LBlack14 I vape. I don't like to smoke anything, even though when I was much younger, that's the only way we took it in. Some of the stuff we smoked when I was a kid was so terrible (it was the only thing we could afford -- $20/ounce where the good stuff was a whopping $35/quarter) that we sometimes wondered which would happen first: we'd get high or we'd die from smoke inhalation.
A lot of people take CBD drops orally (sublingually -- under the tongue) or, if mixed in an edible oil, use it to bake/cook with. The problem with that is dosing is a bit unpredictable: you don't know how thoroughly the oil got mixed in.
I just have a cheap, rechargeable vaporizer that only cost me about $40. But the more I learn about cannabinoids, the more convinced I am that I'm going to get a more expensive vaporizer with a temperature control. Apparently, some cannibinoids "decarboxilate" (i.e., become active) at about 285 degrees. Others don't become active until just over 400 degrees. So, depending on what effect you're looking for or ailment you're addressing, you will heat the product accordingly. (Note that there are more than 100 cannibinoids, which we are just beginning to understand. Here is an interesting figure that looks at some of the primary cannibinoids and their effects/uses: https://www.leafly.com/news/cannabis-101/cannabinoids-101-what-makes-cannabis-medicine.) Vaping is different from a joint, which will burn at over 1000 degrees! That's what makes it so harsh (that and inhaling burning paper!). Not only is vaping less harsh, but since the plant matter never ignites, the vapour (actually, aerosol) has no particulate to it, which is much easier on the lungs.
Just so you know.