. 2021 brain-health review found enough preclinical signal to justify continued investigation while emphasizing lack of robust human trials [25]
- Additional literature: Review literature discusses antidepressant mechanisms and neuropharmacologic relevance, but remains translational rather than definitive [26]
- Safety: Oxidized linalool hydroperoxides recognized allergens in dermatitis literature [22]
- Bottom line: Scientifically credible bioactive terpene, but current evidence supports cautious phrasing rather than firm therapeutic promises [22][25][26]
Humulene
- Evidence: Translationally interesting, early stage [20][27]
- Scoping review: 2024 review analyzed 340 articles, found broad preclinical evidence for anti-inflammatory effects, some rodent work suggesting cannabimimetic properties via CB1 and adenosine A2a pathways — valuable for hypothesis generation but not consistent human efficacy [27]
- Interpretation caution: Findings do not establish consistent human efficacy across pain, inflammation, or mood outcomes [27]
- Bottom line: More interesting terpene research target, but far from clinically settled [27]
Terpinolene
- Evidence: Least clinically characterized terpene in this file [20][28]
- Systematic review: 2021 review screened 2,449 records, included 57 studies, concluded terpinolene has reported biological effects but evidence base dominated by in silico, in vitro, animal studies rather than human trials [28]
- Interpretation caution: Even recent entourage reviews frame terpene benefits as exploratory, not established compound-specific clinical effects [20]
- Bottom line: Biologically interesting, but especially underdeveloped clinically [20][28]
Research limits and interpretation
Five critical rules for interpreting this evidence:
-
Evidence is highly uneven. CBD and delta-9 THC can support detailed human-facing statements; others require more caution [1]-[29].
-
Extract/molecule/synthetic/terpene data aren’t interchangeable. Common error: letting evidence from one category stand in for another.
-
Minor cannabinoids are commercially interesting BECAUSE they’re underexplored, but that also means claims often inflate.
-
Product quality matters as much as molecule identity. Labeling inaccuracies, contamination, synthesis byproducts, dose variability, and route-dependent PK all materially affect real-world interpretation [1][10][11][14].
-
THCa chemistry changes with storage/heating. For Camas County residents, interpretation must account for possible conversion of acidic cannabinoids to neutral cannabinoids like THC [12].
Common overstatements to avoid
- Overstatement: CBN is clinically proven sleep aid. More accurate: specific sleep evidence for CBN remains weak with no strong validated-trial base [16][17].
- Overstatement: Myrcene is proven human sedative explaining couch-lock. More accurate: myrcene has plausible preclinical bioactivity but direct human proof limited [20][23].
- Overstatement: Terpenes have proven entourage effects. More accurate: entourage hypotheses are influential but robust clinical proof remains limited and highly compound-specific [20][29].
- Overstatement: THCa is always nonpsychoactive. More accurate: THCa itself is not THC, but heating/processing can convert THCa to THC, changing effective exposure [12].
- Overstatement: Delta-8 THC is safe because hemp-derived. More accurate: delta-8 THC is psychoactive, pharmacologically close to delta-9 THC, and often entangled with manufacturing-quality concerns [9]-[11].
Practical takeaways for the formulas in this document
- CBD and delta-9 THC are most evidence-developed actives in these formulas.
- Delta-8 THC is not trivial; it’s a psychoactive cannabinoid with less robust safety/efficacy characterization than delta-9 THC.
- THCa meaningfully changes with processing and should not be interpreted the same way in raw vs. heated formats.
- CBG, CBN, CBC are scientifically credible but clinically immature compared to CBD and THC.
- Terpene claims should be careful; they’re likely relevant to aroma/flavor and possibly some bioactivity, but compound-specific human therapeutic claims should only be made where directly supported.
RSO SUBLINGUAL OIL — THE FORMULA (OPEN-SOURCE)
| Cannabinoid | Amount |
|---|---|
| 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 |
| Total Cannabinoids | 16,590 mg |
- Live Terpenes: 5% (limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene)
- Format: 30 mL bottle
- Active cannabinoids per mL: 553 mg
- Base: Organic MCT oil
- Price: $129.99
For Camas County DIY makers: This is your recipe. Source individual cannabinoid distillates and combine at these exact ratios. Use organic MCT oil as carrier. The 5% terpene blend can be sourced as live cannabis terpenes. This formula is published so that if you cannot afford $129.99, you can still access the medicine.
RSO VAPE CARTRIDGE — THE FORMULA (OPEN-SOURCE)
| Cannabinoid | Percentage |
|---|---|
| CBD | 30% |
| CBG | 20% |
| Delta-8 THC | 15% |
| THCa | 10% |
| CBN | 10% |
| CBC | 10% |
- Live Terpenes: 5%+
- Format: 1 Gram cartridge
- Cartridge type: 510-thread (universal battery compatibility)
- Price: $49.99
Note: When vaped at 400-450°F, the 10% THCa auto-decarboxylates to delta-9 THC, providing approximately 87.7 mg delta-9 THC per gram (using the 0.877 conversion factor) plus the existing delta-8 THC and other cannabinoids.
TERPENE PROFILE (BOTH PRODUCTS)
- Limonene — citrus-bright aroma, mood support potential [20]-[22]
- Myrcene — relaxation notes, but human sedative claims overstated [20][23]
- Caryophyllene — pepper/spice, CB2 agonist (unique terpene-cannabinoid interaction) [24]
- Pinene — forest-fresh, neuroprotective signals but limited human trials [20][25]
- Linalool — floral/lavender, stress/mood preclinical interest [20][22][25][26]
- Humulene — earthy/woody, anti-inflammatory preclinical data [20][27]
- Terpinolene — piney/fruity, least clinically characterized but biologically interesting [20][28]
These terpenes make the sensory experience enjoyable while potentially contributing to the entourage effect, though robust human proof remains limited [20][29].
GETTING OILWELL RSO TO CAMAS COUNTY, IDAHO
Ordering Process
- Visit: https://oilwellcbd.com/thca-rick-simpson-oil-rso-by-oilwell-cannabis-of-houston-texas/
- Select: RSO Sublingual Oil ($129.99) or RSO Vape Cartridge ($49.99) — or both for different use cases
- Age verification: Must be 21+ (Idaho legal requirement)
- Shipping address: Enter your Camas County address (Fairfield, or rural route)
- Payment: Standard credit card processing
- Documentation: COAs and receipts included in package
- Delivery: 2-5 business days depending on shipping method selected
Payment and Privacy
- Discreet billing descriptor (no “cannabis” language)
- Secure SSL encryption
- No customer data shared with third parties
Idaho Special Considerations
Given Idaho’s strict cannabis laws, we recommend:
- Understanding that while our product is Farm Bill compliant federally, state attitudes vary
- Keeping documentation (COA, receipt) with product
- Using discreet packaging option
- Being aware that THCa conversion to THC through heating may affect legal status under Idaho interpretation
- Consulting local legal resources if uncertain
Business Hours for Support
- Monday-Thursday: 10:00 AM – 7:00 PM (Central)
- Friday-Saturday: 10:00 AM – 10:00 PM (Central)
- Sunday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM (Central)
Phone: (832) 416-2816
Email: [email protected]
Instagram: @oilwellcbd
Return Policy
- Unopened products: 30-day return window
- Opened products: We stand behind quality; contact us with concerns
- Damage during shipping: Full replacement at no cost
FAQ FOR CAMAS COUNTY RESIDENTS
Q: Is this legal to order to Idaho?
A: Our product contains less than 0.3% delta-9 THC and is hemp-derived, making it federally legal under the 2018 Farm Bill. Idaho state law is strict; however, hemp-derived products meeting federal standards have been sold in Idaho. We provide full documentation (COAs, receipts) with every shipment. Customers are responsible for understanding local laws.
Q: Will this get me high?
A: Only if you choose to activate it. In its raw form, the THCa is non-psychoactive. If you heat it (260°F for 45-60 minutes), it converts to delta-9 THC and will produce psychoactive effects. The vape cartridge is psychoactive because heating occurs automatically during vaporization.
Q: How long does shipping to Fairfield, Idaho take?
A: USPS Priority Mail typically 2-3 business days from Houston. UPS/FedEx Ground 3-5 days. We ship within 24 hours of order placement.
Q: Can I make my own using your recipe?
A: Absolutely. That’s why we publish the complete formulas. If you can source cannabinoid distillates and live terpenes, you can replicate our product. Many in Idaho’s DIY, self-reliant culture appreciate this option.
Q: Will this help with my chronic pain from ranch work?
A: The multi-cannabinoid formula targets pain through multiple pathways (CBD, delta-8 THC, delta-9 THC when activated, caryophyllene CB2 agonism). Evidence supports cannabinoids for chronic pain [4][13], but individual responses vary. We recommend starting with raw form during day to assess non-psychoactive relief, then exploring activated forms for nighttime.
Q: What’s the difference between this and CBD oil I can buy locally?
A: Typical CBD oil contains only CBD (maybe 1,000 mg total). Our RSO contains 16,590 mg total cannabinoids across 7 compounds, plus live terpenes. It’s designed for therapeutic contexts where single-cannabinoid approaches prove insufficient.
Q: Can I use this if I’m undergoing cancer treatment in Boise?
A: Many patients use RSO as adjunctive supportive care during chemotherapy. Evidence supports cannabinoids for chemo-related nausea [1][13]. However, you MUST discuss with your oncologist. Do not replace proven treatments. Our product is designed to support quality of life, not cure cancer.
Q: How do I know it’s safe?
A: Every batch is third-party tested for potency, terpenes, pesticides, heavy metals, residual solvents, and microbial contaminants. COAs are available on request. We use zero solvents in production — it’s a formulated blend in organic MCT oil, not a crude extraction.
Q: What if I can’t afford $129.99?
A: Use our open-source formula. Source individual cannabinoids and make it yourself. The recipe is published above. We intentionally provide this option for economically challenged communities like rural Idaho.
FINAL THOUGHTS FOR CAMAS COUNTY
If you’re reading this from Fairfield, from your ranch along Highway 20, or from a cabin near Silver Creek Preserve, you likely understand what it means to be underserved by conventional medicine. Camas County’s critical access hospital does its best, but specialized care requires travel to Boise, Sun Valley, or beyond. When you’re facing cancer, chronic pain, PTSD, or benzodiazepine dependency, those miles become barriers.
OilWell Cannabis was built from similar barriers. Colin Valencia grew up in border violence that makes Camas County’s challenges look different but no less real. Bentley’s paralysis taught us that cannabinoids can do what pharmaceuticals cannot. Colin’s PTSD and benzo addiction taught us that patients need control over their medicine. The seven features on ABC13 Houston taught us that integrity and transparency earn trust.
We cannot promise cures. We will not sell snake oil. What we offer is the best-researched, most transparently formulated, legally accessible RSO available to Idaho residents — shipped directly to your door in Camas County with full documentation, published formulas, and a phone number (832) 416-2816 you can actually call to speak with someone who understands both the science and the struggle.
The same formula that doctors use for Crohn’s disease and PTSD. The same formula Colin uses to manage his own severe PTSD. The same formula that could have helped Rick Simpson’s patients if they’d had access to modern chemistry and legal distribution.
For Camas County, this is what accessibility looks like: not a dispensary on every corner (impossible in Idaho’s legal landscape), but a legal, tested, documented product that arrives at your door when you need it most.
Order today: https://oilwellcbd.com/thca-rick-simpson-oil-rso-by-oilwell-cannabis-of-houston-texas/
Questions? Call (832) 416-2816 or email [email protected]
Follow us: @oilwellcbd on Instagram for educational content and community updates
OilWell Cannabis is not a substitute for medical care. Always consult your healthcare provider. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Must be 21+ to purchase. Keep out of reach of children. Do not operate vehicles or machinery under the influence of psychoactive cannabinoids.
THCa Rick Simpson Oil
Full-Spectrum • In-House Extraction
THE OILWELL PASSION PROJECT: THCa RSO
Experience true full-spectrum relief. Our Rick Simpson Oil is meticulously crafted in-house to preserve the complete cannabinoid and terpene profile of the plant. Potent, pure, and profound.
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