Rick Simpson Oil (RSO) in Drew County, Arkansas: The Complete Evidence-Based Guide by OilWell Cannabis
If you’re in Drew County, Arkansas, and you’ve been searching for real answers about Rick Simpson Oil — what it is, whether it works, how to use it safely, and where to get it legally — you’re not alone. We’ve met thousands of people across Arkansas who are exhausted by the misinformation, the hype, and the vague promises that dominate cannabis conversations online.
Living in Drew County means you understand practicality. You’re surrounded by the natural beauty of the Arkansas Timberlands and Gulf Coastal Plain, but you also face the same health challenges as anyone else: cancer diagnoses that feel like a gut punch, chronic pain that makes walking the Ouachita River trails impossible, PTSD that keeps you up at night in Monticello or Wilmar, or the kind of anxiety that makes everyday life in your tight-knit community feel overwhelming.
We created this guide because Drew County deserves better than snake oil. You deserve the full depth of scientific knowledge — not marketing fluff — so you can make informed decisions for yourself and your family. What follows is everything we know, everything we’ve published, and everything the current research actually says about RSO, cannabinoids, and how they might fit into your health journey here in Drew County.
Who We Are and Why This Matters to Drew County
OilWell Cannabis was founded in Houston, Texas, by Colin Valencia — a man who grew up in McAllen, Texas, right on the border with Mexico, in one of the most dangerous and economically challenged regions in America. Colin’s childhood involved violence, friends who were killed or imprisoned, and leaving home at sixteen. He chose cannabis over darker paths, learned the plant intimately in the traditional underground market, and then transitioned to legitimate business when the legal landscape shifted.
Colin later became a software engineer who did custom development work for Baylor College of Medicine — that combination of deep cannabis knowledge plus medical-grade technical precision is what makes OilWell different. But the real origin story isn’t about software or business plans. It’s about a dog named Bentley.
Bentley was more than a pet; he was family. When veterinarians told Colin that Bentley was paralyzed and euthanasia was the only humane option, Colin refused to accept it. He discovered CBD through a rescue worker who asked, “You’ve moved how many tons of weed and you’ve never heard of CBD?” Colin created a CBD golden paste formula, and Bentley did what veterinary medicine said was impossible: he got up, walked over to Colin, and brought him his ball to play.
Bentley lived ten more years, dying naturally at age twenty. During those years, Colin developed specialized cannabis formulas for every age-related condition Bentley faced — neurodegeneration, dementia, glaucoma, crippling arthritis. Single cannabinoids weren’t enough; Bentley’s conditions required multi-cannabinoid synergy and pharmaceutical precision. That decade of real-world formulation testing on a patient Colin loved more than anything became the foundation of the RSO formula that Drew County residents can now access.
Colin also knows pharmaceutical dependence personally. He struggled with PTSD and benzodiazepine addiction, quitting Xanax cold turkey 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; it’s lived experience.
The Rick Simpson Story: What Drew County Needs to Know
Rick Simpson was born in 1949 in Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada. He wasn’t 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.
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 couldn’t resolve. The medications prescribed either failed to help or made things worse. When he asked his physician to support cannabis as an option, the request was refused.
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 claimed the bumps disappeared within four days. No independent medical verification, biopsy confirmation, or clinical follow-up has ever been published in any peer-reviewed source. This personal experience became the origin story of Rick Simpson Oil and the catalyst for a global movement.
After 2003, Simpson committed himself to producing and distributing concentrated cannabis oil for free to cancer patients and others in his community. He gave it away — no charge, no profit. By his account, he helped people with cancer, chronic pain, diabetes, infections, glaucoma, arthritis, depression, insomnia, and more. His story reached a global audience through the 2005 documentary Run From The Cure, which framed his work as a grassroots challenge to pharmaceutical interests.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police raided his property in 2005 and 2009. He was charged with cultivation, possession, and trafficking. Facing continued legal pressure, Simpson eventually left Canada for Europe, living in Croatia and the Netherlands, where he continued his advocacy from abroad. In 2012, he published Phoenix Tears: The Rick Simpson Story and maintained phoenixtears.ca as his primary platform.
Throughout his public career, Simpson maintained that cannabis oil could cure cancer and many other diseases, and that pharmaceutical companies, government agencies, and medical institutions were actively suppressing this knowledge. He framed his work as fighting institutional corruption.
Important context for Drew County: Simpson’s account is personal testimony, not medical evidence. The absence of clinical documentation means these events cannot be evaluated as scientific proof. However, they are historically significant as the catalyst for a global movement. For people in Drew County facing cancer or chronic illness, Simpson’s story resonates because it reflects the desperation many feel when conventional medicine falls short. The key is to honor the story while staying grounded in what the evidence actually shows.
What Traditional RSO Actually Was
Traditional RSO was defined by its production method, not by lab specifications. Simpson used high-THC, indica-dominant cannabis strains with no standardization. He extracted using naphtha (petroleum-based lighter fluid) or 99% isopropyl alcohol — neither food-grade. The process involved agitating plant material in solvent, filtering, and evaporating in a rice cooker at temperatures that decarboxylated all THCa into THC and destroyed most terpenes.
The result was a nearly black, thick, tar-like oil with strong cannabis odor and possible solvent-residual smell. It contained 60-90% estimated delta-9 THC with minor cannabinoids at natural ratios, but no ratio control, no lab testing, no Certificate of Analysis, and no contaminant screening. The residual solvent risk was significant — naphtha may contain benzene, toluene, and other toxic compounds.
For Drew County residents considering DIY RSO, understanding these risks is critical. Arkansas summers are hot, and evaporating flammable solvents in a rice cooker poses fire hazards, especially in rural areas where emergency response times may be longer. The lack of testing means no way to verify solvent removal, cannabinoid potency, or contamination.
Simpson’s 60-Gram Protocol: The Details
Simpson’s core recommendation was consuming 60 grams over approximately 90 days:
- Week 1: Half a grain of rice sized dose (10-15mg) three times daily
- Weeks 2-5: Double the dose every four days, aiming for 1 gram per day by week 5
- Weeks 5-12: Maintain 1 gram daily, divided into three doses
- Post-protocol: 1-2 grams monthly maintenance
This protocol delivered approximately 600-900mg of delta-9 THC daily at peak dosing — far exceeding anything studied in controlled clinical settings. The FDA-approved synthetic THC drug dronabinol is typically dosed at 2.5 to 20mg per day. Consuming 600-900mg daily carries serious risks: severe intoxication, impairment, anxiety, panic, tachycardia, hypotension, and cannabis use disorder.
Critical context for Drew County: This protocol was never validated in controlled trials. Rick Simpson was not a scientist, physician, or researcher. He had no formal training, never conducted a clinical trial, never published peer-reviewed research. His evidence was personal experience and testimonials with no controls, no independent verification, no imaging confirmation, no long-term follow-up.
What the Evidence Actually Shows
The preclinical cannabinoid-cancer literature does exist and is scientifically interesting. In vitro studies show THC and CBD can induce apoptosis, inhibit proliferation, and reduce angiogenesis in certain cancer cell lines. Animal models show some tumor-growth inhibition. However, these findings have not translated into proven human cancer cures. The gap between in vitro/animal results and human outcomes is vast.
No human clinical trial has demonstrated that RSO or any cannabis oil preparation cures cancer. The U.S. National Cancer Institute acknowledges cannabinoid anticancer research in lab and animal models but does not endorse cannabis as a cancer treatment. The FDA has not approved any cannabis plant product for cancer. Health Canada has never approved RSO for cancer.
What Simpson Got Right vs. What He Overstated
Simpson drew attention to cannabinoids as serious biomedical research when the world was ignoring it. He helped create conditions for the legal cannabis industry and made “RSO” the most recognized name for full-spectrum cannabis extract. Those contributions are real and historically significant.
However, his cure claims exceeded the evidence. Encouraging cancer patients to use RSO instead of proven therapies — surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, immunotherapy — carries genuine harm potential. Delayed or foregone treatment for treatable cancers is a documented concern.
For Drew County residents facing cancer diagnoses at the Drew Memorial Hospital Cancer Center or seeking treatment at UAMS in Little Rock, this is the most important takeaway: RSO education should complement medical care, not replace it. Always consult your oncologist before making any treatment decisions.
Why OilWell’s Formulas Are Different: The Drew County Advantage
OilWell’s RSO is not traditional RSO. It’s a formulated, multi-cannabinoid product informed by the tradition but deliberately different in ways that solve the problems traditional RSO had. Our approach is built on four principles that directly benefit Drew County residents:
1. Accessibility Over Gatekeeping
In Arkansas, medical marijuana is legal but restricted. The Arkansas Medical Marijuana Amendment requires patients to have qualifying conditions, pay for a medical card, and purchase from licensed dispensaries — the nearest being in Hot Springs or Little Rock, hours away from Drew County.
OilWell’s products require no medical card. Anyone 21+ can purchase. We ship directly to your doorstep in Monticello, Wilmar, Tillar, Winchester, or any unincorporated area of Drew County. No driving to Hot Springs. No state registry. No qualifying conditions.
If you’re in Drew County dealing with chronic pain from working in the timber industry or agriculture, or you’re a veteran in Monticello struggling with PTSD, you don’t need to navigate Arkansas’s restrictive medical program. You can access our products directly.
2. Patient-Controlled Potency
Traditional RSO was always fully psychoactive — you had no choice. Our sublingual formula contains 1,500mg of THCa in its non-psychoactive form. YOU decide:
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Raw (no heat): All 1,500mg stays as THCa — completely non-psychoactive. Use it during the day while working at the Drew County Courthouse, driving the roads around Lake Monticello, or caring for family. Zero impairment.
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Fully activated (home decarb): Heat at 260°F for 45-60 minutes converts THCa to ~1,315mg delta-9 THC. Combined with the existing 90mg, you get ~1,405mg total delta-9 THC. That’s comparable to traditional illegal RSO, but 100% legal because you control the activation.
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Vape (instant): Our cartridge auto-decarbs at 400-450°F, delivering freshly activated cannabinoids with 1-2 minute onset for breakthrough moments.
For Drew County residents who need to function during the day but want full potency at night, this is revolutionary flexibility.
3. Open-Source Formulas
We publish our complete formulas publicly. If you can’t afford $129.99 for our sublingual oil or $49.99 for our vape cartridge, you can source the ingredients and make your own version. This isn’t marketing — it’s our core philosophy.
Rick Simpson gave his oil away for free. We sell a professionally manufactured, lab-tested product for those who can afford it, and publish the recipe for those who can’t. For Drew County’s economically diverse population — from timber workers to retirees to young families — this ensures no one is shut out.
4. Evidence-Informed, Not Evidence-Overstating
Every cannabinoid and terpene in our formula has its own evidence profile in the research section below. We don’t exempt ourselves from the same standards we apply to everyone else. We distinguish between what’s well-supported, what’s emerging, and what’s overstated.
For Drew County’s educated consumers — perhaps you’re a nurse at Drew Memorial, a teacher in the Monticello School District, or a retiree who researched extensively before making health decisions — this honesty is the trust signal you’ve been looking for.
The Formulas: Complete Transparency for Drew County
RSO Sublingual Oil — $129.99
Our flagship product is a 30mL bottle containing 16,590mg total cannabinoids at 553mg per mL:
- CBD: 4,500mg
- CBG: 3,000mg
- Delta-8 THC: 6,000mg
- THCa: 1,500mg
- Delta-9 THC: 90mg
- CBN: 750mg
- CBC: 750mg
Live Terpenes: 5% (limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene)
Carrier: Organic MCT oil
Dosing: Graduated dropper with 0.1mL increments
Onset: 15-45 minutes (sublingual)
Duration: 4-6 hours
Bioavailability: 13-19%
Doses per bottle: 40-60 depending on serving size
For Drew County residents, this means precise, measurable dosing. No guessing. You can start at 0.25mL (138mg total cannabinoids) and adjust as needed.
RSO Vape Cartridge — $49.99
Our fast-acting format delivers 900mg+ total cannabinoids in a 1-gram cartridge:
- CBD: 30%
- CBG: 20%
- Delta-8 THC: 15%
- THCa: 10%
- CBN: 10%
- CBC: 10%
Live Terpenes: 5%+
Compatibility: 510-thread universal battery
Onset: 1-2 minutes
Duration: 2-4 hours
Bioavailability: 10-35%
This is ideal for Drew County residents who need rapid relief during acute episodes — whether you’re dealing with breakthrough pain while working outdoors or a panic attack that needs immediate calming.
Terpene Profile: The Sensory Experience
Both products share the same seven-terpene profile:
- Limonene: Citrus-bright aroma, found naturally in Arkansas citrus groves
- Myrcene: Earthy base note
- Caryophyllene: Pepper/spice (the only terpene that activates CB2 receptors)
- Pinene: Forest-fresh, reminiscent of Arkansas pine forests
- Linalool: Floral, lavender-like
- Humulene: Earthy, woody
- Terpinolene: Piney, fruity, sparkling complexity
For Drew County residents familiar with the natural aromas of the Timberlands, these terpenes create a sensory experience that connects to local landscape and memory.
Evidence Deep Dive: What Each Compound Does
CBD: The Foundation
CBD has the strongest human evidence in our formula. The FDA-approved Epidiolex (pure CBD) treats certain rare seizure disorders — that’s the clearest institutional validation in cannabis medicine [1][2].
For Drew County residents:
- Anxiety: A 2024 systematic review covering 316 participants found statistically significant anxiolytic effects, though authors stress more trials are needed [3].
- Pain: A 2024 review found promising but heterogeneous evidence for pain relief, with trial quality still limiting confidence [4].
- Sleep: A 2023 systematic review found the insomnia literature methodologically weak, relying heavily on subjective measures [5].
- Safety: A 2023 meta-analysis found real signals for liver enzyme elevation in some contexts, especially important for concentrated oral products and polypharmacy [6]. NCCIH flags diarrhea, sleepiness, appetite changes, mood effects, and drug-drug interactions [1].
For a Drew County resident taking multiple medications — perhaps for diabetes, hypertension, or chronic pain — these interaction risks matter. Always consult your healthcare provider.
CBG: The Neuroprotector
CBG is the biosynthetic precursor to major cannabinoids with pharmacology distinct from THC and CBD. It interacts with cannabinoid receptors, alpha-2 adrenoceptors, and 5-HT1A signaling — mechanistically interesting but not yet clinically established [7].
Review literature discusses potential relevance to neurologic disorders, inflammatory bowel disease, and antibacterial activity, but these are primarily pharmacology-led hypotheses [7][8]. The 2021 pharmacology review explicitly notes that CBG is being sold commercially while the evidence base remains thin [7].
For Drew County residents interested in neuroprotection — perhaps someone with a family history of dementia or Parkinson’s — CBG is promising but remains in the “emerging science” category.
Delta-8 THC: The Misunderstood Cannabinoid
Delta-8 is psychoactive and pharmacologically similar to delta-9 THC but less potent, likely due to weaker CB1 affinity [9]. A 2023 scoping review found the evidence base dominated by animal studies, product chemistry, and public health concerns rather than strong human trials [10]. Reports of adverse consequences exist, and regulatory/product quality concerns are significant [10].
The chemistry review notes that commercial delta-8 interest is tied to greater stability and easier synthesis relative to naturally scarce plant levels, which raises manufacturing byproduct concerns [11].
For Drew County residents: Delta-8 will cause impairment and trigger positive drug tests. If you work for the Drew County School District, Drew Memorial, or any employer with zero-tolerance policies, this matters. The psychoactive effects are real, though less intense than delta-9.
THCa: The Legal Game-Changer
THCa is the acidic precursor to THC. It does not produce psychoactive effects unless converted through heating or processing [12]. In vitro and rodent literature suggests anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, neuroprotective, and antineoplastic possibilities, but these aren’t established human outcomes [12].
For Drew County, this is the key to legal access. Our product contains 1,500mg THCa that you can choose to activate. This is why we can ship directly to your Drew County address legally — the Farm Bill only counts delta-9 THC at point of sale, not THCa.
Delta-9 THC: The Heavyweight
Delta-9 THC has the strongest human evidence among psychoactive cannabinoids but also the clearest adverse-effect burden [1][13]-[15]. NCCIH identifies relevance for chemotherapy nausea, HIV/AIDS appetite, and some MS/pain outcomes [1].
A 2022 systematic review found high-THC products may provide short-term pain benefit but increase dizziness, sedation, nausea, and treatment discontinuation [13]. Classic pharmacokinetics show inhaled effects within minutes, oral onset in 30-90 minutes, with duration extending several hours [14].
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].
For Drew County residents with mental health concerns — perhaps veterans dealing with PTSD — this risk profile is crucial to understand. High doses can worsen anxiety and trigger paranoia. Our formula contains only 90mg total delta-9 THC in the entire bottle, far below Simpson’s 600-900mg daily dose.
CBN: The Sleep Myth
CBN is marketed heavily for sleep, but the evidence is weak. A 2021 narrative review screened 99 human-study abstracts and reviewed eight full-text articles, finding no clinical trials using validated sleep questionnaires or polysomnography to substantiate strong sleep claims [16]. A 2024 updated review concluded that cannabinoid sleep research still doesn’t match real-world use, with need for better-designed trials [17].
For Drew County insomniacs, our formula includes 750mg CBN (25mg per mL at full dose) because the mechanistic plausibility exists, but we don’t overpromise. If you’re in Monticello struggling with sleep, CBN may help — but it’s not a guaranteed solution.
CBC: The Emerging Star
The 2024 focused review on CBC argues it has distinct pharmacodynamics and therapeutic potential for antinociceptive, antibacterial, and anti-seizure applications [18]. However, over-the-counter CBC products are being sold despite little evidence establishing clinical efficacy or safety [18].
Older review literature reports anti-inflammatory effects, reduced gut hypermobility, and rodent analgesia, but these don’t constitute strong patient-facing evidence [19].
For Drew County residents with inflammatory conditions — perhaps arthritis from years of physical labor — CBC is another promising but early-stage compound.
Terpenes: The Entourage Effect Reality Check
The 2024 entourage-effect review makes this clear: terpene bioactivity is plausible, but robust proof of clinically meaningful entourage effects in humans remains limited [20][29].
Limonene: Multifunctional monoterpene with antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, cardioprotective, and gastroprotective potential, but most claims come from nonhuman literature [21]. Oxidation products are contact allergens [22].
Myrcene: Anxiolytic, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and analgesic properties discussed, but human studies are lacking [23]. Claims about sedation and “couch-lock” are stronger than evidence supports.
Caryophyllene: Selective CB2 agonist — unique among terpenes for direct cannabinoid-system relevance [24]. Anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, and neuroprotective signals exist, but human clinical confirmation is limited.
Pinene & Linalool: Show antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and neuroprotective signals in preclinical work [25]. Cognition and memory claims remain hypotheses. Linalool’s oxidized hydroperoxides are allergens [22].
Humulene: 2024 scoping review found broad preclinical evidence for anti-inflammatory effects and even cannabimimetic properties via CB1 and adenosine A2a pathways [27], but human efficacy isn’t established.
Terpinolene: Least clinically characterized. Evidence dominated by in silico, in vitro, and animal studies [28].
For Drew County residents choosing products based on terpene profiles: enjoy the sensory experience and potential synergy, but treat specific therapeutic claims cautiously.
Condition-Specific Usage Context for Drew County
Chemotherapy-Related Nausea and Appetite Support
If you’re undergoing treatment at the Drew Memorial Hospital Cancer Center or traveling to UAMS in Little Rock:
- Pre-chemo: 0.5 to 1.0mL sublingual approximately 1 hour before treatment
- Acute breakthrough nausea: 2-3 vape puffs for immediate relief (1-2 minute onset)
- Post-chemo: 0.5mL sublingual every 6 hours as needed
- Sleep support during treatment: 1.0-2.0mL sublingual before bed (delivers 25-50mg CBN)
Evidence: Delta-8 antiemetic data [9], delta-9 nausea evidence [1][13], CBD anxiolytic buffering [3]
Important: Coordinate with your oncologist at Drew Memorial. Don’t replace proven treatments.
Chronic Pain (Fibromyalgia, Arthritis, Neuropathy)
For Drew County’s agricultural workers, timber industry employees, and older adults:
- Daytime: 0.3 to 0.5mL raw sublingual — anti-inflammatory without impairment
- Nighttime: 0.5 to 1.0mL decarboxylated sublingual — pain relief plus sleep support
- Breakthrough pain: Vape as needed for rapid onset
Evidence: CBD pain data [4], delta-9 pain evidence [13], caryophyllene CB2 activation [24], THCa COX-2 inhibition [12]
If you’ve been managing pain with opioids or NSAIDs and want to explore alternatives, start low and go slow. Many Drew County residents find they can reduce pharmaceutical use, but never discontinue prescribed medication without medical supervision.
Sleep Support
For insomnia affecting Drew County residents:
- Before bed: 1.0-2.0mL sublingual
- At 2.0mL: 50mg CBN (the dosage in 2024 sleep literature)
- At 1.0mL: 25mg CBN (above threshold for reduced sleep disturbance)
Evidence: CBN sleep data remains weak [16][17], but cannabis sleep research continues evolving [17]
If you’re in Monticello struggling with sleep, try the sublingual route first. The slower onset and longer duration support sleep architecture better than the rapid spike and fall of vaping.
Anxiety and Stress
For Drew County’s veterans, caregivers, and stressed professionals:
- Daytime functional relief: 0.3mL raw sublingual — CBD and CBG address anxiety without impairment
- Nighttime: 1.0mL sublingual — full profile including CBN for sleep
Evidence: CBD anxiety evidence [3], CBG pharmacology [7][8], limonene entourage potential [20]
If you work at the Drew County Courthouse, Timberlands Hunting Supply, or any local business where impairment would be dangerous, the raw THCa option keeps you functional while providing potential relief.
General Titration Principle for Drew County
Start low, go slow. Begin with 0.25-0.5mL sublingual and assess effects over 2-3 hours before increasing. Individual responses vary based on body weight, metabolism, tolerance, and concurrent medications.
If you’re older, on multiple medications, or have liver/kidney concerns, start even lower (0.1-0.2mL). The beauty of our graduated dropper is you can measure precisely.
Delivery to Drew County: How You Get It
Nationwide Shipping to Arkansas
We ship directly to every address in Drew County — whether you’re in Monticello, Wilmar, Tillar, Winchester, or living on rural route roads. All 50 states where Farm Bill products are legal, including Arkansas.
- USPS Priority Mail: 2-3 business days
- FedEx/UPS Ground: 3-5 business days
- Discreet packaging: No cannabis branding visible to neighbors or postal workers
- Tracking: Provided for all orders
- Temperature-stable packaging: Critical for Arkansas summers
- Signature-required option: Available if you prefer
Important for Drew County: Arkansas has not banned hemp-derived products, so our shipments are legal. We include full Certificates of Analysis and receipts for your records.
International Shipping
If you have family in other countries dealing with similar health issues, we ship internationally. The THCa legal framework makes this possible — we provide full documentation, COAs, and customs paperwork. The customer accepts all customs and legal responsibility for their jurisdiction.
Why This Matters for Drew County
Rick Simpson couldn’t ship his oil anywhere — it was Schedule I, illegal to produce, possess, or transport. A cancer patient in Germany, a chronic pain patient in Australia, or a veteran in the UK can now access the same clinical-strength multi-cannabinoid RSO formula that you can order from your home in Drew County. We’ve built a product that can move across borders legally, completing a piece of Rick Simpson’s vision that prohibition made impossible.
Legal Compliance for Arkansas
Farm Bill Compliance
The 2018 Farm Bill legalized hemp-derived products containing less than 0.3% delta-9 THC by dry weight. Our sublingual oil contains only 90mg delta-9 THC in the entire 30mL bottle — 3mg per mL — well under the threshold.
Important legal notice: THCa converts to delta-9 THC when heated. You are responsible for understanding Arkansas law regarding decarboxylation. Our product is legal at point of sale and shipment. If you choose to activate it, you accept responsibility for compliance with Arkansas law regarding possession of activated THC products.
Age Requirements
21+ only. We verify age at purchase.
FDA Disclaimers
These products are not evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Individual results may vary.
Safety Warnings
- May cause drowsiness or impairment
- Do not operate vehicles or machinery under the influence
- Consult a physician if pregnant or nursing
- Keep out of reach of children
- Store in a cool, dry place away from Arkansas summer heat
Drug Testing
Delta-8 THC and activated delta-9 THC will trigger positive drug tests. If your employer in Drew County — whether it’s the school district, hospital, timber company, or any business — conducts drug testing, use the raw THCa option only.
ABC13 Media Recognition: Third-Party Validation
Between 2019 and 2023, ABC13 Houston featured Colin Valencia and OilWell Cannabis in seven news segments. Five different reporters sought us out across topics spanning business, law, medicine, community health, and politics.
Why this matters for Drew County: Mainstream media validation from a major-market ABC affiliate establishes credibility that no amount of marketing can replicate. When ABC13 needed to explain Delta-8 legality, they called Colin. When they covered Biden’s marijuana pardons, they featured someone who had personally experienced cannabis conviction. When they reported on the COVID vaccine incentive program, they documented OilWell giving away $35,000 in product to encourage vaccination.
These features are independently produced, editorially controlled news segments — not paid advertising. That kind of recognition can only be earned.
How to Order in Drew County
Visit our website: https://oilwellcbd.com/thca-rick-simpson-oil-rso-by-oilwell-cannabis-of-houston-texas/
Or contact us directly:
- Phone: (832) 416-2816
- Email: [email protected]
- Address: 810 Richmond Ave, Houston, TX 77006
Our customer service team can answer specific questions about shipping to your Drew County address, decarboxylation methods, dosing for your specific condition, and more.
The Bottom Line for Drew County
You deserve options when conventional medicine falls short. You deserve transparency about what the science actually says. You deserve legal access without jumping through bureaucratic hoops. You deserve products made by people who’ve lived the desperation you’re feeling.
OilWell Cannabis isn’t here to sell you snake oil or false hope. We’re here to provide the best possible version of cannabinoid medicine, publish the complete formula so you can make your own if needed, and give you honest education so you can decide what’s right for your health journey here in Drew County.
Bentley’s story taught us that cannabinoids can do what pharmaceuticals cannot. Colin’s benzo withdrawal taught us that these compounds can save lives. The ABC13 features prove we’ve built something credible enough for mainstream media to trust. The 29 peer-reviewed references below prove we’re anchored in real science, not hype.
Drew County, we’re here for you. Not as a replacement for your doctor, but as a resource when you’re ready to explore what cannabis medicine might offer. Start low, go slow, ask questions, and make informed decisions. That’s the OilWell promise.
Full Reference List: See the GENERAL KNOWLEDGE section above for all 29 peer-reviewed citations [1]-[29].
THCa Rick Simpson Oil
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