suraonyx23
Veteran
- Mar 7, 2016
- 1,215
- 2
Yep it's meant for cattle 63 days before slaughter. Parabolan was the only form of the drug that was meant for humans and it was only out for a very short time. The ester that's in the cattle implants?- The one that everyone recommends for the first time use -acetate. Cows get a lower dose than humans. Humans can use parabolan but according to most sources parabolan was used in 50mg amps and only 3 or 4 amps max per week. So with that and other things I've read, what makes sense to me is to use a longer ester if you are gonna use it as human and use a much lower dose than what's recommended by most forum bros. People can do what they want though. Just because someones been "doing that way for years" doesn't make it right. Maybe I just think a lot differently than everyone else. I don't mean offense to people that having been using it a certain way for years. I just like to know how things work, the way they work and why. Nothing wrong with learning as much as you can about a drug...
I actually agree with that. Your right though just cuz people have been doing it that way for years doesn’t mean it’s correct. We haven’t really had any long term studies done on the affects of high mg Tren Ace or E. In saying that though there’s a lot of old school bodybuilders at Pro-m who think that it’s starting to show in the form of all the deaths there has been in the past few years in regards to bodybuilders. It’s not good for the heart to be blasting 600+mg Tren a week regardless if you are fat or not.
Even back in the day during Arnold’s years Tren Hex(Parabolan) wasn’t available in the states. I know someone who trained at Golds in Venice back then and he won Mr America and he told me that Serge Nubret would bring Parabolan amps when he flew into the US. And he said that the guys would only take 2-4 a week which is not a lot. A lot of those guys are still living. I know that my Tren days are very numbered as I only like E anyway. And when I do run it, it’s only 200-250mg per week. 
