Chapter V
Concentrates in Woodland Hills, from first dab to daily driver.
Concentrates are cannabis with everything non-essential pressed, washed or distilled away — which means there's nowhere for a mediocre extractor to hide. We stock this case the way hash people shop for themselves: live resin from farms that freeze on harvest day, solventless rosin from washers we'd name-drop unprompted, and enough textures that your preference gets a vote. Every batch carries its lab results, and every Tuesday the whole shelf is 10% off.
New to extracts entirely? Start with Concentrates 101 and come in with questions — translating is the job.
Live resin, cured resin, rosin — what actually changed
Two decisions define almost every jar in the case: what the plant looked like when extraction started, and what pulled the good stuff out. Livemeans the plant was frozen the day it was cut instead of dried, locking in volatile terpenes that curing normally burns off — that's why live products taste like the strain and cured products taste deeper and gassier. Resin means a hydrocarbon solvent (butane or propane) did the extracting before being vacuum-purged out. Rosin means no solvent ever entered the room: flower or ice-water hash gets squeezed between heated plates, and what drips out is the concentrate.
Neither route is "better." Hydrocarbon extraction is precise, consistent and affordable at scale; solventless is slower, lower-yield craftwork with a flavor ceiling that hash heads will pay for. California requires residual-solvent testing on every batch either way, so the choice comes down to taste and budget, not safety.
| Extract | Starting material | How it's made | Flavor & character | Typical CA price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Live resin | Fresh-frozen plants | Hydrocarbon (butane/propane) | Loud, strain-true flavor — the terpenes never got a chance to evaporate | $25–$45 / g |
| Cured resin | Dried & cured flower | Hydrocarbon (butane/propane) | Deeper, gassier, less bright — and easier on the wallet | $15–$30 / g |
| Live rosin | Fresh-frozen → ice-water hash | Solventless (heat + pressure) | The craft ceiling — nothing touches the plant but water, ice and a press | $40–$70+ / g |
| Flower rosin | Dried flower or hash | Solventless (heat + pressure) | Honest, full-spectrum flavor at a friendlier price than live rosin | $30–$50 / g |
| Distillate | Refined cannabis oil | Distillation (stripped, re-terped) | Neutral potency workhorse — most carts and many edibles start here | $15–$25 / g |
Badder, sauce, shatter, diamonds — texture is the second question
Once the extract exists, how it's finished determines what you find in the jar. Texture mostly changes handling and flavor delivery, not what the concentrate is — the same live resin can become any of these depending on how it's whipped, purged or crystallized.
Badder
Whipped into a frosting-like consistency during the purge. Easy to scoop, hard to spill — the texture we hand most first-time dabbers.
Sauce
A terpene-rich liquid layer with THCa crystals resting in it. Stir before you scoop so every dab carries both flavor and strength.
Shatter
Glassy, stable and old-school. Snaps into clean pieces, travels well, and stays consistent as long as you keep it cool.
Diamonds
Isolated THCa crystals, often testing above 90%. Nearly flavorless on their own — which is why they usually ship paired with sauce.
Three ways in — and a word about potency
Bowl-topping is the free trial. Crumble a pinch of badder or shatter over flower in a bowl or roll it into a joint. Zero new equipment, a noticeable step up in strength, and an easy way to learn which extracts you actually like before buying hardware.
Dabbing is the full experience. A rig flash-vaporizes the concentrate on a heated surface. Skip the blowtorch learning curve and start with an electric rig or nectar collector — they hold the low-and-slow temperatures that preserve flavor, where an overheated nail just scorches terpenes.
Carts are concentrates in convenience form. A live resin or distillate vape cartridge is the same extract family with the battery doing all the work — the right answer if a rig on the coffee table isn't your life.
Whichever door you pick, respect the math: flower usually tests 20–30% THC, while concentrates run 60–90% and diamonds go higher. A dab the size of a grain of rice is a real dose. Take one, wait, and let it finish talking before you go back for more — nobody has ever regretted starting small.
Concentrate Tuesday: the West Valley's hash holiday
Every Tuesday · All day
10% off every concentrate
Live resin, rosin, diamonds, sauce, shatter, badder — the entire case, open to close. It's the day our regulars restock and the day new drops tend to hit the shelf, so Tuesday is also when selection is at its best.
Every night · 7–9 PM
Happy hour, 15% off everything
Concentrates included, seven nights a week. Percentage deals don't stack — the register applies whichever discount is bigger — so a Tuesday happy-hour dab run simply gets the 15%.
Either way you still earn Nature's Points on the full purchase. The current lineup — and anything limited-time — always lives on the deals page, and the happy hour guide breaks down how to time a visit. Today's live concentrate selection, gram by gram, is on the menu.
Concentrate questions, answered
- How much do concentrates cost in Woodland Hills?
- At Nature's Story, cured resin and budget badders start around $15–$25 a gram, live resin from name-brand extractors typically runs $25–$45, and solventless live rosin sits at $40–$70+ for top-tier hash makers. Every Tuesday all of it is 10% off, and happy hour (7–9 PM nightly) takes 15% off instead — best price wins.
- Do I need a dab rig to try concentrates?
- No. The easiest entry is bowl-topping: crumble a little badder or shatter over flower in a bowl or joint — no new gear, gentler learning curve. From there, an electric rig or nectar collector handles temperature for you, and a traditional quartz rig gives the most control once you know what you like.
- Is solventless rosin safer than butane-extracted resin?
- In a licensed California dispensary, both are held to the same standard: every batch passes mandatory residual-solvent and contaminant testing before it can be sold. Choosing solventless is about process and flavor preference — water, ice and pressure instead of hydrocarbons — not about one being clean and the other not.
- How should I store concentrates at home?
- Cool, dark and airtight. A drawer works for resin and shatter; rosin is the fussiest and keeps its color and flavor best in the fridge. Let cold containers warm up before opening so condensation doesn't get in, and always use a tool instead of fingers — skin oils degrade the product fast.
Tuesday is calling. So is the case.
Every extractor, texture and price is live on Weedmaps — order ahead and your grams are waiting at the register. 10% off concentrates all day Tuesday.