Shake (cannabis)

In [...] culture, shake refers to the small, leafy fragments of [...] ([...]) that gather at the bottom of a bag, which are said to result, putatively, of it having been shaken in handling. By extension, shake has come to refer to many different types of crumbs or other small leafy particles of the plant which gather at any stage of harvest, packaging or transit. Shake can refer to either the shade leaves of the plant (not themselves potent, but may have a dusting of trichromes which fall from the flowers) or small broken parts of the bud (potent), and implies the absence of stems (which are not smoked). Shake can be smoked or further processed into kief, hashish, cannabutter, and others.

Varieties

Nearly all bags of [...] purchased on the street contain one or both kinds of shake, either as a cut by the dealer to increase the weight (leaf shake), or due to rough or prolonged handling (bud shake). Some patterns of usage distinguish between three basic kinds of shake:

Leaf shake (or just shake)

"Shake" is used most often to refer to [...] leaves. However, to reduce confusion, it may also be called leaf shake or simply leaf to differentiate it from bud shake. Leaf shake can be bought in large quantities for extremely low prices, and is often given away.

Leaf shake is of low-potency, and its taste is not well-regarded. It is useful, though, to mix with hashish (in lieu of tobacco) in a spliff or chillum, and may sometimes be found set out for patrons in a small bowl at the counter of a hash bar.

Bud shake (crumbs)

"Shake" also may refer to small particles of [...] broken off from the main nug, or bud, of [...]. Many common recreational users of [...] save their shake for use in rolling blunts, joints, or spliffs. "Bud shake" is typically as potent as bud and is often referred to as such to avoid confusion with extremely low-potency "leaf shake". However, since "bud shake" is sometimes used for yet a third form of the plant, this variety of shake might be called by a different name altogether, depending on region.

Bud leaf (sometimes also bud shake)

Less commonly, bud shake may refer to the smaller leaves clipped from the buds themselves, rather than those harvested from the larger fronds of the plant. These "bud leaves" are not as potent as buds, but are a good deal more potent than regular leaf shake.

Variations on terminology

Originally, "shake" was likely used exclusively for crumbs, whereas "leaf" and "bud leaf" would've been used for the leaf forms.

Regional variants

There has yet to be established a definitive jargon concerning this matter, and thus remains largely a matter of regional slang.

In British Columbia, it is sometimes referred to as "Bob", which stands for "Bottom Of the Bag".

In areas where "shake" always refers to leaves, the term "bud shake" is used to indicate higher-potency leaves clipped from the bud. Particles of bud broken off from the main nug will instead be called "crumb". Thus, we have "shake" proper (leaf), "bud shake" (bud leaf), and "crumb". This terminology is prevalent in some parts of the Northwestern U.S.

In some areas, "shake" may still only refer to regular leaf, whereas "bud shake" will refer to crumbs, and "clippings" will be used for bud leaf. Alternately, "clippings" may refer to bud that has been cut specifically for blunt material, and by extension to the "crumbs" that will also be used for this purpose. Under this latter scheme, "bud shake" is again used for bud leaf.

In parts of the Northeastern U.S. the term "shake" has mutated into "chafe" with the meaning of the word left unchanged. Other words such as "crumbles" or "dust" have also been used frequently in this area.

Throughout much of the Southern United States, the term "shake" is simply used to describe powdered and GeneRally deteriorated [...] bud, that is much more common with lower quality "Shwag" [...]. "Shake" may include some [...] leaves though not exclusively.

In the UK, "Shake" is mainly referred to with the same connotations as throughout the Northern U.S. and B.C., with the same amount of variation between whether people say: "Leaf", "Leaf Shake", "Shake" - for the larger lower dried leaves; "Shake", "Bud Shake", "Good Shake", "clippings" - for the closely clipped leaves of the buds; and "Bud Shake", "Crumbs", "Bud Clippings", "Shake", - for broken/disintegrated bud particles (although the unmoddified "shake" is less frequently used in this way). Shake has a reputation of being sold to younger and less knowledgeable users who could not obtain [...] elsewhere. However, an increasing number of people are buying and using shake because of its cheapness. Different forms of shake may range in smell from similar to the potent buds, or a chlorophyl marred "veg" type odour- like a garden fire(wood, leaves, paper) when burned. Shake, may, also refer to a herbal mixture containing small amounts of [...] and/or other drugs.