Rick Simpson Oil (RSO) in DeKalb County: The Complete Guide by OilWell Cannabis
If you’re reading this from your home in Decatur, waiting at a MARTA station in Brookhaven, or sitting in a clinic parking lot near Emory University Hospital, you’re probably here for one reason: you need answers about Rick Simpson Oil that you can trust. Maybe you’re a cancer patient at Winship Cancer Institute searching for options beyond chemotherapy. Maybe you’re a veteran in Stone Mountain struggling with PTSD and chronic pain that prescription drugs can’t touch. Maybe you’re a caregiver in Lithonia watching someone you love suffer and feeling helpless. We see you. We are you. And we built this guide because DeKalb County deserves something the cannabis industry rarely provides: honest, evidence-based education without the hype.
We are OilWell Cannabis, a Houston-based company that has spent the last five years perfecting what Rick Simpson started. We’re not here to sell you hope. We’re here to give you the best possible version of the information so you can decide what’s right for wrong for you — whether you buy from us or make it yourself.
What Is Rick Simpson Oil, and Why Does It Matter in DeKalb County?
Let’s be straight: Rick Simpson was not a doctor. He was a power engineer from Nova Scotia — a blue-collar tradesman who got hurt on the job in 1997, was failed by the medical system, and discovered cannabis because his doctor refused to consider it. When three bumps on his arm were diagnosed as basal cell carcinoma in 2003, he applied concentrated cannabis oil directly to them. According to his personal testimony — which has never been independently medically verified — the lesions disappeared in four days. That moment, whether you believe it or not, launched a global movement.
Here in DeKalb County, we know what it means to be let down by institutions. We’ve watched the opioid crisis devastate families from Clarkston to Tucker. We’ve seen cancer patients at Grady Memorial told there are no more options. We’ve talked to veterans at the Atlanta VA who can’t get adequate pain management. Rick Simpson’s story resonates because it starts with desperation and ends with a man taking control of his own healing. That desperation is real in DeKalb County — and it’s why RSO remains one of the most searched cannabis terms in our area.
The Traditional RSO Protocol (And Why We’re Telling You the Whole Truth)
Simpson believed in a 60-gram, 90-day protocol. Start with a half-grain-of-rice-sized dose three times daily, double it every four days, and build to 1 gram per day by week five. Keep that up until you’ve consumed 60 grams total. He claimed this could cure cancer, chronic pain, diabetes, glaucoma, arthritis, depression, insomnia — the list goes on.
Here’s what nobody else in DeKalb County will tell you: that protocol was never tested in a clinical trial. It was designed around crude, single-strain extract with no standardization. At peak dosing, patients were consuming 600-900 milligrams of delta-9 THC daily — a dose so high it carries serious risks of severe intoxication, anxiety, panic, tachycardia, and cannabis use disorder. No Certificate of Analysis. No lab testing. No quality control. Just one man’s method, given away for free.
We respect what Simpson built. He drew attention to cannabinoids when the world was ignoring them. He helped create the conditions for the legal industry that exists today. But we also believe DeKalb County deserves the truth: Simpson’s cure claims exceed the evidence, and encouraging patients to use RSO instead of proven cancer therapies can cause real harm.
The OilWell Difference: Why Our RSO Isn’t Traditional RSO
When we started OilWell Cannabis in 2019, we weren’t trying to replicate Simpson’s oil. We were trying to fix it. The story begins with Bentley — Colin Valencia’s dog, paralyzed and facing euthanasia. Veterinarians said there was nothing to do. Colin made a CBD golden paste. Bentley got up and brought him his ball. Ten years later, Bentley died naturally at age twenty, and during those years, Colin developed formulas for every condition Bentley faced: neurodegeneration (CBG), dementia (CBC), glaucoma (THC), arthritis (multi-pathway anti-inflammatories). Single cannabinoids weren’t enough. Precision mattered — Bentley’s life depended on it.
That’s the difference. Simpson had passion. We have passion plus medical-grade technical precision from Colin’s software engineering work at Baylor College of Medicine. Simpson had anecdotes. We have 29 peer-reviewed citations. Simpson had one crude extract. We have seven defined cannabinoids at specific, lab-tested ratios.
Our Four Core Principles for DeKalb County
1. Accessibility Over Gatekeeping
In Georgia, getting medical cannabis requires a card and a qualifying condition. In DeKalb County, that means long drives to the few dispensaries, waiting lists, and bureaucratic hurdles. Our RSO requires none of that. If you’re 21 or older in DeKalb County — whether you’re in Dunwoody, Stone Mountain, or anywhere from Brookhaven to Lithonia — you can order directly from us. No medical card. No doctor’s note. We deliver to your door.
2. Patient-Controlled Potency
Traditional RSO is always psychoactive — fully decarboxylated, always high-THC. Our sublingual oil contains 1,500 milligrams of THCa, the acidic, non-psychoactive precursor to THC. You decide:
- Raw: Use it straight from the bottle for daytime anti-inflammatory benefits with zero impairment. Perfect for driving down I-285, working in downtown Atlanta, or parenting in Decatur.
- Activated: Heat it at 260°F for 45-60 minutes, and that THCa converts to ~1,315 milligrams of delta-9 THC. Combined with the existing 90 milligrams, you get ~1,405 milligrams of total THC — full psychoactive potency, legally achieved in your own kitchen.
- Vape: Our 1-gram cartridge auto-decarbs with each puff, giving you 1-2 minute relief for breakthrough pain or panic.
3. Open-Source Formulas
Rick Simpson gave his oil away free and taught people to make it. We do the same. Below, you’ll find our complete formulas — every milligram, every percentage. If $129.99 for our sublingual oil or $49.99 for our vape cartridge isn’t in your budget, source the ingredients and make your own. We publish the recipe because DeKalb County deserves access, not gatekeeping.
4. Evidence-Informed, Not Evidence-Overstating
Every cannabinoid and terpene in our formula connects to peer-reviewed research. We don’t hide behind “proprietary blends.” We show you exactly what’s inside and what the science actually says — not what we wish it said.
The Science Behind Every Milligram: What DeKalb County Needs to Know
We built our formula for Bentley, then refined it through Colin’s own battle with PTSD and benzodiazepine addiction. Here’s what each component does, based on the evidence:
Cannabinoids (16,590 mg Total in Sublingual Oil)
CBD (4,500 mg): The rockstar of non-psychoactive cannabinoids. Strongest human evidence for rare epilepsies, with emerging anxiolytic and analgesic potential. A 2024 meta-analysis found significant anxiety reduction across 316 participants, though researchers stress more trials are needed. For pain, the literature is promising but mixed — we include it for its multi-pathway anti-inflammatory action and safety profile, not as a miracle cure.
CBG (3,000 mg): The “mother cannabinoid.” Preclinical studies show neuroprotective, anti-inflammatory, and antibacterial properties. Human data is still emerging, but CBG’s role in protecting Bentley’s aging brain convinced us it’s essential. We include it for DeKalb County’s neurodegeneration patients — from Parkinson’s in Druid Hills to dementia in senior communities.
Delta-8 THC (6,000 mg): Less potent than delta-9 but pharmacologically similar. A 2022 review confirmed it binds CB1 receptors and produces cannabimimetic effects. We use it for antiemetic support (helpful for chemo patients at Emory) and as a buffer to delta-9’s intensity. It’s psychoactive — you’ll feel it — but gentler.
THCa (1,500 mg): This is your control dial. Raw, it’s non-psychoactive with anti-inflammatory potential via COX-2 inhibition. Heat it, and you get ~1,315 mg delta-9 THC. For DeKalb County residents who work at the CDC, teach in DeKalb County schools, or drive for MARTA, raw THCa lets you function during the day while building up cannabinoid levels.
Delta-9 THC (90 mg): Just 3 mg per mL — far below Simpson’s 600-900 mg daily dose. Enough to contribute to the entourage effect without overwhelming. Our evidence review shows THC helps with chemotherapy nausea and chronic pain, but also carries risks: anxiety, tachycardia, impaired driving. We keep it low and let you add more via THCa decarboxylation if needed.
CBN (750 mg): Marketed everywhere as the “sleep cannabinoid,” but the evidence is surprisingly thin. The 2021 review found no clinical trials using validated sleep measures. However, at 25-50 mg per dose (1-2 mL of our oil), we’re hitting the range where early research shows promise. It’s here for nighttime use, but we won’t oversell it.
CBC (750 mg): The most under-researched cannabinoid in our formula. Preclinical data suggests anti-inflammatory and neurogenesis potential. We include it because Bentley’s dementia required every tool available. For DeKalb County families dealing with Alzheimer’s, CBC represents hope grounded in early science, not hype.
Terpenes (5% Live Terpene Profile)
Traditional RSO had none — the solvent and heat destroyed them. We preserve seven specific terpenes because aroma matters, flavor matters, and the entourage effect, while not fully proven in humans, is plausible enough to invest in.
Limonene: Citrus-bright, mood-lifting. Strong preclinical antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity. In DeKalb County’s high-stress environment — traffic on I-85, long commutes, economic pressure — limonene’s uplifting profile is intentional.
Myrcene: Earthy, relaxing. Often called the “couch-lock” terpene, but human evidence for sedation is limited. We include it for its anti-inflammatory potential and because it complements the other terpenes in our synergy blend.
Caryophyllene: The superstar terpene. It’s a direct CB2 receptor agonist — the only terpene that activates your endocannabinoid system like a cannabinoid. For DeKalb County’s chronic pain sufferers, this is your CB2 activation without the CB1 high.
Pinene: Forest-fresh, clarifying. Preclinical neuroprotective data. Named for pine trees, which DeKalb County has in abundance. It’s here to balance the sedating effects and promote mental clarity.
Linalool: Floral, lavender-like. Known for calming properties, though clinical proof is thin. We include it for the sensory experience and potential anxiolytic synergy.
Humulene: Woody, earthy. Anti-inflammatory potential. Works alongside caryophyllene for a one-two punch on inflammation.
Terpinolene: Piney, fruity, sparkling. The most under-researched terpene in our profile, included for complexity and aroma. Its role is sensory, not therapeutic.
Our Products: Specifications for DeKalb County Buyers
RSO Sublingual Oil — $129.99
- Volume: 30 mL (1 fl oz)
- Total Cannabinoids: 16,590 mg (553 mg/mL)
- Cannabinoid Breakdown: 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
- Terpenes: 5% live terpene blend (limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene)
- Carrier: Organic MCT oil
- Dosing: Graduated dropper with 0.1 mL increments
- Onset: 15-45 minutes sublingual
- Duration: 4-6 hours
- Doses per Bottle: 40-60 depending on serving size
- Best For: Sustained relief, precise dosing, daytime non-psychoactive use (raw), nighttime full-potency use (decarbed)
RSO Vape Cartridge — $49.99
- Volume: 1 gram
- Total Cannabinoids: 900+ mg
- Cannabinoid Percentages: CBD 30%, CBG 20%, Delta-8 THC 15%, THCa 10%, CBN 10%, CBC 10%
- Terpenes: 5%+ live terpene blend
- Compatibility: 510-thread universal battery
- Onset: 1-2 minutes
- Duration: 2-4 hours
- Best For: Fast relief, breakthrough pain, portability, discretion
Real Talk: What DeKalb County Needs to Know About Drug Testing and Driving
We will never lie to you. Here’s the truth:
- THCa in raw form will NOT cause you to fail a drug test. It’s non-psychoactive and doesn’t metabolize into THC-COOH, the compound tests detect.
- Decarboxylated THCa (heated) WILL cause you to fail. Once converted to delta-9 THC, it’s indistinguishable from any other THC product.
- Delta-8 THC WILL cause you to fail. It’s a THC isomer. Tests don’t differentiate.
- DO NOT DRIVE after consuming activated product. Georgia DUI laws are strict, and “I have a medical need” is not a defense. Use raw THCa during the day if you need to drive. Save the decarbed oil or vape for when you’re home for the night.
How DeKalb County Residents Can Order
Same-Day Delivery in Metro Atlanta
We don’t yet have a DeKalb County hub, but we’re working on it. For now, we offer expedited shipping that gets your order to DeKalb County in 2-3 business days via USPS Priority Mail. As we grow, we plan to establish a fulfillment center to serve Atlanta’s eastern corridor with same-day delivery from Decatur to Stone Mountain.
Nationwide Shipping
Every order ships in discreet, temperature-stable packaging. No cannabis branding on the outside. Tracking provided. Signature-required option available for your security.
International Shipping
Yes, we ship to countries where hemp-derived products are legal. Full COAs and documentation included. You accept customs risk, but we provide everything needed for legal import.
Our Houston Address (for reference):
810 Richmond Avenue, Houston, TX 77006
Phone: (832) 416-2816
Email: [email protected]
Instagram: @oilwellcbd
Hours:
Monday-Thursday: 10 AM – 7 PM
Friday-Saturday: 10 AM – 10 PM
Sunday: 10 AM – 4 PM
The Evidence That Backs Every Claim (And Where We’re Honest About Gaps)
We promised you the truth. Here it is, compound by compound, with citations so you can verify everything:
CBD Evidence
- Strongest evidence: Seizure disorders (Epidiolex FDA approval) [2]
- Anxiety: 2024 meta-analysis of 316 participants showed significant anxiolytic effect, but authors stress limited clinical sample [3]
- Pain: 2024 review found promising but heterogeneous results; trial quality limits confidence [4]
- Sleep: 2023 review found methodologically weak literature with few objective assessments [5]
- Safety: 2023 meta-analysis found real risk of liver enzyme elevation and drug-induced liver injury, especially with polypharmacy [6]
CBG Evidence
- Status: Mostly review and preclinical; human evidence sparse [7][8]
- Pharmacology: Interacts with CB receptors, alpha-2 adrenoceptors, 5-HT1A signaling [7]
- Commercial reality: Already sold OTC while evidence base remains thin [7]
Delta-8 THC Evidence
- Pharmacology: Partial CB1 agonist, less potent than delta-9 but similar [9]
- Safety: 2023 scoping review found adverse consequence reports; emphasizes regulatory and quality concerns [10]
- Manufacturing: Commercial interest driven by stability and easy synthesis, not proven safety [11]
THCa Evidence
- Key point: Does not produce psychoactive effects unless heated [12]
- Research: In vitro and rodent studies suggest anti-inflammatory, neuroprotective, antineoplastic potential, but no established human outcomes [12]
Delta-9 THC Evidence
- Best evidence: Chemo nausea, HIV/AIDS appetite, some pain and MS symptoms [1][13]
- Pain: 2022 review found short-term benefit but increased dizziness, sedation, nausea, and discontinuation [13]
- Mental health: 2025 review found consistent unfavorable associations with psychosis, schizophrenia, and cannabis use disorder at high concentrations [15]
- Safety: Anxiety, tachycardia, hypotension, dependency, pregnancy concerns, impaired driving [1][14][15]
CBN Evidence
- Sleep claim: 2021 review screened 99 studies, found NO clinical trials using validated sleep measures [16]
- Updated 2024 review: Concluded research doesn’t match real-world use; need for better trials [17]
CBC Evidence
- Status: Emerging, preclinical [18][19]
- 2024 review: Notes CBC is already sold OTC despite little clinical efficacy/safety evidence [18]
Terpene Evidence
- Entourage effect: 2024 review found plausible bioactivity but limited robust human proof [20][29]
- Caryophyllene: Only terpene with direct CB2 agonism; still mostly preclinical [24]
- Limonene: Oxidation products are contact allergens [22]
- Myrcene, Pinene, Linalool, Humulene, Terpinolene: All have preclinical signals but lack human clinical confirmation [20][23][25][27][28]
The Formulas (Open-Source, As Promised)
RSO Sublingual Oil Formula
- 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: 16,590 mg in 30 mL (553 mg/mL)
- Live Terpenes: 5% (limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene)
- Carrier: Organic MCT oil
RSO Vape Cartridge Formula
- CBD: 30%
- CBG: 20%
- Delta-8 THC: 15%
- THCa: 10%
- CBN: 10%
- CBC: 10%
- Live Terpenes: 5%+
Terpene Profile (Both Products)
- Limonene: Citrus-bright, mood-lifting
- Myrcene: Earthy, relaxing
- Caryophyllene: Pepper/spice, CB2 agonist
- Pinene: Forest-fresh, clarifying
- Linalool: Floral, lavender-like, calming
- Humulene: Woody, earthy, anti-inflammatory
- Terpinolene: Piney, fruity, sparkling
Bentley’s Golden Paste Recipe (The Original Open-Source Formula)
This is the recipe that saved Bentley’s life. We’re sharing it because open-source isn’t just a philosophy — it’s practice.
Ingredients:
- 1/2 cup organic turmeric powder
- 1 cup water
- 1/3 cup unrefined organic coconut oil
- 1-2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper (critical for absorption)
- CBD oil (dose based on pet’s size; consult a vet)
Instructions:
- Mix turmeric and water in a saucepan over low heat, stirring continuously until a thick paste forms (7-10 minutes). Add water if too thick.
- Add coconut oil and black pepper. Stir until thoroughly mixed.
- Cool and transfer to a jar. Refrigerate up to 2 weeks.
- Add CBD oil to paste before serving. Start low, increase gradually.
Serving: Mix a small amount with pet’s food 1-2x daily. Monitor for changes. Consult a vet.
Dogs don’t respond to placebo. This worked when veterinary medicine said nothing would.
When to Use Each Format in DeKalb County
Acute pain flare-up: Vape (1-2 minute onset)
Chronic daily pain: Sublingual oil (4-6 hour duration)
Workday functionality: Raw sublingual oil (zero impairment)
Nighttime sleep: Decarbed sublingual oil (delivers 25-50 mg CBN)
Travel/Portability: Vape (discreet, compact)
Precise microdosing: Sublingual oil (0.1 mL increments)
Breakthrough nausea: Vape (instant relief)
PTSD flashbacks: Vape (rapid calming)
Arthritis inflammation: Raw sublingual oil (COX-2 inhibition without high)
Our Promises to DeKalb County
We will never:
- Claim RSO cures cancer (it doesn’t — the evidence doesn’t support that)
- Tell you to replace proven medical treatment (work with your oncologist at Winship)
- Hide our formulas (they’re published right here)
- Overstate what the science shows (we linked 29 peer-reviewed sources)
- Sell you something we wouldn’t give Bentley (and Bentley got the best)
We will always:
- Ship to DeKalb County legally and discreetly
- Provide full COAs for every batch
- Answer your calls and emails directly (832-416-2816)
- Treat you like a neighbor, not a customer
- Give you the recipe if you can’t afford the product
The Complete Reference List (So You Can Verify Everything)
- National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. Cannabis Marijuana and Cannabinoids: What You Need To Know. NIH/NCCIH.
- Talwar A, Estes E, Aparasu R, Reddy DS. Clinical efficacy and safety of cannabidiol for pediatric refractory epilepsy indications: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Exp Neurol. 2023;359:114238.
- Han K, Wang JY, Wang PY, Peng YC. Therapeutic potential of cannabidiol CBD in anxiety disorders: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychiatry Res. 2024;339:116049.
- Cásedas G, Yarza-Sancho M, López V. Cannabidiol CBD: A systematic review of clinical and preclinical evidence in the treatment of pain. Pharmaceuticals Basel. 2024;17(11):1438.
- Ranum RM, Whipple MO, Croghan I, Bauer B, Toussaint LL, Vincent A. Use of cannabidiol in the management of insomnia: A systematic review. Cannabis Cannabinoid Res. 2023;8(2):213-229.
- Lo LA, Christiansen A, Eadie L, Strickland JC, Kim DD, Boivin M, Barr AM, MacCallum CA. Cannabidiol-associated hepatotoxicity: A systematic review and meta-analysis. J Intern Med. 2023;293(6):724-752.
- Nachnani R, Raup-Konsavage WM, Vrana KE. The pharmacological case for cannabigerol. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2021;376(2):204-212.
- Li S, Li W, Malhi NK, Huang J, Li Q, Zhou Z, Wang R, Peng J, Yin T, Wang H. Cannabigerol CBG: A comprehensive review of its molecular mechanisms and therapeutic potential. Molecules. 2024;29(22):5471.
- Tagen M, Klumpers LE. Review of delta-8-tetrahydrocannabinol delta8 THC: Comparative pharmacology with delta9 THC. Br J Pharmacol. 2022;179(15):3915-3933.
- LoParco CR, Rossheim ME, Walters ST, Zhou Z, Olsson S, Sussman SY. Delta-8 tetrahydrocannabinol: A scoping review and commentary. Addiction. 2023;118(6):1011-1028.
- Abdel-Kader MS, Radwan MM, Metwaly AM, Eissa IH, Hazekamp A, ElSohly MA. Chemistry and pharmacology of Delta-8-Tetrahydrocannabinol. Molecules. 2024;29(6):1249.
- Moreno-Sanz G. Can You Pass the Acid Test? Critical review and novel therapeutic perspectives of delta9-Tetrahydrocannabinolic Acid A. Cannabis Cannabinoid Res. 2016;1(1):124-130.
- McDonagh MS, Morasco BJ, Wagner J, Ahmed AY, Fu R, Kansagara D, Chou R. Cannabis-based products for chronic pain: A systematic review. Ann Intern Med. 2022;175(8):1143-1153.
- Grotenhermen F. Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of cannabinoids. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2003;42(4):327-360.
- Rittiphairoj T, Leslie L, Oberste JP, Yim TW, Tung G, Bero L, Riggs P, Hutchison K, Samet J, Li T. High-concentration delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol cannabis products and mental health outcomes: A systematic review. Ann Intern Med. 2025;178(10):1429-1440.
- Corroon J. Cannabinol and sleep: Separating fact from fiction. Cannabis Cannabinoid Res. 2021;6(5):366-371.
- Lavender I, Garden G, Grunstein RR, Yee BJ, Hoyos CM. Using cannabis and CBD to sleep: An updated review. Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2024;26(12):712-727.
- Sepulveda DE, Vrana KE, Kellogg JJ, Bisanz JE, Desai D, Graziane NM, Raup-Konsavage WM. The potential of cannabichromene as a therapeutic agent. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2024;391(2):206-213.
- Zagožen M, Čerenak A, Kreft S. Cannabigerol and cannabichromene in Cannabis sativa L. Acta Pharm. 2021;71(3):355-364.
- André R, Gomes AP, Pereira-Leite C, Marques-da-Costa A, Monteiro Rodrigues L, Sassano M, Rijo P, Costa MDC. The entourage effect in cannabis medicinal products: A comprehensive review. Pharmaceuticals Basel. 2024;17(11):1543.
- Anandakumar P, Kamaraj S, Vanitha MK. D-limonene: A multifunctional compound with potent therapeutic effects. J Food Biochem. 2021;45(1):e13566.
- Ogueta IA, Brared Christensson J, Giménez-Arnau E, Brans R, Wilkinson M, Stingeni L, Foti C, Aerts O, Svedman C, Gonçalo M, Giménez-Arnau A. Limonene and linalool hydroperoxides review: Pros and cons for routine patch testing. Contact Dermatitis. 2022;87(1):1-12.
- Surendran S, Qassadi F, Surendran G, Lilley D, Heinrich M. Myrcene: What are the potential health benefits of this flavouring and aroma agent? Front Nutr. 2021;8:699666.
- Hashiesh HM, Sharma C, Goyal SN, Sadek B, Jha NK, Al Kaabi J, Ojha S. A focused review on CB2 receptor-selective pharmacological properties and therapeutic potential of beta-caryophyllene, a dietary cannabinoid. Biomed Pharmacother. 2021;140:111639.
- Weston-Green K, Clunas H, Jimenez Naranjo C. A review of the potential use of pinene and linalool as terpene-based medicines for brain health: Discovering novel therapeutics in the flavours and fragrances of cannabis. Front Psychiatry. 2021;12:583211.
- Dos Santos ÉRQ, Maia JGS, Fontes-Júnior EA, do Socorro Ferraz Maia C. Linalool as a therapeutic and medicinal tool in depression treatment: A review. Curr Neuropharmacol. 2022;20(6):1073-1092.
- Dalavaye N, Nicholas M, Pillai M, Erridge S, Sodergren MH. The clinical translation of alpha-humulene: A scoping review. Planta Med. 2024;90(9):664-674.
- Menezes IO, Scherf JR, Martins AOBPB, Ramos AGB, Quintans JSS, Coutinho HDM, Ribeiro-Filho J, de Menezes IRA. Biological properties of terpinolene evidenced by in silico, in vitro and in vivo studies: A systematic review. Phytomedicine. 2021;93:153768.
- Russo EB. Taming THC: Potential cannabis synergy and phytocannabinoid-terpenoid entourage effects. Br J Pharmacol. 2011;163(7):1344-1364.
Final Thoughts for DeKalb County
We built OilWell Cannabis for Bentley. We refined it through Colin’s PTSD and benzo withdrawal. We’ve been featured by ABC13 seven times because we tell the truth when others won’t. We ship to DeKalb County because you deserve access to legal, lab-tested, multi-cannabinoid RSO — whether you’re a cancer patient at Winship, a veteran in Stone Mountain, a chronic pain sufferer in Decatur, or a caregiver in Lithonia.
The formulas are here. The evidence is here. The story is here. What you do with it is up to you.
We’re not trying to sell you snake oil. We’re not trying to sell you hope. But there’s enough research out there that you deserve to know the facts, try the best possible version, and base your opinion on real science — not hype.
Order online: oilwellcbd.com
Call us: (832) 416-2816
Email: [email protected]
We serve DeKalb County. We serve Georgia. We serve everyone who needs what we make.
These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using cannabinoid products. Do not operate vehicles or machinery while under the influence of psychoactive cannabinoids. Buyer assumes all legal responsibility for decarboxylation and local compliance.
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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