DOPE MAGAZINE NORCAL JANUARY 2016 #8 THE DOPEST ISSUE

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DEFENDING OUR PLANT EVERYWHERE

SKYWALKER OG TRUTH SERUM NATIVE SEED GREEN DOOR & CBCB

ALIVE IN MUSIC LEON HENDRIX INTERVIEW

ROA D T R I P THE GREENING OF VEGAS

WO M E N OF WEED A GRAND SOCIAL EXPERIMENT


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WASHINGTON | JANUARY 2016

CONTENTS

•THE DOPEST ISSUE•

ISSUE # 53 | FREE

DEFENDING OUR PLANT EVERYWHER E

STRAINS

BLACKBERRY DREAM & AFGOO

CONCENT RATE LEMON OG

EDIBLE

UHI? PEANUT BRITTLE

STORES

ISSUE 08 | JANUARY 2016 THE DOPEST ISSUE

ALIVE IN MUSIC

LEON HENDRIX INTERVIEW

THE HIDDEN BUSH & THE HERBERY

ROA D T R I P THE GREENING OF VEGAS

WO M E N OF WEED

A GRAND SOCIAL EXPERIMENT

COVER PHOTO

Purple Haze Properties, LLC

IN EVERY ISSUE

12 STRAIN Skywalker OG

14 EDIBLE

Native Seeds Lift Bars

16 DISPENSARY CBCB

38 DISPENSARY

12

Green Door

50 CONCENTRATE High Noon Truth Seru,m

NEWS

20

40

HEALTH

Dosage in Edibles

24 BRANDING BUD

14

50 24

Playing it Safe - Child Resistant Packaging

32 CANNA-NEWS Homelessness and Cannabis

36 CANNA-NEWS

Farmer’s Almanac - Winter Farming

40 BUSINESS

Oakland’s Patient I.D. Center

44 CANNA-NEWS #END420SHAME

44 52

42

FEATURES 52

ON THE COVER!

Jimi Hendrix - Alive in Music

42 PRODUCT

Cannabis Basics Lip Balm

70

PRODUCT

74

EVENT RECAP

8

Steve DeAngelo Book Review

2015 DOPE Industry Awards

| ISSUE 08 THE DOPEST ISSUE dopemagazine.com

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EDITOR’S LETTER What does it mean to be DOPE? Being dope is less about getting high and more about the choices we make to embrace the plant. When confronted with the decision to be out in the open or to keep your personal cannabis consumption on the down low, being DOPE is choosing the former. It’s DOPE to let your family know cannabis isn’t going to kill them and that sharing is caring. To be DOPE, the opinions of others cannot matter to you. Framing responses to lines of inquiry based on what people want to hear isn’t DOPE. Being the person you want to be in this world rather than the one that is expected of you IS pretty DOPE. If you think for yourself and challenge that which does not make sense, you’re onto something: DOPEness.

EVAN CARTER

PRESIDENT

DAVID TRAN

CEO

CHARM DOMACENA

DESIGN DIRECTOR

JAMES ZACHODNI

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

BRANDON PALMA

ART DIRECTOR

ABIGAIL ROSS NATIONAL CONTENT MANAGER ALISON BAIRD MANAGING EDITOR MEGHAN RIDLEY ONLINE EDITOR JONATHAN TEETERS DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS KATE KELLY OPERATIONS ASSOCIATE ANTHONY DAVIS VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES EMMETT FRASER REGIONAL SALES MANAGER ZAK HUGHES DIGITAL AD TRAFFIC COORDINATOR DALLAS KEEFE SOCIAL MEDIA MANAGER NATHAN CHRYSLER BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT TREK HOLLNAGEL STRATEGIC ADVISOR JENIKA MAO ADMIN EVENT COORDINATOR KINSEY LITTON OFFICE MANAGER CHRISTINA HEINTZELMAN EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT

Being DOPE is opening yourself up to undertakings that make you nervous just thinking about them. Uncomfortable is normal. Awkwardness is character building. It improves self-awareness, and self-awareness is DOPE! Forget about all previous connotations associated with DOPE. DOPE has nothing to do with oppression. Being DOPE is liberating, joyful, and inspiring to communities. We’re not a discriminatory bunch; we’re cooperative, incorporating any and all who wish to shift the paradigm. Being DOPE is about ownership of all things you do.

EVAN KOPELSON STATE DIRECTOR MICHAEL MANNING STATE EDITOR ASHLEIGH CASTRO CONTENT COORDINATOR ALLIE BECKETT LEAD PHOTOGRAPHER

It’s DOPE to use DMX or Jay-Z lyrics to make a point. Oh, you’re not feeling me? Fine. It cost you nothing; pay me no mind. It’s DOPE to respond calmly when the TSA asks you about the dab rig in your carry-on as you clarify that the dabber is an applicator for medicine and not an instrument of destruction.

RON MULLINS ASHLEIGH CASTRO

CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS

It’s DOPE to have goals and strive for excellence. Ambling down East Colfax stopping at each convenience store in search of the perfect taco roller fails to meet the nutritional and philosophical principals of being DOPE. Wild dreams and far-out fantasies are the reality in the land of DOPE. There is definitely an agenda behind this industry. Cannabis has its own culture and community. It’s not a drug culture invading a straight world. The culture of DOPE is rooted in the simple belief that cannabis is very good rather than very bad. The refusal to sit idly by while others besmirch what we love is DOPE. Defending Our Plant Everywhere is DOPE!

CAL GREENFIELD ADAM RITZ

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

SHARON LETTS DAVID BAILEY DAVE HODES RON MULLINS DAVID PALESCHUCK

R.Z. HUGHES KIMBERLY CARGILE RADIOHASH EVAN KOPELSON DEBBY GOLDSBERRY

JASON ROSENBURG ASSOCIATE SALES MANAGER

WWW.DOPEMAGAZINE.COM

@DOPEMAGAZINE

Unabashed and totally biased, but open to discussion, it’s our purpose to inspire and be inspired. Would you rather die enormous or live dormant?

QUESTIONS? COMMENTS?

EMAIL US AT INFO@DOPEMAGAZINE.COM

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DEFENDING OUR PLANT EVERYWHERE DOPE is a free publication dedicated to providing an informative and wellness-minded voice to the cannabis movement. While our foundation is the medical cannabis industry, it is our intent to provide ethical and research-based articles that address the many facets of the war on drugs, from politics to lifestyle and beyond. We believe that through education and honest discourse, accurate policy and understanding can emerge. DOPE Magazine is focused on defending both our patients and our plant, and to being an unceasing force for revolutionary change.

EMAIL US AT ADS@DOPEMAGAZINE.COM

DOPE Magazine and the entire contents of this magazine are copyright 2016 DOPE MAGAZINE LLC, all rights reserved and may not be reproduced in any manner, in whole or part without the written permission from DOPE Magazine LLC.



STRAIN

SKYWALKER OG THE FORCE IS STRONG HERE WRITER •RADIOHASH

| PHOTOS • ASHLEIGH CASTRO

GENETICS With a reputation as one of the most powerful OG strains available, Skywalker OG is the mind controlling offspring of Skywalker (Blueberry x Mazar) and OG Kush. All cannabis from CRAFT is “Clean Green Certified” in line with the delivery service’s commitment to giving patients a totally organic experience from seed to jar.

EFFECTS Potent Skywalker OG easily transports one to a galaxy far, far away with THC levels that exceed 25%, so take a hit and relax. It can be tough to remain calm and collected during moments of stress, but this will have you harnessing your own force in no time.

AROMA Both Anakin and Luke were born with special powers and this strain is no different. Cracking open a nug, a sharp, pungent force of pine fills the air, followed by slightly sweet skunk and an odd but clear hint of dill. Lighting up releases earthy kush aromas from deep within the bud.

FLAVOR As is common with OG strains, Skywalker provides a rich, full body smoke. The taste starts off sharp, a shock to the taste buds, warning that this is a powerful contender. The flavor erupts into a sweet frosty kush with a piney kick. As these fade, an essence of Chemdawg remains.

PROVIDED BY: CRAFT COLLECTIVE, BERKELEY TESTED BY: SC LABS

25.1% THC 0.2% CBD

LOOKS All cannabis from CRAFT comes in dark amber glass jars that prevent degradation caused by exposure to light. The buds are large and radiantly colorful. Both fluffy and sticky, this trichomefrosted mint green colored flower boasts rustorange pistil with darker spots of emerald green.

THERAPEUTIC BENEFITS Medicate with Skywalker OG, many have done. Relief of muscle pain they do report! This strain may also prove valuable for dealing with the stress brought on by daily battles with the dark side. When a Jedi must eat, hunger this strain will bring you. If rest is what you seek, lay back, close your eyes, and drift off to Tatooine.

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WRITER •RADIOHASH

| PHOTOS • ASHLEIGH CASTRO

EDIBLES

NATIVE SEED HEALTHY EDIBLES TO NOURISH BODY & MIND

ATIENTS OFTEN HAVE trouble finding non-GMO, gluten-free, dairy-free edibles that are, well… actually edible. Many offerings taste like someone stuffed a fruitcake full of schwag. Native Seeds addresses this need, offering healthy, labtested edibles as an alternative to smoked cannabis. Founded in Oakland by a husband and wife team, Native Seeds main products are a line of cannabis-infused protein bars called Lift Bars. Their latest edible, Protein Bites, features a 1:1 ratio of THC to CBD. These magical treats are powered by avocado-oil based Rick Simpson’s Oil. They come in soft, chewy, bite-sized bars; the smell of oats, syrup, and cinnamon is a delicious scent when the seal is broken.

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This edible is so packed with goodies that it doesn’t seem free of anything. Organic oats, toasted rice, dates, raisins, and cacao chips are a combination complimenting each other eloquently, while enlightening the senses. Native Seeds’ products barely taste of cannabis, a result of the high-quality cannabis oil use in each treat. Hard to believe it’s healthy, just wait fifteen minutes or so after eating one and you probably won’t care. Reports of extreme, pain free relaxation are common, with stress and worries melting away. If indulging in more than a nibble, consider dedicating the day to wellness and rest, because we wouldn’t recommend making ® any plans. Why mess with peace?

ISSUE 08 THE DOPEST ISSUE dopemagazine.com

PREPARE FOR LIFT OFF: Take one 30 minutes before a spa or massage appointment. Prepare to drift into bliss. Lift bars are high in fiber, omega-3’s and have 10g of protein. Cutting back on sugar? Lift bars are a delicious, guilt-free alternative. AVAILABLE AT: • CBCB (BERKELEY) • THE GREEN DOOR (SAN FRANCISCO) • SUNSHINE VITALITY (SONOMA COUNTY)



WRITER •RON MULLINS

PHOTOS •ASHLEIGH CASTRO

DISPENSARY

CANNABIS BUYERS CLUB BERKELEY GREAT SELECTION WITH A HOMETOWN VIBE

AR FROM THE HUSTLE AND BUSTLE of the University, the Cannabis Buyers Club Berkeley – “CBCB” to the locals – has operated for close to 20 years. Easy to find in the densely populated neighborhood by its aquatic-themed mural outside, they offer much welcomed patient parking and a spacious dispensing area. An open setting with hardwood floors, there’s free coffee and fruit, and a few tables that welcome guests to sit and chill. New to cannabis? CBCB has you covered. A separate patient consult area exists away from the line, where new customers receive as much time as they need to discuss details and acquire samples. Follow up emails track treatment progress.

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I learned about micro-dosing, which is a method of using cannabis in very small doses – usually under 10mg – to experience the therapeutic benefits without psychoactivity. Their menu features many products suitable for micro-dosing that includes Stokes Mints and KIVA Blueberry Terra Bites with 5mg each, and Jolly Lolly lozenges at 15mg per dose. There’s over thirty varieties of flower and every comprehendible edible at CBCB. An entire apothecary of caps, tablets, patches, tinctures, and mineral baths also graces their shelves. CBCB has a reputation for compassion and generosity in the local community. In addition to food and clothing drives, CBCB supports the cannabis community in co-

ISSUE 08 THE DOPEST ISSUE dopemagazine.com

operation with Americans for Safe Access, NORML, and Students for a Sensible Drug Policy. CBCB members send commissary funds to cannabis prisoners, and write them letters of support and encouragement. I’ll be sure to visit CBCB again the next time I’m in Berkeley and this is why we all should. Supporting those that support others is just the right thing to do. They offer discounts for seniors, veterans, students, and teachers. Along with a free eighth of medicine per week for patients with low income, CBCB provides free medicine for people with chronic conditions in the form they need most, be that oil, flower, edible, or topical, so supporting them supports the ® healing of others.


“CBCB has a reputation for compassion and generosity in the local community.” 3033 SHATTUCK AVE, BERKELEY, CA 94705 510-429-8241 HOURS: 9AM-9PM EVERY DAY CBCBBERKELEY.COM

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HEALTH

THE DOSAGE DILEMMA

Rel ax...Th e An a lysts Are Here

E

DIBLE MAKERS are quickly

becoming the fastest growing part of the industry (there are nearly 200 edible makers across the country now), but the emphasis today is more about getting and maintaining the right dosage of THC or CBD than actually inventing a new product. The process starts from the top down, according to Jaime Lewis, owner and executive chef of Mountain Medicine in Colorado. A graduate of the California Culinary Academy, Lewis began her career in the cannabis industry in 2006, making edibles for patients living with HIV and AIDS. “Cooking with

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cannabis starts with really well-defined recipes, and with training,” she said. The baking process for most edibles is much like any other baking process, in which cannabis butter replaces dairybased butter. After chefs test for contaminants and determine the plant’s THC levels, they activate the THC by either decarbing or roasting the bud. When cooking with cannabis, it’s important to keep all of the ingredients, especially the THC, evenly dispersed in order to establish homogeneity in the product. “Getting the right homogeneity is a simple process of making sure that the recipe and the batches are mixed


WRITER •DAVID HODES

properly,” she added. Lewis uses decarbed cannabis butter, which has a precise cooking time, water content, and temperature. “It’s a stirring process in there as well. I stir it every 30 minutes, and then during the straining process it’s stirred again.” Lewis then tests it for homogeneity to confirm consistency before it goes into Mountain Medicine’s baked breads. “Each recipe has a defined mixing process. For our pie bars, it’s mixed seven and a half minutes to the left, and seven and half minutes to the right. It’s really that defined.” Cooks are generally told to taste what they cook as they go, but that’s not the case in the cannabis business. In Colorado, edibles cannot be consumed on site. “I can’t taste my product after it has cannabis in it,” Lewis said. “My staff doesn’t taste anything in my kitchen. We don’t have that luxury.” Instead, Lewis’ team provides samples to dispensaries and asks them to fill out surveys on the products. “From that, we are able to gauge if it’s going to be a flavored product.” “Cannabis, to some consumers, has a very pungent flavor that we don’t generally try to mask in the baked goods,” she said. “But in the chocolates, we just do added things, like add ginger which is actually good at helping cover the flavor of the cannabis.” The biggest issue in this unregulated industry is consistency: a product must have the same level of THC in every bite. If a regulator identifies inconsistency in a product’s strength, the makers face serious consequences. There’s another challenge to consistency, according to Guy Rocourt, a lead extraction artist and partner in Neos. “While the products may be consistent in dosages, especially

when it comes to edibles, the physiology of the consumer is different, so if you have two pieces of chocolates, two different people have a different experience. It’s likely that they just need a different dosage based on their physiology,” he clarified. “We have to understand this, and have to start getting data on how cannabis affects users based on a bunch of other metrics.” The industry is seeking regulation not only to increase understanding of the plant, but also to make edibles predictable for recreational consumption and, more importantly, safer for those with health conditions. This effort is getting a boost from the American Oil Chemists’ Society (AOCS), a nonprofit based in Urbana, Illinois. The AOCS studies fats, oils, detergents, and related materials, and has been looking for an unmet need in the industry, according to Cynthia Ludwig, the AOCS director of technical services and former research scientist for Monsanto. “Cannabis people started calling about a year and a half ago asking if some of our official testing methods would work on THC and CBD oils, and we were like, ‘We really don’t know,’” she said. “We don’t want people to have heavy metals and pesticide residue or any other contaminants in the product. This is about patient safety. So we say, let’s develop some investigative analytic lab procedures to make sure that these things are safe and that the dosage is correct. This is something that’s in our wheelhouse.” In order to determine a validated method for testing cannabis, the AOCS is working with several cannabis labs to do a large-scale collaborative study of hops (the closest cousin to cannabis). Once

GRAPHICS • BRANDON PALMA

“While the products may be consistent in dosages, especially when it comes to edibles, the physiology of the consumer is different,” cannabis is federally legalized, the AOCS hopes to have its method adopted by the industry as a whole. Lewis said that working with the AOCS is one of the most exciting pieces of news she has heard. “We have three to five years of data that we can bring to the table. Smarter people than ourselves can help guide us in terms of taking the cannabis and treating it, just like they do for oils in any other industry,” she said. “This company can bring that knowledge of the standardization process that they have done for every other industry before us.” Ludwig said that she would really like to see industry regulators talk to analytical chemists more before they write their regulations. “They should work together to get things on the books that are enforceable, that are traceable, and that are reasonable,” she said. “Analytical chemists have been around forever. We know how to do this. So let’s look to the people who do this and quit reinventing the wheel.”

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CA MER A S

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AC CE S S C ON T R OL

CannaGuardSecurity.com

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[ Cannapaq’s child-resistant standup pouch ]

BRANDING BUD

PLAYING IT SAFE Cann a bis Brand s Get Creati ve With Ch i ld-Resistant Packag i ng TRAGIC NUMBERS PALM N TURN

A

S THE Canadian director of poison control, Dr. Henri J. Breault was instrumental in creating the first child-resistant container. He established the Ontario Association for the Control of Accidental Poisoning in 1962, paving the way for the 1967 invention of the “Palm N Turn” cap design, which has since become the standard in child-resistant packaging. Although child-resistant (CR) packaging is a part of everyday life, poisoning still remains a hazard to children, causing about 30 pediatric deaths each year. In 2014, the American Association of Poison Control Centers received about 3 million calls from consumers for poison exposure treatment or information. CR packaging is required by regulation for prescription drugs, over-the-counter medications, pesticides, and household chemicals. Some jurisdictions require unit packaging such as blister packs for child safety.

Cheeba Chews child-resistant blister pack

[ A “Palm N Turn” child-resistant cap]

Every 30 seconds, an accidental poisoning is reported in the United States and Europe. More than 800,000 children are rushed to a hospital with symptoms of poisoning. Of these, 100,000 are actually hospitalized. In Europe alone, 3,000 young children die each year from medicine or household chemical poisoning, and children under six account for the majority of all poisoning accidents. When selecting packaging materials and components for solid oral drugs, drug manufacturers (and now cannabis processors) must balance the needs of both children and adults. Under the Poison Prevention Packaging Act of 1970, manufacturers must design packages that help protect children from potentially toxic prescription drugs and make sure that adults who have limited dexterity can use the packages properly. Devising such a package isn’t always a scientific endeavor: manufacturers must base their selections on unpredictable factors like marketplace opinions and child testers. They are also burdened by the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), which hopes to eliminate child poisonings through regulation but offers manufacturers little guidance in package selection.

THE NEED FOR EVOLUTION Despite the established designs of CR packaging, companies are looking for new designs because of changes in varying industries. There are more products that require CR packaging now because of cannabis legalization, widespread publicity about poisoning incidents related to detergent pods, and an ongoing shift from rigid containers

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to flexible packaging. An example of a child-resistant option for flexible packaging is Presto’s Child-Guard zipper, which unzips the pouch when the slider tongue is simultaneously aligned with a groove, depressed, and pulled. PPi Technologies also uses a re-closable CR zipper for its Cannapaq standup pouch for cannabis.

ISSUE 8 THE DOPEST ISSUE dopemagazine.com

[ Child-Resistant Cannapaq Standup Pouch, by PPi Technologies ]


WRITER •DAVID PALESCHUCK, MBA, CLS

“Designers of child-resistant packaging must always work against the paradox that a package that is difficult for a child to open can often be difficult for the adult patient it is intended to treat.” CREATIVE COMPLIANCE

To comply with state guidelines, cannabis companies must ensure that their packages are tamper-proof, childresistant, and within accordance of their local laws. Unfortunately, because the laws are constantly changing, businesses are forced to keep up with the perpetual tweaks made to remain in compliance and to protect the safety and security of the general public. Designers of child-resistant packaging must always work against the paradox that a package that is difficult for a child to open can often be difficult for the adult patient it is intended to treat. In fact, up to 90 percent of adults struggle to open child-vresistant packaging, according to a report in the journal of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. While there’s no consistent set of guidelines for cannabis packaging, there are resources available that help maintain the brand’s look and feel while following state rules and requirements. Assurpack, Locked4Kids, and CoolJarz are but just a few of the firms that have formed to assist cannabis brand owners with state rules and regulations of child-resistant packaging. For example, cities and counties can have more stringent cannabis packaging restrictions than the state of California in general. Recreational packaging laws in Washington and

Colorado also vary greatly, causing mass customization across state lines as brands now grow nationally. Dixie is a solid example. Working closely with a pharmaceutical and consumer product packaging industry expert, Dixie leveraged years of experience to create child-resistant packaging for their “Toasted Rooster” and “Crispy Kraken” chocolate bars. Lindsey Topping, Dixie’s director of marketing, asserted that their multi-state, child-resistant solution remained true to the Dixie brand. It’s in the industry’s best interest not to reinvent the wheel. Instead, it should take the best practices that already exist from relevant sectors (pharmaceuticals, cosmetics) and utilize them. The companies that stay true to their brand while adhering to state regulations will rise above the rest. The onus is on cannabis brands to create safe, consistent products in the most effective child-resistant packages available. It’s on the CPSC to do a better job showing people how to use child-resistant packaging and explaining why it’s important to put all medications away after use. The only way to protect children is to teach adults how to properly use child-resistant packages, but the bottom line is that no package is 100 percent safe.

[ Child-resistant packaging on two of Dixie’s cannabis-infused chocolate bars] dopemagazine.com ISSUE 8 THE DOPEST ISSUE

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CANNANEWS

PUBLIC VULNERABILITY WHY CANNABIS USERS ARE MORE SUSCEPTIBLE TO PERPETUITY IN HOMELESSNESS

I

N THE United States, drug use

is often cited as a cause and perpetuating factor of homelessness. Unfortunately, our society still has trouble separating cannabis from drugs like methamphetamines and crack, so when dispossessed people use cannabis in public encampments, they are seen in a negative light: seen as not responsible enough to work, to take care of their children, to have adequate housing, or to receive federal benefits. Due to unfortunate (and false) connections between the supposed cause and effect of cannabis use and homelessness, advocacy groups for cannabis and homelessness have come to realize that they must work together in order

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to promote their respective causes and improve the lives of their beneficiaries. Their intention is to shed light on the truth about cannabis and homelessness, and show evidence that the use of one does not lead to the other. While cannabis use can perpetuate homelessness, it does so not because of its effect on the user, but because of the public’s imagined effect on the user. “Homeless people have to perform activities in public that would go unnoticed in a private residence,” said Eric Tars, senior attorney at the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty (NLCHP). “They are more vulnerable to being caught and punished than people who have housing.” There are a plethora of negative consequences if someone is caught with cannabis or its paraphernalia, aside from the risk of going to jail. A drug charge affects a person’s finances, credit history, driving record, federal benefits like housing and student loans, employment opportunities, and child custody. “Every time a homeless person is cited or gets arrested, that’s one more barrier between that person and exiting homelessness. Homeless people have a much better chance of success if they are engaging in marijuana use from a sheltered situation versus an unsheltered situation,” said Tars. For that reason, the NLCHP supports putting people into housing without a requirement to be drug free. “If we can get people into housing, their arrest rates go down and their health improves,” said Dr. Barbara DiPietro, senior director of policy at the National Health Care for the Homeless Council. “There is a greater likelihood of them getting a job and being reunified with their family, if these are their goals.” Both Tars and DiPietro said it is con-

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cerning that the general public views cannabis as a contributing factor to homelessness. “When people can see and smell marijuana smoke coming from a homeless encampment, it reinforces the stereotype that all homeless people are drug addicts,” said DiPietro. Tars said he is concerned that law enforcement officers could cite cannabis use in a homeless encampment as a pretext to search it or shut it down. “It only disperses people further and takes them away from a community that they may have built. The appropriate approach is to get people into social services instead of the criminal justice system.” Don Duncan, California director of Americans for Safe Access (ASA), had suggestions for how to help solve the problem. “Two things need to happen. One is an educational campaign for homeless cannabis users, so they can know their rights and risks. This will help them minimize their risk. The other is training for law enforcement and security officers to show them how to interact with homeless people.” Duncan said it is a major concern that many religious organizations require a person receiving shelter or social services to be drug free. “Some communities of faith see cannabis as a drug of intoxication and not as a medicine,” he said. “I think education needs to come from within those communities. Medical service providers who are part of the communities must educate others.” Some religious organizations already welcome those who use cannabis. Captain Dana Libby, social services secretary for the Western territory of The Salvation Army, said the organization’s low-barrier and long-term shelters welcome people who are active cannabis users. In states that have legalized medi-


WRITER

cal cannabis, residents of the shelter are permitted to store their medicine there. “In the low-barrier shelters, people have a mat and a blanket. They tend to keep their stuff next to them. In the long-term shelters, they’ve got a locker. There’s also a medical refrigerator at the front desk made of steel with a padlock on it where people can store their medicine.” Libby said The Salvation Army requires those who store cannabis in the refrigerator to treat it as medication. “They can bring in edibles, tinctures, creams, and Marinol or cannabis in other pill forms. If they come in with loose plant material, they can still stay at the shelter, but we ask them to store that somewhere else. We don’t let people smoke or vape anything in the building. We don’t want to burn the building down or expose other people to second-hand smoke.” While The Salvation Army has responded to state legalization by allowing patients to store their medicine in shelters, it does not allow people to stay at its rehab centers while using cannabis. The Portland Rescue Mission (PRM), a Christian organization, is a little more forgiving with its guests, though it doesn’t offer storage for medical cannabis. “Anyone who is non-violent and needs a meal or a place to use the bathrooms or rest is welcome to use the Mission’s non-smoking facilities,” said Ron Arp, the organization’s spokesperson. Allan St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), said it would be helpful for cannabis advocacy organizations to engage in more con-

versations with homeless advocacy organizations. St. Pierre and Duncan separately acknowledged that NORML and ASA have not had many of these conversations, though both indicated their respective organization had an interest in having conversations in the future. St. Pierre also advocated the creation of a safe place for homeless people to use cannabis for recreational or medical purposes. “These individuals need unfettered access to that space at reasonable hours. Not 24-7, but at minimum, at least as available as liquor. The space should not be treated as a place to ‘shake down’ or have heightened enforcement. It should be treated like a sanctuary. Why not come up with a way [for people to use cannabis] that’s creative, humane, and constitutional?” He said legalization has led to an increase in communication between cannabis advocacy organizations and the state’s local government. “It’s night and day between the states that have legalized it and those who treat it as illegal. In the states where it’s been legalized, they are so much more open and amenable to conversations. Individuals like myself are not treated as political lepers,” he said. Duncan said that by changing the public’s perception of homeless cannabis users, we could find solutions to the problem. “Cannabis is much less harmful, much less of an obstacle for homeless people wanting to move forward than other drugs, like alcohol,” said Duncan. Libby agreed. “They smoke marijuana because it makes life less horrible. That tends not to be

• JESSICA ZIMMER

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DESIGN

• RANDON PALMA

the reason they’re homeless.” “I think there’s a misperception by the public that if homeless people are using medical marijuana, that they’re somehow not helping themselves—that they have to be busy every hour of the day,” said Duncan. “That’s not a realistic expectation. The vast majority of people who are using medical marijuana are using it to treat medical concerns. That’s not wasting time.” Duncan argued that educating Americans about homeless cannabis users would improve the perceptions the public has of both cannabis and homeless people. Likewise, DiPietro said now is an excellent time to start more conversations. “I think there’s certainly less of a stigma around marijuana because our social and cultural views are changing,” she said. “I’m excited about the changes that we’re seeing in jurisdictions changing these laws. It’s an exciting time.”

“It is a major concern that many religious organizations require a person receiving shelter or social services to be drug free. Some communities of faith see cannabis as a drug of intoxication and not as a medicine. ” dopemagazine.com ISSUE 8 THE DOPEST ISSUE

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WRITER/PHOTOS

• CASEY O’NEILL

WINTER REFLECTION

COOLER WEATHER GIVES CANNABIS FARMERS TIME TO PLAN FOR NEXT YEAR

HE SUN IS LOW on the horizon, bringing less warmth and intensity to the landscape. The farm is bedded down for winter, cover crop sown, straw mulch over the top. Despite the cooler weather, there is always work to be done up here on the farm. During the busy, hotter months of the year, cannabis supports farmers not only as a source of income, but also by easing the inevitable soreness and lightening work-weary steps. During winter, there is more time for sampling the many different strains of cannabis we grow, and for enjoying the particular effects of each. Daytime sativas provide counterbalance to heavy medicinal indicas. As a farmer, I’ve learned to align my cannabis intake to the day’s plans: no Strawberry OG for numbers work, like laying out foundations. I find the clear, energizing Sour and Headband strains provide excellent counterbalance, complementary chords in the symphony of farm life. Cannabis is a journey, guiding wayward humans back to the earth and towards enlightenment. There is great joy

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in understanding the connection between soil and soul. Cannabis accentuates and maintains this connection, providing a deep sense of awareness of the innate beauty of the present moment. No matter where we find ourselves, be it in the beauty of nature or deep in the concrete jungle, cannabis uplifts and enlightens, providing a link to the sublime. We are nourished by plants: life through the gifts we receive from the sun. Farming means getting deep in touch with the Earth. The rhythm of the seasons provides balance. Farmers tend to work longer hours in the spring and summer than in the winter. Vegetables don’t grow as fast this time of year, and neither do weeds, which leaves more time for focusing on other projects. I get deep enjoyment from having time to read and write during the cooler months, expanding my horizons while seeking to provide information and knowledge to others. We’ve chosen not to run our winter vegetable enterprise this year, preferring to focus on planning and infrastructure, taking deliberate steps to carve out down-

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time to regenerate battered bodies and worn psyches. A mixed-crop, year-round farm creates an intense and beautiful choreography. Three seasons out of the year we work at a hectic pace; in spring we prep, in summer we tend, and in fall we reap while prepping for winter crops. This winter is for learning, writing, planning and working on long-term projects that we just can’t focus on during more hectic moments. We’ll have the time to assess personal and professional goals, define some objectives, and lay out our strategic plan for the coming season. When I was younger, I thought, “Who needs planning?” But each year deepens my understanding that slow, deliberative processes yield the best results. I’m still a spontaneous idea man, but I’m working on balancing that tendency with the understanding that well-thought-out plans ensure the highest productivity for the lowest cost. Cannabis is an integral part of our farm: we crop vegetables year-round, and we cultivate cannabis in the spring and summer, harvest in the fall, and trim in


the winter. Rotating our crops and interplanting vegetable crops with cannabis helps to maximize yields for time spent on limited space. It’s important to avoid leaving soil bare for the winter to prevent it getting washed away by the rain. Ground cover provides food and a habitat for soildwelling organisms. Over time, the soil is enriched, also feeding the farmer’s soul. We are looking forward to stepping back and assessing some of the stress HappyDay Farms has been going through. Our original business plans never factored in the difficult transition the whole cannabis industry is making, opening up to the public and participating in civic life. I’m spending more of my time on the computer and at meetings than I ever have in my life. Change requires flexibility. Farming is about learning. Each trip around the sun, I feel like I have learned so much, yet know so little. I’m learning to ask for advice and seek counsel from land-use professionals, to be slow and deliberate with my planning processes for the seasons to come. It’s important to make decisions from a foundation of well-articulated personal goals. Understanding your own needs and capabilities will help you run an efficient business, and if you’re lucky, you might even find some measure of personal fulfillment. Balance and clear assessment are the keys to a fulfilled working environment. Much love from HappyDay Farms, Deep Winter ’16. Casey O’Neill is a farmer who co-operates a micro-diversified farm in northern Mendocino County. His family raises approximately two acres of Clean Green Certified vegetables, poultry and medical cannabis in a small-farm setting while working towards sustainability. He is a self-described “weed geek” and is passionate about sharing food, medicine and ® cultivation techniques with others.

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DISPENSARY

WRITER •CAL GREENFIELD | PHOTOS • ASHLEIGH CASTRO

GREEN DOOR METRO SF FAVORITE OPENS NEW SACRAMENTO OUTPOST

PENING ON December 1, 2015, Green Door Metro is the newest licensed dispensary in the Sacramento area, and as the first franchised dispensary to arrive, they offer a glimpse into the future of medical cannabis in California. Located southeast of downtown Sacramento near Florin, the spacious Green Door Metro is their newest outpost dedicated to maintaining all the selection, quality, consistency, and excellent service that customers expect from their San Francisco location. The menu carries over 35 strains and displays live both in the store and on their website. Prices range from $24 to $50 donation per eighth ounce. Bombay Premium

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Platinum Cookies, Bacio Gelato, Bombay, and Candy Jack are just a few of Green Door’s popular strains. I decided to pick up some sweet-smelling Bubble Gum Bazooka Joe Cookies, and at $50, I had no regrets. Well over 50 brands of edibles are offered with the vast array including just about everything from baked goods to chocolates and candies, to honey. HalfCaked Gourmet Edibles and Gummi Cares tempt visitors, along with local favorites like High-Fi and Heavenly Sweet. I’d never had a medicated Boston Cream Pie Cupcake before, so I had to give that a try. Green Door Metro also carries over 40 types of oils, hashes, shatters, waxes and other ex-

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tracts with prices ranging from $25 to $60 per gram. A full clone nursery is also onsite. Sacramento’s newest dispensary has big plans for reaching out to the community. They plan to copy the San Francisco gun buyback program that Green Door SF sponsored in the past. Actively supporting organizations like the Drug Policy Alliance, the National Cannabis Industry Association, and NORML, they also currently offer a Veterans Compassion Program to help wounded vets get the medicine they need; all great examples of reasons to support ® Green Door.


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WRITER •DEBBY GOLDSBERRY | PHOTOS • ASHLEIGH CASTRO

BUSINESS

JEFF JONES OAKSTERDAM’S ORIGINAL PIONEER HE FIRST CANNABIS PIONEER TO put down stakes in Oakland, Jeff Jones arrived long before the city became famous as Oaksterdam, America’s capital of cannabis. In 1995, a year before California’s landmark medical marijuana law passage, he founded the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative (OCBC). A bike delivery service, OCBC was a phenomenal success that quickly developed a strong reputation among both patients and lawmakers. By mid-1996, the City of Oakland passed an official Resolution of Support for OCBC, helping Jones secure a lease for a dispensary on Broadway, right in the heart of down-

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town Oakland. Today, Jones is still on the same city block, operating a vibrant retail store called the Patient ID Center. A 2001 United States Supreme Court decision blocked Jones and all five of the state’s other original dispensaries from distributing medical cannabis to even the most seriously ill people. Now, with Judge Breyer’s 9th Circuit ruling in favor of the Marin Alliance for Medical Marijuana (MAMM), Jones may finally be able to re-open the OCBC dispensary. “Lynette Shaw is the queen of the dragon slayers,” says Jones, referring to the founder of the Marin Alliance. “She used a

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rider bill in a court relief case to have her ruling amended, and Judge Breyer then amended the injunctions placed against all six of California’s first dispensaries. The ruling says that if you meet state law, the federal government cannot intervene.” The federal government originally sued Jones and OCBC in early 1998, along with every other permitted cannabis dispensary in the state. Jones managed to keep OCBC open into the fall that year, while the others dispensaries closed one by one. Shaw was able to keep MAMM open until 2012. It was during this time that the City of Oakland stepped in with a show of support, and


“An Officer of the City designated specifically to distribute medical cannabis.” made Jones an Officer of the City, designated specifically to distribute medical cannabis. Soon after his dispensary’s closure, Jones shifted his focus towards advocacy, creating a groundbreaking identification card system for medical cannabis patients. Law enforcement officers in the field needed a quick way to determine if patients were legitimately covered under Prop 215. Jones stepped in to fill this void with a system of ID cards backed by instant verification. His model was eventually adopted statewide, and he changed the name of his business from OCBC to the Patient ID Center. “In November 1998, we told Judge Breyer that we would not sell or cultivate any cannabis, but would only offer referrals,” Jones says. “We transitioned into our new name in mid-2000 to better identify what we do, so we were differentiated from dispensaries, and law enforcement could not misconstrue our purpose.” Jones’ reform movement credentials go back to 1994, when he first came across a booth for the Cannabis Action Network (CAN) at a concert in Nebraska. “When I found the CAN booth at a Primus show, it shifted my mind frame and my path,” Jones says. “CAN was a source of information about marijuana at a time when the

government was blacking it out. According to the government, there was no such thing as medical marijuana, and cannabis was a harmful, schedule 1 drug.” Jones was further motivated after discovering belatedly that in 1988, Federal Administrative Judge Francis L. Young had ruled that cannabis should be immediately rescheduled to allow research into its therapeutic benefits. “My father passed away when I was 14. He had home hospice, and it effects you watching someone die in front of you, someone who does not want to die,” Jones says. “When I found out that Judge Young’s ruling had come down right after my dad died, it made me mad that he had been unable to access any information about cannabis therapy, which could have helped him. Soon after finding out about medical cannabis, I determined it was my path. It was a formidable decision which provided me a sense of greater hope.” Jones secured a one-way bus ticket from South Dakota to Berkeley, and was soon on a coast-to-coast tour with CAN. “I got a crash course in cannabis activism through CAN, learning what you have to do at a grassroots level to create change,” Jones says. “We collected fifty thousand postcards to send to the president supporting legalization.”

Jones is now working to legalize adult cannabis use in California, and is a board member of the Coalition for Cannabis Policy Reform (reformca.com). “We are setting up a very legitimate industry, and other states are just now catching up to our 1996 laws,” he says. “Back in the dark ages, before the laws started to change, I wanted to help shift the balance of power created by prohibition. With my court case, I knew I had to push through, because if I didn’t I would never be treated fairly. In the long run, it created a discussion about states’ rights that opened up the door to legalization around the country.” Jeff Jones has never shied away from the fight for legalization. If the appeals process in Lynette Shaw’s case goes well, Jones may find himself back in the dispensary business after nearly two decades of legal exile. For someone who has given so much of himself to the movement, that ® would only be fair.

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CANNANEWS

#END420SHAME

WRITER

•KELLY VO

TRACKING THE PATH TO LEGITIMACY LEGITIMATE CANNABIS INDUSTRY – that’s the end game. That’s why Steve DeAngelo wrote The Cannabis Manifesto. That’s why states have put strict regulations in place for cannabis consumers, growers, and retail stores. It’s also why seed-to-sale tracking systems are so vital. Tracking systems help businesses and lawmakers keep track of every gram of cannabis to prevent diversion, improve transparency, and create accountability. Whether it’s fair or not, cannabis faces an uphill battle on the road to legitimacy. Without seed-to-sale software, the cannabis industry is just another barely legal drug operation. Software that helps the industry demonstrate to naysayers that cannabis can be produced and consumed completely above board can only be a good thing. Seed-to-sale cannabis tracking companies have helped to #end420shame by legitimizing the industry. First, it’s important to recognize what the industry would look like without the ability to track each and every plant. “Lack of access to the data provided by seed-to-sale cannabis tracking would mean a lack of transparency and accountability,” says Patrick Vo, CEO and President of BioTrackTHC (Full disclosure: he’s also the author’s husband.) “A lack of transparency and accountability is unsettling and uncomfortable for law enforcement, the government, and concerned citizens.” “Cannabis would not be nearly as accepted as it is now without tracking,” says Scott Denholm, Executive Director at Metrc. “v willing to step out and the entire industry would probably be on iffy footing if these systems weren’t out there. Regulation and tracking benefit the industry’s ability to not only survive but to thrive.” To appreciate the advantages of operating in a well-regulated market, all you need to do is look at the one state where cannabis isn’t tracked: California. “While California’s cannabis market has certainly survived without tracking software, cannabis businesses in the state are much more

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While California’s cannabis market has certainly survived without tracking software, cannabis businesses in the state are much more at risk for federal and local prosecution, raids, and seizures. at risk for federal and local prosecution, raids, and seizures,” says Heather Smyth, Marketing Manager at MJ Freeway. “Seedto-sale tracking means that every touch to the plant will be recorded to ensure consumer safety and integrity. Tracking software makes regulation possible. And local regulation means protection from federal prosecution.” “From a state tracking perspective, a seed-to-sale system enables government agencies to have full visibility of everything – every plant and every gram,” Vo says. “That gives peace of mind not just to the naysayers, but to patients. And from a business perspective, we don’t want people buying their cannabis from dark alleyways. A tool that keeps employees accountable, tracks inventory, and helps maximize revenue is hugely important.” One of the biggest problems that tracking helps solve is diversion. “When I talk about diversion, I’m talking about stopping illegal marijuana from finding its way into the legal market. If we eliminate that diversion, it protects the consumer from unregu-

lated product and results in better prices.” All of that transparency is necessary if the cannabis industry wants to improve its public image. “There’s a halo effect that takes place when product is created in a legal structure,” Denholm says. “We don’t walk into the grocery store concerned about the fruits, vegetables, and canned goods we buy. If cannabis is regulated the same way, you’re going to see a boom. You’re going see people have a much friendlier attitude toward regulated cannabis products.” “We need to hold ourselves to a high standard of accountability to become more widely accepted,” Vo says. “Showing that we are responsible, that businesses are responsible, is absolutely critical to continuing to positively influence perceptions and the political landscape of the cannabis industry.” But it’s not just about other people’s perception of cannabis; it’s also about helping those individuals already in the business. “With cannabis tracking, business owners can understand patient and customer data to better serve their market and improve

their business model,” Smyth says. At the end of the day, tracking is about bringing the cannabis industry up to the standards of other legitimate industries. “I really want people to look back and see what has happened in states like Colorado and Washington, and what’s starting to happen in Nevada and Oregon,” Denholm says. “The world has not crashed and burned. People aren’t getting sick. People aren’t dying. The population hasn’t fallen off the edge of the world. Cannabis has not been the big issue that a lot of people thought it was going to be.” Even more, cannabis is about passion for the plant and it’s many uses. “I’ve seen firsthand the positive impact that cannabis has on the lives of individuals,” Vo says. “The legalization of cannabis, in and of itself, is nothing for anyone to fear. The prohibition of cannabis harms families and unjustly imprisons millions of people. Even if you have concerns, know there is technology out that we can use to show this industry is filled ® with good businesses and people.”

INDUSTRY LEADERS BioTrackTHC is the only cannabis industry software company providing tracking solutions to both government agencies as well as the private sector. Founded six years ago, fourteen hundred businesses use their paid commercial system and they have four government contracts. Metrc deployed Colorado’s seed-to-sale tracking system for the state’s Marijuana Enforcement Division starting in 2013. Their system has eleven thousand users and has been used to track over three million plants and two million packages. MJ Freeway has provided professional services since 2010 that include cannabis business license application support, operational consulting, and marketing services. They offer digital menu services, a white-label mobile application for cannabis businesses, in-store mobile ordering, cash kiosk integration, and retail supplies.

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BUSINESS

SEED TO SALE On l i ne Tracki ng Compan i es Step Up Th eir Ga me

F

OR NEARLY two decades, Cali-

fornia’s cannabis industry has operated in a legal grey area that discourages leaving a paper trail. Inventory and bookkeeping records can also be used as self-incriminating evidence in a court of law, so tracking and transparency haven’t been the industry’s biggest priorities. That’s all about to change. As cannabis emerges as the fastest growing industry in the country, three companies are stepping up to take California into the digital age. MJ Freeway, Amercanex, and Homegrown List all offer online platforms that transparently track and monitor every aspect of the cannabis industry from seed to sale. With new regulations for medical marijuana recently passed in Sacramento, this type of software will soon

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become mandatory, and California cannabis will never be the same. MJ Freeway was founded in 2010, the leading seed-to-sale software in the U.S., providing cultivators, manufacturers, and dispensaries with easy inventory management and point-of-sale system. “When we started the company, we did a great deal of market research and realized there was not a point-ofsale program that met the specific needs of the cannabis industry,” co-founder Amy Poinsett says. “If a product dries and loses weight, or if a provider would like to weigh heavy, other programs do not allow adjustments for those changes.” The software also makes inventory and bookkeeping processes much more efficient, saving time and money. One brilliant idea gave Poinsett’s company a head start on bringing a


WRITER

• KIMBERLY CARGILE

“If a product dries and loses weight, or if a provider would like to weigh heavy, other programs do not allow adjustments for those changes.” [ MJ Freeway Co-founder Amy Poinsett ]

closeted industry into the 21st century. “Because MJ Freeway is cloud-based, it provides a level of protection and security for the dispensary’s data,” she says. “In the event of an emergency such as a raid, robbery, or fire, the information is kept safe on remote servers.” Amercanex – the American Cannabis Exchange – is also bringing its progressive vision of financial openness to the cannabis industry. The company provides cultivators, manufacturers, and dispensaries with an online marketplace that can easily be audited by regulators from the backend. Founded in 2014 by Steve Janjic, Amercanex is a sort of eBay for wholesale cannabis. Here’s how it works: Licensed cultivators and manufacturers put their products on the exchange to be bid on by licensed dispensaries. A licensed transporter picks up the products and takes them to a licensed distribution center for lab testing, and then delivers the products to the dispensary. California’s new rules mandate that regulators be able to track and monitor all this activity, along with every other aspect of the cannabis business. “If you look at what eBay or Amazon has done for producers of goods and services, we want to do something very similar within the cannabis industry, giving everyone the ability to manage their business more efficiently,” Janjic explains. “We want to pioneer the industry; we want to

help the participants that have fought the battles over the years to get the industry where it is today. We want to help those participants to fight the battle from here forward as well.” Homegrownlist was developed from within of the cannabis industry. Kevin Fann, a grower and dispensary manager, co-founded the cannabis-only Craigslist clone early in 2015. Fann understands both points of view when it comes to negotiations between cultivators and dispensaries. Having experienced the hardships that growers deal with bringing their products to market, he is determined to do his part to make things easier. “Driving around from dispensary to dispensary is legally risky, and being turned down time after time is not fun. It is much more fun to sit at home and put your product on a free website and watch it sell itself,” Fann says. Homegrownlist is free for dispensaries, cultivators and manufacturers to use, with revenue generated by advertising. As the cannabis industry continues to rapidly evolve, we have to embrace new ways of doing things if we want to be part of the future. Big business is coming whether we like it or not. To keep our cottage industry from being swallowed whole, we’re going to need the time and money-saving technology from innovators like MJ Freeway, Amercanex, and Homegrownlist.

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WRITER •RADIOHASH | PHOTOS • ASHLEIGH CASTRO

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EFFECTS Being whole-spectrum cold-water hash, this retains the beneficial effects of the cannabis plants from which it came. This hash is motivating and helpful in clearing out mental cobwebs. A good daytime strain that won’t weigh things down, this could be a great option for creative tasks.

AROMA Removing the lid releases a sweet, spicy, fruity pineapple and slightly earthy scent with the power to produce instants grins. Take a few more whiffs and all that hashy goodness can be tasted in the back of the mouth. Dabbing temporarily fills the room with sweet, pine-spice scented vapor.

FLAVOR To ensure capturing the wide spectrum of this hash’s complex flavor, it’s well worth lowering the temperature of the e-nail, or letting the nail cool off for a few extra seconds after torching. Predictably spicy sweet, there is also a refreshing pine taste that compliments tropical fruit flavors.

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Packaged in a round tin canister featuring a silhouette of the Bay Bridge under a pinkish-lavender sky, this hash has a golden-brown fine sugar texture. Unusually consistent in color, pressing between parchment paper leaves a perfectly golden-brown, delicate slab.

THERAPEUTIC BENEFITS Truth Serum is pretty heady at first, but thoughts typically become clearer after the initial effects wear off. In company, this strain induces chattiness and often enhances social activities. If retrospection is what you seek, Truth Serum can make it easier to evaluate yourself honestly. Physically, this hash can bring relief to a sensitive stomach.



IMI HENDRIX’S iconic and self-de-

scribed love song, Purple Haze, is often thought of as a nod to a psychedelic trip on acid, inspiring the genre of psychedelic rock during the late 1960s. He had been fingering the unmistakable opening riff for a while, writing down lyrics before allegedly finishing the melody in the dressing room of a London club in 1966. He then went on to record the song in 1967 with his band, The Jimi Hendrix Experience. Later he would say he wrote the song from a dream in which he was walking under the sea. “[Purple Haze] had a thousand words. I had it all written out. It was about going through, through this land. This mythical ... because that’s what I like to do is write a lot of mythical scenes. You know, like the history of the wars on Neptune,” he trailed during an interview.

“Jimi was obsessively, compulsively, addicted to playing his guitar,” Leon laughed. “He would go to sleep with it on his chest, and when he woke up in the morning—before brushing his teeth—he’d play his guitar.”


WRITER

• SHARON LETTS

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PHOTOS

• PURPLE HAZE PROPERTIES LLC

FEATURE

SLEEPING UNDER THE STAGE

BRANDING A LEGEND

Today, Jimi’s brother Leon Hendrix is in partnership with Andrew Pitsicalis of Rockin Artwork, LLC, to form Purple Haze Properties, LLC, in an effort to license and market merchandise under the iconic name that is already a brand. Hendrix and Pitsicalis are laying out multiple platforms globally. Merchandise will be marketed under Jimi’s Cannabis Collection, with cannabis products, such as infused lavender macaroons, marketed under Jimi’s Edibles, further defining the Purple Haze strain (among others to come) in packs of pre-rolled joints under Jimi’s Genetics. The farmer involved in the California operation is Scott McPhail of California’s Finest, who has been doing well sourcing for packs of pre-rolls since 2012. Purple Haze lounges are planned in Las Vegas with Pitsicalis in association with the owner and creator of Hard Rock Café and House of Blues. One building, in the shade of Capitol Records on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, was in acquisition at the time of press. When discussing keeping his brother’s name alive through branding, Leon scoffed at the concept. “He’s already a legend,” he said during a phone conversation from his home in Los Angeles. “He’s the greatest guitarist that ever lived. There’s nothing I can do to improve on that. It’s done and he’s not going away. He’s here to stay like Mozart or Beethoven.”

[ Jimi’s brother Leon Hendrix ]

Leon, who is four years younger than his brother Jimi, idolized his older brother. When Jimi first began playing guitar with Ray Charles at 16, Leon was there. “We drove my dad’s old Plymouth 30 miles out to Spanish Castle and slept under the stage at night so he could play.” Jimi would later write a song about the historic castle-like venue outside Seattle proper, but Leon remembers being a wide-eyed young man, proud to be in the shadow of his talented brother. Leon was in prison while his older brother became a rock star. He was ironically serving time due to going AWOL in order to be with his brother as he toured. “When he played the Star Spangled Banner the prison warden was so angry at what they called the disrespecting of the song, they treated me very

badly,” he remembered. “I must have peeled 15 tons of potatoes after that.” His brother’s notoriety made him famous in prison, much to the warden’s dismay. “The warden called me into his office and told me, ‘There’s only one general here, and that’s me.’” Leon remembered being put in his place, “but everyone loved my brother.” When his brother passed, he said he felt alone, though many in prison shared his grief. “They called my name over the loud speaker, told me to go to the chaplain’s office,” he said, adding that it was the longest walk he ever made. “Everything stopped for me then.” Leon has fought with his own demons over the years. While Jimi worked his out with music, Leon turned to drugs, alcohol, and women, with his problems worsening after Jimi’s death.

OBSESSED WITH MUSIC Immediate rumors of Jimi’s demise were that he died of a heroin overdose like his tragic counterparts, Joplin and Morrison. But a little known fact is that the young woman he was dating at the time of his passing was actually the daughter of the owner of a prominent pharmaceutical company in Germany. Jimi overdosed by taking nine prescription sleeping pills, which his girlfriend provided, with alcohol. The cause of death was asphyxiation: the pills stopped his heart. Jimi was not a heroin addict, nor was he a drug addict. The only addiction his brother said he had was playing music on his guitar. “Jimi was obsessively, compulsively, addicted to playing his guitar,” Leon laughed. “He would go to sleep with it on his chest, and when he woke up in the morning—before brushing his teeth—he’d play his guitar.”

The path to addiction or obsession often lies in a family’s lineage, and the brothers’ father was a known alcoholic, making Jimi and Leon what are called “adult children of an alcoholic,” with a lifetime of dysfunctions to overcome. Leon has been in recovery for 15 years and has come to terms with his pratfalls and weaknesses. He attends Alcoholic Anonymous (AA) meetings regularly, but he won’t give up the herb. “I have to smoke a joint just to get in the door—to go into those meetings,” he laughed. “I know it is medicine and good. It relaxes me and takes the edge off. There is no way I would ever compare it to alcohol or any of the other drugs I played around with over the years, and I’m sure my brother would agree,” he surmised. “Jimi loved the herb. Oh, yes he did.”

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Pu rpl e h a ze a l l i n my bra i n Lately th i ng s don’t s eem th e s a me Act i n’ fu nny but I d o n’t k now w hy Excu s e m e w h i l e I k is s th e sky — J i m i H end ri x (1 9 4 2 – 1 9 7 0)

TAKE TWO LEAVES AND CALL ME IN THE MORNING

Amanda Reiman, manager of Marijuana Law and Policy at the Drug Policy Alliance, lectures on the successes of studies on “harm reduction,” in which alcohol, prescription medications, and street drugs are replaced by ingesting or smoking cannabis. During her lectures, Reiman sites many studies on the subject, explaining how withdrawal symptoms from drug and alcohol addictions are quelled with the beneficial effects of cannabis in an often smooth transition to sobriety. Studies cited include patients’ accounts of the efficacy of cannabis as superior to many drugs prescribed by a doctor for other ailments. California physician Tod H. Mikuriya, MD, led many studies on the subject and came to the conclusion that 12-step programs under AA should incorporate cannabis as a beneficial substitute for alcohol and other addictive substances. In other words, Leon is on the right path. He should keep smoking that joint before and after meetings; it’s all good. Leon continues to tour, playing his brother’s songs and more on the road. He is bent on doing good work for the greater good and making his big brother proud, continuing the tradition of helping others in their hometown of Seattle. This past Thanksgiving, as per usual, Leon teamed up with the food bank of Seattle, delivering turkey sandwiches to the needy in Pioneer Square. “He’s still here with me,” Leon concluded. “I can go anywhere and his music will be there with me. He tells me to ‘bend them strings’ when I’m in trouble on stage.”

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CANNANEWS

Cann a bis Use In th e Sex Indu stry

N

EVADA RANKS high

for health issues in the United States, and infectious diseases are at the top of the list of preventable ailments, alongside the heart disease, diabetes, and cancer statistics that plague the rest of the country, according to a study done at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Being the only state in the country that allows prostitution, it’s telling that infectious disease is at the top of the list. Ironically, Cook County is one of the counties in Nevada that doesn’t allow the world’s oldest profession, yet Las Vegas is one of the top workplaces for both male and female prostitutes in the Silver State. Traditional casino, hotel, and food service gigs rank second, and they don’t pay nearly as much. And though gun violence and drug abuse play huge roles in Nevada’s deaths and illness, the emotional issues associated with prostitution are often overlooked.

PTSD WITH OR WITHOUT CONSENT Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is very real in the lives of strippers and prostitutes of both sexes. Melissa Farley, clinical psychologist and founder of the San Francisco-based non-profit, Prostitution Research & Education, has spent a career studying, writing about, and advocating for prostitutes abused by sex trafficking and violence—with a focus on PTSD within the profession. Of the hundreds of sex workers interviewed on the streets, in brothels, and in strip clubs, Farley found 68 percent had been diagnosed with

PTSD from violence, rape, or slavery. Her findings put an end to the myth of consent in the business, finding that many enter into the field due to a history of abuse within the family, financial dependency, or drug addiction. Farely’s 2007 book, Prostitution and Trafficking in Nevada, found that 90 percent of prostitution took place in Las Vegas and Reno, where it’s illegal. A staggering 81 percent of sex workers interviewed in legal brothels said they wanted to leave for a better life but were physically prevented from doing so. Corroborating the violence, Farley writes that she was even threatened at gunpoint by a brothel owner.


WRITER & PHOTO •SHARON LETTS

MEDICATING THE PAIN Ashley, a Las Vegas dancer and occasional prostitute, said she sought to leave the world of prostitution for good and enter the healthier workplace of the cannabis industry. She’s looking forward to legalization and the opportunities it may bring. “I’m 27 and have been dancing since I was 19 years old,” she explained. “I grew up fast in Vegas and soon moved on to prostitution. My mother used to smoke bud. It was like smoking ciga-

BONNIE AT BUNNY RANCH The Moonlight Bunny Ranch, located east of Carson City, is one of several legal brothels located in Nevada. First opened in 1955 as The Moonlight Ranch, it recently gained notoriety by being included in HBO’s America Undercover special, Cathouse. Bonnie came for two months in the fall of 2014, then recently came back to stay longer. She originally hails from Washington. No stranger to cannabis, she has grown it herself in the past, keeping track via a high-tech remote system to keep her day job. “I was diagnosed with chronic kidney disease at the age of 24, and was told I could use cannabis for pain,” she shared. “Doctors are so quick to prescribe pain medication, and they kill your liver. I have seen

GRAPHICS • BRANDON PALMA

rettes in our family, and I started smoking at the age of 13. Cannabis has been my ultimate release from the things I had to do down the road from stripping—the kind of stuff the whole world knows about, but no one wants to talk about—or at least they never tell the truth.” Ashley said she specifically chooses cannabis to medicate for emotional issues connected to her work, because it is effective. “I was what they call a ‘renegade,’ a girl who answers to no one and never gives her money to any man for protection,” she continued. “To me, protection was carrying my little handgun in my purse, pepper spray, and a Taser. Can-

nabis always helped calm me down if I was uncomfortable or if I was just feeling bad about myself for choosing the crazy things I did for money—but a girl’s gotta eat.” Ashley said she never apologized for the work she did, but that cannabis helped her remain in control and stay safe. “Bud was the best thing to use when you deal with the men and women I’ve dealt with in this business,” she concluded. “The best part was how empowered I felt. I was in control and I decided what the rules were, and how far things would go. Cannabis helped me with that.”

people really regain their life due to using cannabis.” In Washington, Bonnie said she uses Kush Creams topically for migraines, applying the lotion to the base of her neck and temples. “I’ve also rubbed it on my abdomen for menstrual cramps, and it really, truly works!” she exclaimed. “I’ve also used it on my runner’s knee. The girls at the ranch and I talk about cannabis as medicine all the time. I’m also a big supporter of CBD products.” Bonnie said that not all illnesses are visible, and though she’s a cannabis patient, she’s actually in line for dialysis or a kidney transplant very soon.

Not knowing about ingesting, I informed both of them of the many ways they could further use the plant as medicine. For Bonnie, I advised that ingesting the strong cannabis oil has been reported to cleanse and heal organs, possibly making her pending kidney transplant surgery unnecessary. Hopefully, she’ll keep in touch on her path to recovery. As for the many ailments that can be associated with prostitution, such as myriad infections and the stress of the job, there are cannabis products out there for purchase in legal and medically legal states—many able to ship across state lines because of their sole CBD base.

A SEX WORKER’S CANNABIS REFERENCE

1

2

3

4

Think “inflammation and infection” when using cannabis to medicate issues related to sex work.

Smoking or vaporizing can provide immediate relief from anxiety, panic attacks, depression, sleep disorders, nightmares, and symptoms related to PTSD.

Medicated salves or lotions can be used topically for inflammation caused by chafing, minor infections such as yeast infections, personal lubricants, and to enhance the senses.

Ingesting tincture or capsules (CBD- or THC-activated) can help you sleep, ease nightmares, and prevent infection.



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ROAD TRIP

NTERESTINGLY, LAS

Vegas translates to “the meadows,” despite the fact that it is now a barren valley. The last watering hole after the glaciers of the ice age melted, Vegas was once a lush, green valley that formed the pools of water that now flow through the Hoover Damn. In the late 1930s, Thomas Hull, owner of the historic Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in Los Angeles, had his eye on the desert and built the first casino in downtown Las Vegas. The fancy Westernthemed El Cortez Hotel opened in 1941. At the time, Vegas was a weekend getaway from Los Angeles for rebel rousers—a place to drink, gamble, and get a quick divorce. Once El Cortez was a hit, Hollywood reporter Billy Wilkerson built the Flamingo Hotel in an attempt to attract high rollers. It was the long, skinny legs of Bugsy Malone’s starlet (and sometimes mob courier) girlfriend, Virginia Hill, that inspired the name. Funded by mobsters, The Flamingo became the start of a string of hotels along what is still

referred to as the Strip. As a child visiting Vegas with my parents in the 1960s, I remember Highway 15 cutting straight through town and into the lights. It was, and still is, a magical experience to arrive in Vegas, with its metropolis of fun rising up from the desert floor. The casinos were built as gaudy palaces, with winding driveways circling fountains overlooked by Greek Gods. Star-struck visitors milled about, hoping to strike it rich on the card tables and slot machines. My sister and I were only welcome poolside at the casinos or inside Circus, Circus. We played our own slots on rows of pinball machines upstairs and watched the adults in the casino below. There, my dad played Keno and my mom camped out in front of a nickel slot machine. Our coffee table at home held ashtrays from The Flamingo, Caesar’s Palace, and The Golden Nugget: relics from the old strip, where casino lights still give the illusion of daytime at 3 a.m. and light shows entertain out front for free.

“Nevada has the potential to become the next major source of cannabis information & research.” WINNING GREEN

Since medical cannabis was voted into effect through Nevada Senate Bill 374 with a 17:4 vote during its State Legislative session in 2013, Vegas has embraced the culture. A year prior to legalization, the historic Bonanza Gift Shop (the city’s block-sized tourist attraction) added ashtrays and shot glasses emblazoned with cannabis leaves, putting a whole new meaning to the term “high roller.” My anti-hippie dad would roll over in his grave at the sight. Just four retail shops were open by the time the city’s second annual Marijuana Business Conference & Expo took place. I was able to visit two of them: ReLeaf and Inyo, both beautiful, stateof-the-art facilities staffed with knowledgeable and friendly reps. As a patient from another medically legal state, I’m in luck in Nevada, as they recognize my rights to safe access of my good medicine; all I needed was a letter of recommendation and my I.D.

GETTING RELEAF

While in ReLeaf, I had the good fortune to chat with Mr. Johnston, a longtime Vegas resident who arrived


in the city in 1959 as a working musician. Not allowed to enter the casinos through the fancy circular driveways I traversed with my family years ago due to the color of his skin, Mr. Johnston had to enter through the back. I mentioned that I was working on an article for the Jimi Hendrix issue of this magazine, and he shared with me that he once had the good fortune of playing with the late guitarist, recounting Jimi Hendrix’s last performance at The Monterey Pop Festival in California. It was a surreal encounter, as the lineage of the stigma with black musicians and cannabis runs deep. One can imagine Sammy Davis, Jr. burning one outside the rear entrance with some of the great entertainers of the time, both black and white, for the herb knows no color. An outspoken proponent of the plant, Louis Armstrong was no stranger to the herb or to Vegas, and once stated, “I just won’t carry on with such fear over nothing, and I don’t intend to ever stop smoking it, not as long as it grows. And there is no one on this earth that can ever stop it all from growing. No one but Jesus—and he wouldn’t dare, because he feels the same way I do about it.”

HEALING AT INYO

While filling out my patient intake form at Inyo Fine Cannabis Dispensary, I noticed a woman in a wheel chair attempting to fill out her paperwork with the help of her grown daughter. She had dropped the clipboard on her leg and was sobbing in extreme neuropathy pain. My heart sank and I handed her my vape pen for quick relief. Cameras were watching and patients are not allowed to medicate inside, nor are they allowed to share, so she took my pen outside. I soon learned she was there just for flower to smoke. We laughed at the thought of her being able to pop an oxy inside a pharmacy, but taking a hit of a natural plant-based medicine in a dispensary is off-limits. Despite having a morphine pump implanted in her body, smoking gave

WRITER •SHARON LETTS

her the most relief. As is common with opiates and other pain killers, cannabis enhances their effect. Patients can still have pain while on up to 300mg of morphine, but when they smoke, relief is immediate. Patients are just beginning to learn that they can do away with the morphine and solely ingest cannabis for complete pain relief. I made a deal with her and said I would help pay for a topical cream or edible tincture if she’d like to try it. She ended up buying flower and a transdermal patch from Mary’s Medicinals, a Denver-based company that produces CBD-only products (from cannabis) that can be shipped across state lines, due to their low THC count of 0.03 percent. She told me to keep my money and was grateful for the help.

TESTING, TO BE SURE

One evening, Susan and Curtis Bunce were watching the news when they saw a laboratory in Nevada getting licensed to test medical cannabis. Susan said a light bulb went off in her head, as she surmised it probably would take more than one lab to test all of Nevada’s finest. One thing led to another, and as is often the case in this seemingly magical industry, someone knew someone who “used to work at a lab.” That someone turned out to be none other than Savino Sguera, who holds a bachelor’s in biomedical engineering from Columbia University. He was the former laboratory director for Steep Hill Labs, the first cannabis-testing lab in California. Not a bad connection. Encouraged by her new alliance, Susan started DB Labs. Sguera is the laboratory director and his business partner, Marco, is the laboratory manager. The team they put together has a combined lab experience of 80 years, and the majority of them are women. The 20 samples DB Labs currently tests per week will soon jump to 60 samples per day in the immediate future, but it won’t stop there. “That number will soon expand to 100 samples per day as the production increases in the

GRAPHICS • BRANDON PALMA

New Year,” Bunce explained. Nevada currently has the most stringent testing in the world’s cannabis market. DB Labs uses the most state-of-the-art equipment available, with rigorous standards. Sguera, who also consults for the cannabis industry on the topics of extraction and analysis, said the lab is currently “opti-mixing” its output efficiency and refining its methods in order to make room for the onslaught of samples to come. “We are also looking at the possibility of seeing more analytes: new cannabinoids, more required pesticides, lower tolerance levels, and so forth,” he explained. “With such an expansive market due to open in Las Vegas and elsewhere, Nevada has the potential to become the next major source of cannabis information and research.” The advantage of coming in to the game behind Colorado and Washington, Sguera said, is being able to share information. “When different doctors, cultivators, producers, and especially laboratories begin to pool the information gathered on this enormous set of samples, we will have an invaluable new insight into the cannabis plant. For instance, how does the plant handle different chemical additives and contaminants? How can we identify strains based on chemical profile? How do growing conditions control this profile, and how do these chemical profiles translate to the pharmacodynamics of cannabis medicine?” One thing Sguera said we must remember about cannabis is that it is still a plant, and unlike pharmaceuticals, its effects cannot be narrowed down and attributed to one or two chemicals that can be isolated and purified—although some companies do take that approach. “A majority of cannabis’ medicinal qualities stem from the as-of-yet unknown interplay between hundreds of cannabinoids and terpenes that currently only living plants can produce in the correct amounts,” he said. “As such, the best cannabis will come from the healthiest plants, and healthy plants are in constant symbiotic balance with thousands of different bacteria, fungi, and even parasites—with most of these microbes easily kept at bay by a healthy human immune system.”


GOING GREEN

FARMING NEVADA

Former attorney Chris Van Hook is the founder, program director, and chief inspector for Clean Green, a certification program for farmers. Clean Green is a start-to-finish inspection program, covering all areas in which crops would be worked, stored, or cured. Prior to its inception in 2004, the company was working closely with the USDA National Organic Program, certifying organic farms, so the transition to cannabis was natural. With nine inspectors working separate regions, Clean Green has been able to spread out. Currently certifying five states, they have applications pending in five more. “Eighty farmers were certified last year alone, but all told, we’ve helped more than 1,000 come into compliance since we began,” he said. Green Life Productions, operated in Parhump, was the first farm to be certified in Nevada. Parhump is a small town about an hour out of Las Vegas proper, and to the east of Death Valley. The farm is indoors, a result of the harsh conditions of the Nevada desert, which has snow and frost in the winter and a short outdoor season before temperatures climb to 120 degrees in August. “The facility is an excellent example of how top quality indoor cannabis can be grown in a manner with very low consumption—and in a remarkably sustainable manner,” Van Hook said. Green Life Productions uses LED lighting, which does not need to be cooled, making the reduction of energy in Nevada’s harsh environment easy. Producing a high quality flower with the lowest electricity possible is quite a feat in a region that demands constant energy use. “Its continual reuse and rebuilding of the soils in place further reduces the overall footprint of the facility by not having to replace their soils with each crop, which would require trucking it in and out of the valley,” he explained.

The cannabis market is still developing in Nevada, with farms and product being procured as I write, leaving dispensary shelves a bit wanting at the moment. Green Life Productions has been able to acquire a license and a step up in the market. The difference between Green Life Productions and a traditional indoor cannabis farm is that they grow in large, square beds with cover crops to feed the soil. They regenerate soil through organic composting—otherwise known as sustainable farming. But the real story lies in its cofounder’s past. Steve Cantwell was born and raised in the tiny desert town of Parhump. Bored and challenged, Cantwell speaks of his time as a “troubled youth” before he began training in martial arts as a diversion. At 17, Floyd’s Ace Hardware sponsored his move to Las Vegas to live, train, and compete as a professional. It was a good move, and by the time he was 20 Cantwell was signed by the WEC, and soon after won his first title. At 21, he was the WEC Light Heavy Weight Champion. Then the injuries came. “I started fighting with serious injuries,” he explained. “I knew the dangers of pain pills from what close friends and family had been through with them, and knew I had to find an alternative way to manage what was sure to be a lifetime of chronic pain.” Cantwell began researching, studying, and testing cannabis as medicine, realizing the benefits of the plant. With reservations, he enlisted his wife, Kouanin Villa, to help him. “Steve and I met when we were 17, when he moved into the gym where I worked,” Villa explained. “Twelve years later we are still happily working together, growing cannabis in the former hardware building where it all began.” Villa shared that Cantwell’s attention to farming wasn’t always focused on cannabis. His love of farming started with fruits and vegetable gardens at home before transitioning to coral reef fish tanks, then to hydroponics and working with nutrients. “I began growing in soil first with rock wool cubes, then coco coir and bottled nutrients,

to mixing and recycling super soil, to finally what I believe to be the safest, most sustainable style on the planet earth—no till, organic, living soil.” Cover crops are used as companion planting, just as backdoor, organic farming dictates. The outcome is biodiversity and rich soil with fewer pests. “Our goal is to introduce and grow healthy, beneficial life that outcompetes negative pests and pathogens, creating symbiotic relationships above and below our soil,” he concluded. What this means is that Green Life Productions’ bud and the medicine it makes is clean and pure, loaded with beneficial compounds. Truth and wellness go hand in hand in this industry, and both Cantwell and Villa say they are in this for the long haul. Putting off kids for three Rottweilers, they intend to focus on growing some of Nevada’s finest. Cantwell shared, “We feel true healing can only take place when we first free ourselves from the legal and moral convictions both society and our legal system has put on cannabis.”

FROM SILVER TO GOLD, AND THEN TO GREEN

Nevada has had the advantage of watching what other states do for a very long time. We already know the money is there and the green tourist trade is a given, so the state is preparing in a very smart way. Starting with testing all products from seed to shelf and farming with the cleanest and most efficient methods, they make medicine for real ailments, not just prepping for recreation. Now five states into my Road Trip series, I’ve noticed that when a state legalizes, more people get help and heal. Legalizing helps a medicine maker feel safe to come out of the green closet and to share for the greater good. Whether you are a high roller or just heavily medicated in Sin City, you will experience healing with this plant— fiscally or otherwise. Inevitably, the plant, with its people, prevails.



CANNANEWS

[ Women of Weed members celebrate the association’s second birthday in May 2015 ]

C

A Grand Socia l Experi ment!

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OMMUNITY AROUND

cannabis is a gift that we have been historically robbed of. As weed smokers, cannabis activists, and entrepreneurs, we have been forced to live in the shadows and hide our relationship with the queen of plants. I encourage everyone to come out of the cannabis closet and speak openly. Only then can we wash away more than 70 years of prohibition and the stigma of the past, evolving into a new era of exploration and reverence for this plant. I am honored and proud to be the founder of Women of Weed (WOW). Among our ranks are activists, growers, patients, naturopaths, nurses, herbalists, extractors, hash makers, entrepreneurs, political analysts, agronomists, inventors, scientists, graphic designers, nationally published writers, photographers, and publishers. We are CEOs, COOs and CFOs, 502 producers, processors, and retailers, lawyers, lobbyists, international cannabis experts, and policy advisors. Currently, there are 128 participants. At full capacity there will be 200 members in

ISSUE 8 THE DOPEST ISSUE dopemagazine.com

Washington and 100 honorary members from around the country and the world, totaling 300 altogether. In May of 2013, nine brave female souls gathered at my house in Magnolia for the first Women of Weed celebration. We have continued to gather monthly for almost three years. We have had clothing exchanges, jewelry-making and slumber parties, bonfires, extraction demonstrations, and karaoke nights. Throughout those events, lots of beautiful food, cocktails, and weed has been shared. About half of our events are members only, so members can bring a guest to several events every year. We have an annual holiday mixer and welcome husbands, boyfriends, and partners (all privacy boundaries still apply). Women of Weed is the result of my own need for community within the cannabis space. From 1995 to 2007, I ran a hemp company, and my only cannabis support came from my best friend Kelley. Kelley has yet to come to a single Women of Weed event, despite being a true woman of weed. A felony conviction for growing cannabis,


WRITER & PHOTOS

along with the imposed social shame and financial burden, has kept this goddess closeted and timid about being “out” in any way, even today. The vast majority of participants may not have a problem being photographed, but let us not forget that people are still going to prison and losing their children over cannabis use. For this, Women of Weed is now private, and will remain so. Media has never been allowed inside our celebrations. While photography is permitted at our events, sharing photos publically is prohibited, unless every single person in the photo agrees to it. Call me old school, but I believe that the best parts of life still happen, even when they’re not posted on social media. Sometimes all that picture taking and posting takes away from the joy of the moment. Women of Weed is a Washington state private social club that’s intended to provide a private, celebratory respite and source of empowerment for its dedicated cannabis industry and movement participants. I have fought to keep my vision intact, making Women of Weed a social club where we simply enjoy, support, and love each other. We have taken great effort to keep the focus on the individual women and their particular dreams, not on the group itself. In an act of empowerment, each of the original 100 members has one spot in the second 100 to give to the cannabis woman of her choice. These new members should be women who have sacrificed personally and given themselves freely for the greater good of the cannabis community. NORML Women of Washington, MJBA Women’s Alliance, and Hempfest are all great places where work is actually being done. Get involved in any cannabis organization and you will naturally find us. Women of Weed sisters are everywhere and there are still 83 spots available for Washington women. My goal is to clear up misconceptions and illustrate that Women of Weed is actually all about being inclu-

•AH WARNER

“Among our ranks are activists, growers, patients, naturopaths, nurses, herbalists, extractors, hash makers, entrepreneurs, political analysts, agronomists, inventors, scientists, graphic designers, published writers, photographers, and publishers. We are CEOs, COOs and CFOs, 502 producers, processors, and retailers, lawyers, lobbyists, international cannabis experts, and policy advisors.” sive, but the most important message is to encourage others to form their own social groups. We are here for fun and support, and our intent is to get together away from the pressures that we carry in the worlds of business and activism. Spending real time in a community—not virtual time—will benefit everyone involved. The larger cannabis community will be stronger, healthier, and happier for it. I am grateful to all of the women taking part in this grand social experiment. I am excited to see all of their accomplishments, and look forward to the ones we will share in the future. These women have been there for me, supporting me and bringing joy to my journey. I am forever grateful and in their debt. dopemagazine.com ISSUE 8 THE DOPEST ISSUE

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Women of Weed does not accept event sponsorships of any kind: there is no buy-in. Events are voluntarily hosted by signed participants. There are no dues or membership fees. However, every member must sign an agreement that covers everything from liability waivers and use of the association’s logo to inviting event guests and sponsoring new members.

Women of Weed does not promote, endorse, condemn, or condone anything, except the removal of cannabis from the Controlled Substances Act.

Women of Weed is not a business association or an activist group. The only agenda at our gatherings is to have no agenda.

“Call me old school, but I believe that the best parts of life still happen, even when they’re not posted on social media.”

Women of Weed is not a secret society. There is no clandestine activity, no women smoking weed in lingerie, and no plots are being forged to push away our cannabis brothers. If you are a cannabis brother who supports, loves, and respects your cannabis sisters, we support, love, and respect you right back.

Women of Weed has no email list, even for use by members themselves. All personal requests, business pitches, and activist pleas are not allowed at celebrations. Instead, we use our private Facebook group, where all signed members can network freely.

Ah Warner is the Founder and CEO of Cannabis Basics, Seattle’s own since 1995. She has a bachelor’s in Gender and Women’s Studies from the University of Washington. As a guiding member of NORML Women of Washington, she recently received a special MJBA Women’s Alliance award for focus and dedication to the women in Washington’s cannabis industries.

WOMEN OF WEED SEPTEMBER 20, 2015 6PM-10PM AVA QUEEN ANNE ROOFTOP 330 3RD AVE W, SEATTLE WA 98119

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P R O U D LY H O S T E D B Y T H E W O W T R I N I T Y O F

STEFANI QUAINE | ATTORNEY AT LAW MELISSA HYSOM | CANNABIS FREEDOM MARCH ORGANIZER


Just because it’s grown in Humboldt doesn’t mean it’s good. If the geographical name alone were a promise of quality, anyone could grow premium cannabis. But we think it takes a lot more than that. Like fertile soil, rain water, fresh ocean air, and natural California sunlight. It also takes unwavering dedication to the growing methods established by the farmers who put Humboldt on the map over 50 years ago. We’re True Humboldt, a collection of local farmers living up to the legend. Try us and you’ll taste, smell, and experience the difference.

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POLITICAL

OAKLAND Ameri ca’s Dopest City

O

AKLAND, CA, has long domi-

nated the cannabis industry, and its leadership has no intention of giving up the helm to cities like Denver, Portland, or Seattle, despite the temporary advantage that legalization has offered them. In early 2016, Oakland’s City Council will vote on a comprehensive set of medical cannabis regulations. These are expected to pass with the support of the city’s Cannabis Regulatory Commission, city staff, and the Mayor. Its eight licensed dispensaries, and numerous ancillary businesses, are gearing up for these changes, which will license and regulate medical cannabis cultivation and manufacturing and expand the number of dispensaries. And, in anticipation of legalization, Oakland has already regulated sales of cannabis to adults, and it will likely be the first city to allow retail cannabis sales, if legalization passes in 2016. Oakland’s roots run deep. It has always had a vast mix of people flowing through it. These are tough people, willing to

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fight, like the gold rush pioneers of the late 1800’s, the women workers who demanded fair pay in 1946 Oakland General Strike, and the Black Panther’s working to empower the community in the 1970’s. Today, it is the most racially and ethnically diverse city in the United States, made even better by its breathtaking landscape, hardworking, creative people, and world class restaurant scene. Simply put, Oakland sparks innovation. Oaksterdam, Oakland’s former cannabis mecca, was the brainchild of cannabis entrepreneur Richard Lee, who moved to Oakland from Houston, TX, where he had been a hemp tour organizer and proprietor of the hemp store Legal Marijuana. Richard opened the Bulldog Coffeeshop medical cannabis dispensary on Broadway Avenue, a fading retail area of the city, where the original Oakland Cannabis Buyers Coop had been located before the feds closed them. Other dispensaries soon moved into the neighborhood, 14 total, and businesses, including a grow shop and several restaurants and cafes, popped

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• DEBBY GOLDSBERRY

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PHOTOS

• FIRST LAST

“Today, it is the most racially and ethnically diverse city in the United States, made even better by its breathtaking landscape, hardworking, creative people, and world class restaurant scene.” up to serve the medical cannabis patrons. When nuisance came with the crowds and a school opened nearby, the City decided to push back, making a law to limit the number of total dispensaries in Oakland to four. Now, only one dispensary, the Oakland Community Partners (1776 Broadway Avenue), is left standing in the Oaksterdam neighborhood, but the changes started by Richard Lee continue to grow, and the area is booming with development. Oaksterdam University (OU) (1734 Telegraph Avenue) still continues to thrive in the heart of Oaksterdam, hosting ongoing classes of students from around the world. Executive Chancellor Dale Sky Jones staffs the school with world-class instructors, including guru of ganja Ed Rosenthal and a full cast of lawyers, writers, and cannabis experts. Directly behind OU, attached by a door between, sits the Patient I.D. Center (1733 Broadway Avenue), where medical cannabis patients can secure a card to prove their medical

standing under CA state law, while picking up pipes, books, and a variety of useful and novelty items of interest to cannabis consumers. Oakland has the nation’s largest retail dispensary, Harborside Health Center (1840 Embarcadero). It’s up and coming location Magnolia Wellness (161 Adeline Street) recently added luminaries Ed Rosenthal and Amber E. Senter to their team, as well and this article’s author. There are eight retail dispensaries total in Oakland, ranging from small neighborhood joints, like the Telegraph Health Center (3003 Telegraph Avenue) near Pill Hill, and Purple Heart (415 4th Street) in the Jack London Square area, to larger chain dispensaries like Phytologie (8440 Enterprise Way) and Oakland Organics (705 Broadway Avenue). Thanks to Richard Lee’s visionary work, Oaklander’s passed Measure Z in 2004, which decriminalized adult sales of cannabis. Now, several retail facilities

have opened to serve the adult personal use crowd, albeit still in a largely underground fashion. This is because, while the law makes enforcement of adult sales of cannabis the lowest priority of the local police department, it is still an enforceable crime. Measure Z Clubs, as they are called, are routinely located and closed by the City, with only a few staying under the radar enough to stay open over the years. To join, you generally have to be walked in by an existing member, with locations remaining a closely held secret.


PRODUCT

WRITER

• KELLY VO

| PHOTOS • MELODEE FISKE

BOOK REVIEW

THE CANNABIS MANIFESTO BY STEVE DEANGELO

OMPELLING AND SPELLBINDING, The Cannabis Manifesto by Steve DeAngelo isn’t the usual book promoting the wholesale use and distribution of cannabis. While a cannabis plant does adorn the cover, assuming this is just another book about why everyone should partake would miss the bigger picture here. This isn’t just a call-to-action encouraging the reader to reconsider their preconceived notions about cannabis, it’s a tantalizing glimpse into the world of cannabis from the Spanish Inquisition to modern times. Steve DeAngelo, considered by many to be the father of the legal cannabis industry, is the only individual who could tell the tale of cannabis in such an irrefutable way. A part of the industry in various ways since the early 1970s when he joined the Yippies, he runs Harborside Health Center today—the world’s largest medical-cannabis dispensary serving over 200,000 patients. His experience adds a depth and breadth to The Cannabis Manifesto that wouldn’t be there if it came from an outsider’s perspective, or even from another industry leader. DeAngelo has always been on the front lines of cannabis reform, and that dedication is revealed throughout all of these 175 pages. DeAngelo opens his book without holding back any punches, quickly outlining nine key points beginning with “cannabis isn’t harmful but prohibition is,” and ending with the idea cannabis legalization cannot and will not be stopped. In between those two points, DeAngelo weaves a story that is part historical accounting, part auto-

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“At every turn, DeAngelo challenges his readers to look at the facts and history of cannabis and to come to their own conclusions about prohibition, legalization, and adult use.” biography, and part inspirational tale. On every page, there’s a new key point to highlight. Whether it be an enthralling statistic such as the fact that a larger percentage of black Americans have been imprisoned here in the U.S. than blacks imprisoned in South Africa at the height of apartheid, or a bold statement like, “Apparently they [legislatures] believe public safety is better served by keeping cannabis in the hands of criminal organizations.” DeAngelo’s manifesto is also a wonderfully instructive journey into the world of cannabis written for anyone who wants to be well-informed. DeAngelo doesn’t hide behind the propaganda, and he won’t let his readers hide either. Decisively, he points to the origin of the cannabis debate and the unfortunate but real truth that cannabis was never prohibited for health or safety reasons—it was demonized because it had an easy connection to non-white races. And for

those readers who assume that race and cannabis are no longer an issue, he brings it full circle with prison and cannabis statistics real in today’s world. DeAngelo’s persuasive and personal stories are compelling. In exhaustive detail, he breaks down misperceptions and debunks them with countless references. Benefits for specific conditions are discussed. The truth about communities that have embraced cannabis is revealed—a decrease in crime, DUI deaths, and drug overdoses, and he details the powerful effect legalizing cannabis could have on the financial needs of our government. Unlike many books about cannabis, DeAngelo’s manifesto was not written solely for those individuals who already love the plant. The Cannabis Manifesto is written for the mother, father, grandparent, friend, doctor, or government worker who knows nothing about cannabis except the propaganda they’ve been fed

their entire lives. At every turn, DeAngelo challenges his readers to look at the facts and the history of cannabis to come to their own conclusions about prohibition, legalization, and adult use. Well researched, with over 275 references and resources to back up his claims, DeAngelo doesn’t just share a diatribe about why cannabis is great; he provides a compelling and believable narrative backed up by facts. We challenge you to read The Cannabis Manifesto and not react with indignant screams for justice, a desire to protest, and the need to tell everyone you know the truth. “The tipping point for cannabis has arrived, and there is no question about where we are headed… Our memories are not short, our energy is not low, and our minds are not dimmed by ignorance of superstition. We will not rest and we will not stop until the last ® cannabis prisoner is set free.”

STEVE DEANGELO is the earliest pioneer of socially responsible and patient- and community-centric cannabis distribution. If you are wondering if medical cannabis might help you or a friend or a family member, of if you have questions about medical cannabis, or if you’re just trying to figure out what this issue entails, let this book be your guide.” Willie L. Brown, Jr., 41st mayor of San Francisco dopemagazine.com dopemagazine.com ISSUE ISSUE08 8 THE THE DOPEST DOPEST ISSUE ISSUE

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CANNANEWS

WRITER

• SCOTT PEARSE

| PHOTOS •NATASHA LAWYER

#VANLIFE SELL YOUR STUFF. BUY A VAN. SIMPLICITY BRINGS FREEDOM 72 36

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PHOTO • JOY EFFA

Ditch your job, load up the car, and disappear into the wilds of nature – never to be seen or heard from again. It’s something you usually contemplate after a particularly long day at the office, when you’re worn down from the constant drudgery of the nineto-five world. For some, this impulse becomes strong enough that they act on their wanderlust. All that’s required is a vehicle large enough to double as a bedroom, kitchen, and lounge, along with a few dollars in the bank or a plan to earn some cash while you travel. For Natasha Lawyer and Brett Bashaw, this meant buying a vintage VW bus, which they quickly named Wes Vanderson. “Brett came home one day when he had watched a documentary on this rich doctor who was unhappy, even though he had a stereotypically perfect life. The doctor bought a condo in Venice and now spends his days rollerblading up and down Venice Beach,” Natasha explained, “He found the one thing that made his life amazing. Brett texted me and said, ‘We need to travel. What if we took a year off?’ I was like, ‘yeah sure, but what are we millionaires?’ Practically speaking, having a place to stay is the most expensive part of travel, so we thought to ourselves, ‘We should buy a van!’” THE HIPPIE BUS, EVOLVED

The image of the burnt-out hippie – tanned, surfboards lining the side of his VW bus, joint in hand – isn’t really an unfair stereotype. The bus and the bong go together like lawyers and suits. The origin of the VW Type II bus began just after World War II in Wolfsburg, Germany. In 1947, a Dutch importer noticed that the motorized trolleys used to transport parts around the factory were made from stripped down Beetles. He was inspired by these rather strange looking vehicles to sketch out a Beetle-based van design. The modern traveler expects more from their van than a box on wheels. From $80,000 custom campers to $300,000 motorhomes, the diversity of homes on wheels has never been greater. For many buyers these hefty price tags go against the ethos of living simply and using only what you need, a bed, somewhere to shelter from the rain, a kitchen, and love for the open road. In this age of underemployment and financial instability, camper vans have also become a refuge. Stealth camping, with sleeper vans constructed to be completely inconspicuous so they can be parked overnight on suburban streets, has become a necessary reality for many people.

THE #VANLIFE MOVEMENT

Living in a van is fast being elevated to an art form. Enthusiasts of the van lifestyle are broadcasting their lives – and the interiors of their homes-on-wheels – via social media, in a movement becoming known as #VanLife. The movement brings together otherwise isolated and disparate travelers to share not only stories but the designs, methods, and minutia of living in a space smaller than many bathrooms. For the Wes Vanderson crew, the energy behind #VanLife has turned them into minor celebrities. Wherever they choose to spend the evening, there’s a decent chance they’ll be discovered by sharp-eyed followers. “We were in a parking lot in Edmonton,” Brett recounts, “These girls came out yelling, ‘It’s Wes Vanderson! We’re huge fans!’”

DOING LESS - WITH LESS

We are seeing a downsizing movement taking place in society. As more people move to the cities, we find ourselves further pressed for space, which has become an expensive luxury. People are learning to live with less, rather than taking on the burden of having to pay for more. Until recently, living out of a van would have been unthinkable for all but the most hardened hippies and drifters. Commuting from the suburbs was the ideal. Why go small when you can go big by living farther away and driving longer to work? You want to go somewhere nice? Work hard all year, and maybe you’ll get to fly somewhere for a week or two of hurried relaxation on a beach somewhere. Once you realize that life on the road can be a kind of permanent vacation though, there’s no need to fly to Hawaii. By simply purchasing a van, and coming up with a plan to make some money, people can experience a level of freedom that renters and owners will never know. Many people who aspire to live the #VanLife have made the realization that a life collecting experiences is more valuable than a life spent collecting possessions. For Natasha and Brett, the experience of traveling and living in a bus has changed their outlook forever. “We were really bummed about going back to our normal lives after this big adventure,” Natasha says. “So we started thinking, what about if we just get some land and live in a vintage airstream?” For these two the #VanLife adventure will continue ® – in one location, for now at least. Follow the Airstream adventures of Natasha & Brett @tincanhomestead on Instagram. They’ve sold @wesvanderson, but you can still follow the van’s travels with its new owners. dopemagazine.com ISSUE ISSUE 05 8 THE dopemagazine.com THEDOPEST DOPESTISSUE ISSUE

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THE BIGGEST NIGHT IN THE

CANNABIS INDUSTRY

SATURDAY DECEMBER 19, 2015 8PM SHOWBOX SODO | SEATTLE , WA HOSTED BY

KITTY KITTY BANG BANG

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WRITER

• ALISON BAIRD

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PHOTOS

• MARK COFFIN

HIS YEAR’S DOPE Industry Awards of 2015 hosted by Kitty Kitty Bang Bang was a unique event many will reminisce over in their warmed wintertime hearts for quite some time. The only black tie, red carpet event of the cannabis industry, this is a favorite anticipated evening in Seattle. A night set aside to showcase the strength and size of our growing industry in Washington and celebrate how far we have come, special guests included Dr. Carl Hart, and Ed Rosenthal who was presented with the Marc Emery Award for his numerous efforts and sacrifice for the plant. Pride and warm vibes filled the venue making this feel more like a giant family reunion as we celebrated and reconnected on this memorable night presented by Dutch Master Nutrients with support from Evergreen Extracts, Buddy Boy Farms, and Suspended Brands.

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PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR

BEST GLASS COMPANY

BESS BYERS

MOTHERSHIP

JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR

BEST HEAD SHOP

WES ABNEY - NW LEAF

PIECE OF MIND

BEST CONSULTANT

BEST TOPICAL BRAND

AMBER LEWIS

CANNABIS BASICS

BEST LIGHTING COMPANY

BEST CONCENTRATE BRAND

GAVITA

X-TRACTED

BEST NUTRIENT COMPANY

BEST EDIBLE BRAND

EMERALD HARVEST

LOADED SODA

BEST SECURITY COMPANY

BEST NEW PRODUCT

CANNAGUARD SECURITY

BUDDER BLOCKS - POCKET SQUARE

BEST TECH PRODUCT

BEST STAFF

LEAFLY

SEATTLE CANNABIS COMPANY

BEST BRAND MARKETING

THE EMERY AWARD

SUSPENDED BRANDS

ED ROSENTHAL

BEST OVERALL BRAND

BEST COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

SOLSTICE

DOCKSIDE

ACTIVIST OF THE YEAR

BEST MEDICINE SELECTION

BRIAN CALDWELL

THE CPC

BEST CANNABIS ASSOCIATION

BEST EDIBLE SELECTION

NWPPR

THE NOVEL TREE

BEST TESTING FACILITY

BEST STORE MERCHANDISING

INTEGRITY LABS

SATORI

BEST LAW FIRM

BEST NEW RECREATIONAL STORE

ASHBY LAW GROUP

STASH POT SHOP

BEST PROCESSOR

BEST STORE ATMOSPHERE

X-TRACTED

THE NOVEL TREE

BEST PRODUCER

FEMALE BUDTENDER OF THE YEAR

FORBIDDEN GARDENS

ARIANA RAMIREZ - TRIPLE C CANNABIS

BEST OUTDOOR GROW

MALE BUDTENDER OF THE YEAR

WASHINGTON’S FINEST CANNABIS

EASTON MORGAN - TRIPLE C CANNABIS

BEST INDOOR GROW

RECREATIONAL STORE OF THE YEAR

SOLSTICE

GREENSIDE RECREATIONAL

BESTGLASS BLOWER

MEDICAL CO-OP OF THE YEAR

ERAN PARK

TRIPLE C CANNABIS

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Sacramento's Finest Dispensary ���� El Camino Ave. www.1841ElCamino.com


W

e want 1841 to serve as the cornerstone of community and holistic health. Looking ahead, we are excited about our plans to offer a variety of healing services to help each patient meet their individual medical needs and improve the quality of their daily lives.

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TITAN OG

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