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Anyone enjoys sauna, steam room a jacuzzi???

desant

Active member
Veteran
Back in 2000 - 2005 i had access to good sport clubs with proper jacuzzi steam room, sauna and gym... man those were great times..... we even used to smoke reffer in the bath (Lady Gaga bath hous comes to mind)

Anyway, right now i live in a small town with a poor health club with a COLD water jacuzzi which is no good...

Miss old times...
 

desant

Active member
Veteran
Lets have some fun this smoke is thick, i wonna take a ride on your RooR stick
 

BadTicket

ØG T®ipL3 ØG³
Moderator
Veteran
I got a sauna, it's nice in the winter.. Gonna be full o weed come summer tho :tiphat:
 

RandyMarsh

Member
I like to burn a J in the shower usually. If you close the roof vent it fogs up real good, sometimes you aren't able to see your hand in front of you. Jamaican showers, is what we call 'em.
 

Stoner4Life

Medicinal Advocate
ICMag Donor
Veteran


I enjoy the shit out of my neighbors new sauna, I never
actually used it but watching Becky climb in 'n out of it
bare ass naked several times a week just tickles me pink.


 

kmk420kali

Freedom Fighter
Veteran


I enjoy the shit out of my neighbors new sauna, I never
actually used it but watching Becky climb in 'n out of it
bare ass naked several times a week just tickles me pink.

If you use a li'l lotion...you won't get those friction burns--:tiphat: :nanana:
 

sutra1

Member
Living in the N.E., a steam room, jacuzzi and sauna make winter tolerable. I swim laps and my reward is the three.............
 

flubnutz

stoned agin ...
Veteran
i used to belong to a nice fitness club with the works including a steam room, all clubs seem to have a sauna, but a steam room seems rarer ... i prefer 'em, they're great.
 

Stoner4Life

Medicinal Advocate
ICMag Donor
Veteran


one is dry heat, the other is not,
although customarily in a sauna you'll
ladle some water on the stones to provide
some moisture for better breathing.......
 
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desant

Active member
Veteran
"some moisture for better breathing....... "

Not so much as better breathing but for more heat!!

Also adding some nice aromatic oil to the stone water mix makes for a pleasant aroma in the room, my friend used to buy quality equaliptus oil....
 
U

unthing

I rarely go to sauna, but if the environment is right ( summer cottage in the countryside with nice lake) it's nice and relaxing.
 

mcmawg

Member
A good sauna is ALSO a way of sweating out some of the weed residuals in your system.
Spend a good 3 or 4 days at a couple hours a day (10-20 min in, 5-10 min breaks), drink buckets of water while sweating and you should be a whole lot closer to passing a piss test.
 

exploziv

pure dynamite
Administrator
Veteran
a steamroom is great after you smoke a joint. i love to lay on those hot stone benches stoned as hell.
or in a sauna with some pine essece on the rocks.

oh and jacuzzy's are great for "chilling" with girls.. :)

:tiphat:
 

iSmokeTrees

Member


one is dry heat, the other is not,
although customarily in a sauna you'll
ladel some water on the stones to provide
some moisture for better breathing.......

no, ladling water is for steam to heat the room, it has nothing to do with breathing. the more water you ladle, the hotter it gets. that is why some health clubs don't let you ladle water, to keep the heat down for their insurance reasons.

a steam room pumps steam once the humidity gets below a certain point. a lot of places add menthol to the steam as a decongestant.
 

exploziv

pure dynamite
Administrator
Veteran
Traditional saunas are heated with stones placed on a heater - usually an electric or wood-burning heater. Steam is produced if you pour water over the stones. This raises the temperature in the sauna by several degrees, but the steam quickly dissipates.

Far infrared saunas use infrared heaters.

Steam rooms are heated with a steam generator. Steam is fed into an almost airtight room where it builds up to create a humidity level around 100%.

Saunas are usually made of wood and include wooden benches to sit on. (small portable "saunas" are an exception)

Steam rooms need to be designed to contain the moisture created by the steam. A material like ceramic tile is often used.

Also, steam rooms are built with a slanted ceiling most of the time to prevent the steam buildup from dripping onto the bathers.
 

desant

Active member
Veteran
WHen i was going to this health club with my friend, we would come into steam room and he would slap the walls really hard, drops accumulated on the celling would all turn into a massive rain - and he would shout : "Ahhh in Newcastle there are RAINS" lol, good times
 

Lazyman

Overkill is under-rated.
Veteran
I have a jacuzzi at home, me and the missus will sit out there sometimes in the evening, watch the rain and smoke a bowl> Pretty nice, except when its cold outside the hot/cold thing tends to give me a head cold.
 
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