MIKE RICKER OPERATING PARTNER ricker@leafmagazines.com | advertising opportunities
TOM BOWERS CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER tom@leafmagazines.com
DANIEL BERMAN CHIEF CREATIVE OFFICER daniel@leafmagazines.com
BOBBY BLACK LEAF BOWL DIRECTOR & HISTORIAN bobbyblack@leafmagazines.com
MATT JACKSON CALIFORNIA CONTENT DIRECTOR mattjackson@leafmagazines.com
KAYL WOHL COPY EDITOR kayl@leafmagazines.com
ASHLEY HIRCHERT SOCIAL MEDIA LEAD ashley@leafmagazines.com
ABOUT THE COVER
Cassie Genc is an illustrator and painter based in Eugene, Oregon. Her love of surreal worlds, bold color and the Pacific Northwest inspire her work. Her main goal: create a rainbow-hued escape amidst the everyday. As she illustrated the cover for the Impact Issue, she aimed to create that surreality of confronting one’s own potential within — joint in hand — and the power of seizing it as a new and vibrant reality. When she isn’t designing graphic tees or textile patterns for Kohl’s retail, she regularly freelances, creates collections for local shows and sells her work at fairs and cons.
ILLUSTRATION BY CASSIE GENC CASSIEGENC.COM | @CASSIEGENC
CONTRIBUTORS
JAN ACOSTA, PHOTOS
ADHDDEAD, FEATURES
ANGELA-JORDAN AGUILAR, FEATURES
DANIEL BERMAN, DESIGN
TOM BOWERS, FEATURES
WYATT EARLY, FEATURES
CASSIE GENC, ILLUSTRATION
REX
HEADY HAWAII, PHOTOS
HILSINGER, FEATURES + PHOTOS
ELLEN HOLLAND, FEATURES
MATT JACKSON, FEATURES + ART
TERPODACTYL MEDIA, FEATURES
JAMIE VICTOR, DESIGN
AMANDA VILLEGAS, PHOTOS
BRUCE WOLF, PHOTOS
LAURIE WOLF, RECIPES
We are creators of targeted, independent Cannabis journalism. Please email us to discuss advertising in the next issue of California Leaf Magazine. We do not sell stories or coverage. Email ricker@leafmagazines.com to start advertising!
Exclusive Cannabis Journalism CONNECT WITH CALIFORNI A LEAF
Thanks for picking up The Impact Issue of California Leaf!
June marks 15 years of publishing the Leaf, which began in June 2010 with the first issue of Northwest Leaf in Washington state. As we publish our 180th monthly issue of NW Leaf, I am overwhelmed with gratitude for our plant, community and the movement I’ve been able to dedicate my life’s work to.
I used to believe I was born in the wrong time, a man meant for a different era. My other passions are fishing and the outdoors, and as a boy my daydreams were filled with adventures in the untamed wilderness. Born too late to explore the raw world and born too early to explore outer space is where I occasionally find myself mentally. But I had a true epiphany recently: I was born at the perfect time to experience the rebirth of plant-based medicines, a movement that began on the West Coast with deep roots in the Pacific Northwest.
In 2010, weed was still illegal, patients were often considered fakers, and the opioid epidemic was raging across America. Legalization brought taxation without representation, ridiculous regulations from clueless go vernment agencies, and over 15 years, Cannabis has gone from underground to mainstream. I’m old enough to have been arrested for weed, to have run from cops and been caught smoking by college professors, and to have seen the first legal gram sold in multiple states.
Having just turned 37, I find myself back in college preparing for law school in 2026 to better fight for the plant and people harmed by the War on Drugs. My goal is not to leave the Cannabis industry or abandon the beaut iful mission of publishing Leaf magazines, but to gain new tools for the fight that is not yet won.
“...I WASN’T MEANT TO MINE FOR GOLD OR EXPLORE MARS, BUT I WAS BORN AT THE RIGHT TIME TO FIGHT FOR PLANT MEDICINES…”
Weed is not legal federally. The War on Drugs grinds lives daily in mass incarceration and for-profit prisons, and it still targets the poor and Black or brown lives disproportionately. In my home state of Washington, it’s a felony to grow a few pot plants in your backyard for recreational use. And in many states, like Idaho or soon-to-be dry Texas, our plant is still completely illegal.
So what was my epiphany? I realized I wasn’t meant to mine for gold or explore Mars, but I was born at the right time to fight for plant medicines and usher global consciousness into a new era of healing, health and light! As a Christian, I feel this purpose aligns with my faith in God, who gave us plant medicines as a tool to connect spiritually and appreciate the wondrous design of this planet and universe.
I also want to say that YOU were born at the right time to have an Impact and raise your voice, along with a joint, as we spread the good news of Cannab is! I’ve seen lives changed, saved and ended with dignity because of the plant. I’ve seen ad dicts become clean, including my two-plus years sober from alcohol, and I’ve witnessed the tr ue healing power of the plant. So please share it! We must plant seeds of change in order to harvest the bounty, and we all can have an Impact by living well with weed, one hit at a time!
BY THE NUMBERS
40%
The National Hemp Report, released by the National Agricultural Statistics Service, Agricultural Statistics Board and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, shows a 40% increase in hemp production from 2023 to 2024. Industrial hemp production was up 64%, and floral hemp was up 159% in that time. This is a promising sign for the hemp industry and a continuous boom in this market for producers and retailers.
1 in 4
The amount of Native American Tribes in the U.S. who are now involved in Cannabis or hemp programs. The Indigenous Cannabis Industry Association released an infographic in May showing the locations of over 100 of these programs around the country. This represents around 26% of all federally recognized Indigenous communities in the U.S. The data “shows that the Indigenous Cannabis industry is trending upward in terms of jobs, community development and overall industry growth, with many Tribes currently scaling to meet demands for global Cannabis distribution,” according to the association.
100k
Utah’s medical Cannabis program has reached a peak in medical Cannabis patients, surpassing 100,000 for the first time in five years. Members of the Utah Patients Coalition, a plant medicine advocacy group that lobbied hard to help pass the 2018 referendum that allowed the medical Cannabis program in deeply conservative Utah, see the milestone as a demonstration that the system to obtain a card is getting easier to navigate, according to Utah News Dispatch. The state, along with help from advocacy groups like UPC, are trying to eliminate barriers to entry for this booming industry.
$123.5m
In the largest bust to date from the state of California’s Unified Cannabis Enforcement Task Force, 105,700 plants and 22,057 pounds of illicit Cannabis products were seized, totaling $123,500,000. In a press release, Gov. Gavin Newsom said, “Let this be a reminder to all who grow Cannabis illegally: We won’t tolerate the undermining of our legal industry and impacts to our environment. I appreciate the multi-agency, cross-county efforts to take on the illicit market.” It’s a scary thought that even in 2025, we still have a state-funded task force going after the black market.
15
The amount of consumption lounges Maryland Gov. Wes Moore licensed after signing Senate Bill 215, but there is a catch. State law stipulates that Cannabis can be “consumed, but not smoked indoors” at a statesanctioned lounge. This means you will not be able to smoke in these lounges but will be able to purchase single-serve edibles, beverages and various other forms. Each serving will also be limited to 5mg of THC, a limitation whose effect remains to be seen. This is a step in the right direction, and the hope is that Maryland’s government will adjust as these businesses open.
£600k
Ex-Arsenal football player Jay Emmanuel-Thomas has admitted to his involvement in an attempt to smuggle 60 kilograms, about 132 pounds, of Cannabis into the United Kingdom from Thailand. The haul was valued about £600,000, or just over $800,000. The Cannabis was seized after being found in suitcases arriving at London Stansted Airport in Essex on Sept. 2, 2024. His club at the time, Greenock Morton, has cut ties with Jay as he awaits sentencing in the UK. Thailand seems to be the origin of many recent smuggling attempts.
10-15%
In Minnesota the Cannabis market is nearing its launch. While not even operational yet, it has already seen a 5% tax hike under a new budget agreement. Under the initial law passed in 2023, the tax was supposed to be 10%. Under the revised agreement, the tax is up to 15%, plus an additional 6.975% sales tax and any other local taxes. This does not put a good feeling in the air for Minnesotans who were excited about their state’s upcoming program. Nevertheless residents are happy to have licensed dispensaries offering safe, convenient access to Cannabis.
TEXAS ON VERGE OF COMPLETE THC BAN DESPITE SURGING INDUSTRY GROWTH
THE TERM “Texas legal” has come to mean the ability to buy weed, with a wink and a nod, from stores selling CBD and hemp openly in the Lone Star State. Cannabis is illegal in Texas, which has not passed recreational or medical Cannabis laws. Since the 2018 Farm Bill was passed, classifying weed as having delta-9 THC, people have been selling weed under the THCA loophole. Scientifically, all Cannabis flowers have high quantities of THCA, the acid form of THC, that converts to delta-9 THC when heated and smoked. This allows a gray market industry to flourish, with hundreds of dispensaries selling hot hemp and weed to pot-hungry Texans.
The industry has grown enough to catch lawmakers’ attention, but in typical backward fashion, the Texas House now seeks to ban THC outright. This crackdown ignores that shops have been open for years — and that Texans like to get high like everyone else.
After the House passed a bill 95-44 on May 21, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said, “Dangerously, retailers exploited the agriculture law to sell life-threatening, unregulated forms of THC to the public and made them easily accessible. These stores not only sold to adults, but they targeted Texas children and exposed them to dangerous levels of THC.” Patrick offered no evidence for his claims.
“We are not going to allow these retailers to circumvent the law and put Texans’ lives in danger,” he said. To date, there have been zero deaths caused by Cannabis in Texas or anywhere else on the planet. The ban bill now heads to the Senate, where the fate of “Texas legal” hangs in the balance.
SHAWN KEMP PLEADS GUILTY TO SECOND-DEGREE ASSAULT
SIX-TIME NBA ALL-STAR Shawn Kemp, aka the Reign Man, is back in the spotlight, this time in a true crime story tied to a March 2023 shooting in the Tacoma Mall parking lot.
CALIFORNIA WOMAN HIDES 151 POUNDS OF WEED IN CHECKED BAGS
MANY TRAVELERS have tried to get an airport scale to hit that perfect 50-pound limit to avoid overweight fees, but this woman’s baggage was well over. Diane Bahlawan, 34, was arrested after her four rolling bags were flagged for suspicion. Airport security found 131 sealed bags of Cannabis, totaling 151 pounds. She was headed from San Francisco to Germany, where the world’s largest Cannabis convention, Mary Jane Berlin, is scheduled for June. Cannabis that may cost between $400 and $800 per pound in California can fetch up to 10 times that value overseas, which explains the risk Bahlawan took.
MINNESOTA GETS GREEDY BEFORE LEGAL SALES LAUNCH, LOBBIES FOR TAX INCREASE
“SEEING GREEN” is an apt expression for those states regulating Cannabis, where heavy taxation and a focus on revenue always come before the plant and the people who invest time and money into growing and selling it. Minnesota is the latest state pushing a cash grab before legal sales start. Gov. Tim Walz leads efforts to raise the tax from 10% to 15%.
Known for his basketball career and love of Cannabis, Kemp opened his first dispensary in 2020 and a second in 2023, both in downtown Seattle. In 2023 Kemp’s vehicle was broken into, a common issue in West Coast cities, and his laptop, cellphone and game-worn Gary Payton and Kemp jerseys intended for a charity auction off for charity were stolen.
Kemp decided to follow the cellphone with a tracking app to confront the thief who was in a stolen Toyota 4Runner. But a second person in the back of the vehicle, according to the defense’s trial brief, “fired off a round from a handgun at Mr. Kemp.” In self-defense and attempting to disable the 4Runner, Kemp returned fire as the vehicle fled. Originally charged with first-degree assault, Kemp pleaded guilty to second-degree assault on May 27. His attorney, Tim Leary, told The Seattle Times, “He was presented with an offer from the state that allows him to take responsibility, but I think also recognizes the self-defense nature of how this transpired.”
The governor and his legislative gladhands want to repeal a provision that shares 20% of the tax revenue with local governments, allowing the state to keep all proceeds and hide them in a general fund without oversight. This is separate from the state sales tax, which will also be charged on retail sales.
If approved, the tax hike would move Minnesota from a low-tax Cannabis market to one of the highest rates in the nation. In addition to state and sales tax, Cannabis businesses must also comply with federal Tax Code 280E, which bars them from deducting business expenses except for cost of goods sold. This creates a heavy burden on Cannabis businesses and pushes costs to customers at the point of sale. Still, Minnesota’s proposed 15% tax looks modest from Washington state (home to Leaf HQ), where weed is taxed at 37% plus an average local sales tax of 9.38%, totaling 46.38% at the register.
Ready to Redefine Cannabis Banking?
We Support Cannabis Businesses
At Mission Valley Bank, we understand the Cannabis industry deserves a banking partner that gets the challenges and opportunities.
With our approach, entrepreneurs and owners will receive personalized service so you can focus on what matters - your business.
Cannabis. Banking. Redefined
CALIFORNIA LEAF BUDTENDER
Our Impact Issue Budtender of the Month was first recognized by Denise at Rosin Tech Labs. She told Leaf Magazine about the passion for the plant that Abu brings to the wonderful people who shop at Vibe by California. Abu has been a budtender at Vibe’s south Sacramento location for four years now, but he actually started his professional Cannabis journey as a trimmer. Working his way up from production to cultivation, he eventually created clones as a propagation leader before becoming a budtender.
ABU
VIBE BY CALIFORNIA, SACRAMENTO 8112 ALPINE AVE SACRAMENTO, CA VIBEBYCALIFORNIA.COM | @MAJINBUUD_11 @VIBEBYCALIFORNIASAC | @VIBEBYCALIFORNIA_ (916) 739-6337 | OPEN 9AM - 9PM DAILY
WHAT INSPIRED YOU TO LEAVE THE CLONING STATION FOR THE SALES FLOOR? I really, really like helping people. It means a lot to me when we can make a difference in people’s lives, especially for the medicinal customers who come in. I love helping people who’re just looking for the fire, but it’s nice to be able to help someone looking to use Cannabis to aid with something specific, and you can introduce them to things like THCV or CBG.
HAVE YOU ALWAYS BEEN PASSIONATE ABOUT THE MEDICAL BENEFITS OF CANNABIS? I had used Cannabis before, but I got into a really bad car accident. The pills they were giving me afterward were making my mind and body feel lazy. Switching to weed pretty much saved my life. That’s why I’m so passionate about it.
“SWITCHING TO WEED PRETTY MUCH SAVED MY LIFE. THAT’S WHY I’M SO PASSIONATE ABOUT IT.”
GIVEN ALL YOUR EXPERIENCE, IS THERE A PIECE OF ADVICE YOU’D GIVE TO PEOPLE LOOKING TO ENTER THE CANNABIS INDUSTRY RIGHT NOW? My advice would be to really think about if you have a love for doing this kind of work — not just for smoking weed or for collecting a paycheck. It’s about who you are at the end of the day. If you can show people that you’re passionate about what you want to do, in my experience, they’ll give you a chance to do it.
WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE WAY OF CONSUMING CANNABIS AFTER WORK? When I get home, I’m pulling out my Puffco and I’m dabbing up. Usually, I’m a big fan of the gassier stuff, but I’m also really liking this Item 9 (Exodus Cheese x (G13 x Hawaiian)) — it’s stupid fire. I’ve also gotten into rolling my own hash holes, like some CBX GM-UHOH with some Rosin Tech Ether. I’ve been trying to tell customers about it, to brush them up on some game.
Speaking with Abu, it’s clear that his drive to connect with customers and help them become as excited about the products as he is makes him the perfect choice for our Budtender of the Month. Next time you’re in Sacramento, stop by Vibe and ask him what’s the fire in the fridge.
Puff N Pride: How Queer Activists shaped Cannabis Culture
June is Pride Month—a time to celebrate love, allyship, and the pioneers who paved the way. Join us as we honor the past, embrace the future, and come together for community, connection, and cannabis.
Mary Jane Rathburn (1922-1999), a.k.a. Brownie Mary was a fierce advocate for medical marijuana. A hospital volunteer in San Francisco, she baked and distributed cannabis brownies to AIDS patients, easing their suffering. Her activism helped humanize the fight for medical marijuana and helped pass Prop215, legalizing medical cannabis in California.
“I know from smoking pot for over 30 years that this is a medicine that works.” -
Brownie Mary
DATE: FRIDAY, JUNE 13TH
LOCATION: 1654 W CARSON ST.
TIME: 3-9PM
“Cannabis is compassion” - Dennis Peron
Dennis Peron (1945-2018) was a pioneering activist who helped legalize medical cannabis in California. A Vietnam war vet and openly gay advocate, he coauthored Prop215, making California the 1 state to legalize medical marijuana. st
The newest Southern California Cannabis lounge, Sessions by the Bay, opened on 4/20, ushering in a new wave of public consumption for San Diego. Located five minutes from the water and five miles from San Diego’s Gaslamp Quarter, Sessions is the county’s very first dispensary and weed cafe where you can smoke up while ordering a whole menu of snacks, entrees and mocktails designed by Chef Jorge Bendesky.
BAY
BUT BENEATH THE AROMA of signature drinks and weed smoke, Sessions houses a 3,000-squarefoot retail space, hidden art gallery and exotic snacks section inspired by the markets of the 1930s.
The menu has more than 300 varieties of herb and 100 kinds of concentrates, plus a huge variety of edibles and beverages. Staff work both upstairs and downstairs, meaning that employees at Sessions are trained on product knowledge and hospitality, something multiple people have commented on since the store’s opening.
Customers can stroll upstairs after their purchase to the walk-in section at the bar or patio where they can take a moment to enjoy themselves. A small cover charge applies unless you spend $75 — but downstairs is just as impressive.
Set off from the main retail section, Sessions by the Bay has a vintage-style marketplace housing a selection of chips, cookies, drinks and candies from around the world. Patrons can even discover a secret doorway that leads to a multiroom gallery space.
A still-evolving part of the store, the journey through this hidden door will eventually lead visitors through a series of immersive, consumption-friendly exhibits that end with a showcase of work from a variety of artists.
“THE MENU HAS MORE THAN 300 VARIETIES OF HERB AND 100 KINDS OF CONCENTRATES, PLUS A HUGE VARIETY OF EDIBLES AND BEVERAGES.”
Part of a project approved in 2022, it took serious work for owners Alex and Pearl Ayon to transform the space from the former site of California College San Diego, which shut its doors in 2021. Along with their partners from the Sycaun Tribal Development Corporation, the Ayons are using Cannabis to create a new life for the building, which sits on Kumeyaay land. Alex, who owned a dispensary before this, describes the store as “a place where we’re hoping to not just sell you something but provide a full experience.”
Together with Pearl’s aesthetic spin, the store’s unique layout makes Sessions feel as much of an experience as a store. After all, there aren’t many weed stores in the world that can promise you a quality selection, knowledgeable staff, a trip to an art gallery, healthy snacks, a patio that you can see Mexico from, and blueberry ice cream-flavored Oreos.
With such a groundbreaking upstairs, the team at Sessions is working hard to ensure the store is a space with a flair and feeling that complements the lounge but is also all its own — something we feel they’re on track to achieve.
Even though Telos Hash Co. is a brand-new name on California’s rec market, they’ve already won an award for their work, something they say might have to do with their proximity to a secret city inside Mount Shasta. A singlesource hash company with about a half-acre of cultivation space in Trinity County, owner Matt Hawkins is proud to say they use all their own sungrown, living-soil flower to make this rosin.
hash in the world comes from material produced right here,” he told Leaf. “There’s just something about sungrown from the Emerald Triangle.” Alongside his partner Charles, the two have taken their passion for hash and jumped headfirst into the retail market.
Telos is also defined as the ultimate aim or objective. To Matt and Charles, this means that the rosin they produce is the final form of that seed they planted — the result of all that pheno hunting, cultivating and careful harvesting, brought to life in a single gram in your hands. It’s that single-minded focus that they’ve used to drive the brand along their first steps.
Telos is also the name of the secret Lemurian city said to sit near the farm where this weed is harvested for hash. Home to ancient Atlanteans, the technologically advanced civilization just might be why they won a packaging award before even hitting the market.
“...fruit and funk layered over a bed of Z, like an extravagant appetizer from a Michelinstarred restaurant.”
Opening a jar of this OZK, you can catch an immediate blast of ripe fruit and foot funk coming from this gorgeous, slightly saucy rosin. A combination of OG Kush and Zkittlez, this influential strain has been called one of the most important crosses in modern Cannabis. Taken from a cut Telos said they received from the Trinity Association in Southern Oregon, it has a beautiful color and sheen. After stirring it up, waves of sweet fruit and sweaty foot terps start to build, along with whiffs of Z. At 500 degrees on the Toro Mini Slurper, the flavor leans much more Kush-y. You still get that footy funk and an overlayer of Z, but not a lot of the fruit. Dialing up the temperature to 550 kicks up that Z a couple notches but puts the K into overdrive, building into a strong presence on the aftertaste. If you’re more into low temps, 430 degrees offers a more layered, even mix of the aroma bursting from the jar: fruit and funk layered over a bed of Z, like an extravagant appetizer from a Michelin-starred restaurant.
Marina
Marina Glass began her journey in 2020, deep in the misty forests of Oregon. Surrounded by towering pines, foglaced mornings and a grassroots community of creatives, she discovered borosilicate glass — and never looked back. What began as a quiet fascination quickly grew into a passionate pursuit: a life shaped by fire, movement and meaningful connection.
NOW BASED in the sundrenched deserts of Arizona, Marina’s art continues to evolve. She’s become known for her highly detailed miniature figurines — each one a testament to both creativity and precision.
Drawing inspiration from the things she loves most, her work often features playful cartoons, expressive animals and surreal clowns. She captures complexity on such a small scale with an expert hand; the process demands advanced technical skill, patience and control over heat and form. But for Marina, this meticulous dance with molten glass is a joy, not a chore. Each piece is infused with her unique voice, shaped by both whimsy and mastery.
Looking ahead, Marina’s plans reflect the same spirit of adventure that fueled her beginnings. A full West Coast tour is next — an art-fueled road trip that will take her up and down the coast, connecting with fellow makers, collectors and creative communities. After that, she’ll head to Chicago for a joint show with her longtime friend and collaborator, Kid Glass.
It’s more than just an exhibition; it’s a celebration of shared growth and vision. Then it’s on to Arkansas to visit Banjo and the family, grounding herself in love, laughter and the kind of community that inspires her at the deepest level.
Throughout it all, travel and connection remain Marina’s compass. Every stop along the way feeds her art. Every person, a new spark! She shows this through her extensive domestic and international travels.
Her dream? To take borosilicate glass into the mainstream — creating more space for events, collaboration and visibility for artists in the flame-working world. She envisions a vibrant scene where stories are told through glass and where community thrives.
Marina Glass isn’t just making art; she’s building a movement one flame, one figurine, one connection at a time. And her journey is only just beginning.
It is almost impossible to pin this artist down. If you’re looking for artwork by Marina Glass, try her directly on socials or inquire at your local glass art gallery for availability. But be warned: Marina’s work sells very, very quickly. @MA.RINA.GLASS
“Her dream? To take borosilicate glass into the mainstream — creating more space for events, collaboration and visibility for artists in the flame-working world.”
“PRIZM
BUILDS UPON THE ALREADY INSPIRING WORK MAVEN’S DONE WITH OPAL BY BREEDING IT WITH ONE OF THE MOST POPULAR STRAINS OF THE LAST FEW YEARS, PERMANENT MARKER.”
aven has grown to encompass four partners, a retail store and a respected reputation in the industry, thanks to an impressive in-house breeding program.
PRIZM
Maven Genetics wascreated foronepurpose: to breed rare and exotic Cannabis. This SouthernCaliforniabrandcantrace itsrootsbacktoasingleseedof Pre-98BubbaKushgrownin theclosetofco-founder DavidBosworth.
Released as the inaugural strain from their 2024 collection, Prizm was selected as the winner from 31 competing phenotypes. This cultivar builds upon the already inspiring work Maven’s done with Opal by breeding it with one of the most popular strains of the last few years, Permanent Marker. Opal (Blue Agape x Carbon Candy) is a special strain Maven created in collaboration with world-renowned graffiti artist Saber, which was selected for phenotypes that the artist found helped with his rare form of epilepsy.
Since then, they’ve gone on to breed it with Black Diamond X in a drop that helped victims of the recent Southern California wildfires. So you can see that this cross highlights a very special strain from the Maven stable.
Prizm is one of those plants with buds that come out like little footballs made of Romanesco broccoli. Mottled with purple, the transitioning shades expose a beaded coat of trichomes that drapes over every inch. High in limonene, myrcene and beta-caryophyllene, Prizm won first place in the indica category at last year’s Best of California competition.
The smell from the jar is light with a chem edge, but once these nugs are crushed, that chem and gas edge comes out with a little of that soapy quality you’ve come to expect from Permanent Marker crosses. Grinding them up releases a sweet, citrusy smell that is much softer and fruitier than what you get from handling the buds. The dry inhale is gassy with a twist of lemon at the end, but once the joint gets started, it puts the foot on the gas until the tank runs dry. Working through the joint, the robust smoke takes on an earthier taste with some herbal top notes. In a bong rip or pipe, that robust second step comes out earlier and grabs you by the lungs. The sharp fuel notes are much more reminiscent of Opal’s flavor, but the quick onset and more relaxing effects I experienced from this strain reminded me of Permanent Marker.
After smoking Prizm, it’s easy to see why this was one of the strains that received overwhelming support when it was first previewed through Maven’s R&D strain line, singled out for its distinct flavor and calming effects.
Cancer sucks. Shelter Project can help.
Weed culture today is pushing back on classic stereotypes and redefining and realigning vintage ideas about what a stoner looks like, what we do for fun and what we want to smoke. Whether it’s renting a Gravitron or a Times Square billboard, weed smokers are becoming a more accepted and impactful part of society. Let’s look at some trends that seem to be growing on a national scale.
This is something that’s been brewing up for a while now but is hitting trend status. European seed companies like Barney’s Farm, Sensi, Blimburn, and Royal Queen are creating partnerships between their brand and American names like DOJA, Happy Munkey, Backpack Boys, and Sherbinksis. Last month, Barney’s announced a new collaboration with B-Real of Cypress Hill. What was once an American scene traveling to Europe for genetics has shifted to Europeans promoting American breeding projects and cementing their place within this new global ecosystem for Cannabis genetics.
FOOD COMPANIES
COOK UP CANNABIS SUPPORT
We saw a major lack of the usual brand involvement for 4/20 this year. No big activations or capsule drops, not even the traditional shoe release. Instead, the food sector picked up the torch. There’s even a collaboration between Blazy Susan and Jimmy John’s now. Carl’s Jr., Popeyes, Jack in the Box, Smashburger, Buffalo Wild Wings, Magnolia Bakery and, of course, Jimmy John’s all had stoner specials on the menu for 4/20. We have a reputation for exploring new food combinations, which makes stoners the dream demographic for anyone looking for people to stand in line for a pickle-glaze chicken sandwich.
STONER FASHION GETS A GLOW-UP
We’re breaking down old ideas about how pot-centric people dress. Cannabis brands are shifting into lifestyle brands through capsule drops and collabs. Now fashion is looking at what Cannabis culture wants to see and responding in kind. Carhartt, a major favorite with the scene, announced its 2025 Spring/Summer WIP line will highlight tactile, hemp-blend fabrics. Binske partnered with L’equip to drop a line of high-end clothing that has zero weed references on it. This year, New York’s STAPLE clothing store did a pop-up event with trulyredpanda and EDISTSEW, plus the Alien Labs and HUF 4/20 collection, which is long sold out.
GAS AND SOURS ARE BACK?
Almost every seed bank and breeder we’ve spoken to this year has said some variation of the same thing: “Gas is back.” It’s a trend you can see in strains like Permanent Gas, Brainwash and Bazkittlez. Right now it’s mostly the candy-leaning stuff that’s being gobbled up, leaving us to wonder if this will truly catch fire. Along with gas flavors, sour crosses have hit a definite uptick from both the rosin and flower markets, along with the amount of Sour D. Though, much like gas, it’s the sweeter flavors that are finding an immediate place with consumers looking to “branch out.”
WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS
There’s a major shift in the way stoners are perceived when we head out for the night. In the last year a ton of restaurants, rooftop bars and outdoor patios became open to hosting weed events or don’t seem to mind the casual pull on an e-rig. As Cannabis lounges become more and more of an accepted idea, so too are the people who frequent them. As such, options for what can be part of a Cannabis event have also blown wide open. Hell, we even saw a Gravitron for Puffcon and a Ferris wheel at Hall of Flowers. What’s next?
IMPACT PROFILES
NORTHEAST
JOSH ALB
Josh Alb, founder of Cannademix, describes the core of his work as “education as activism.” He explains, “When I started in Cannabis my job was to educate dispensary staff, doctors and consumers about the medical benefits of cannabinoids.”
“IN CANNABIS, THE ONLY THING THAT MAKES YOU SUCCESSFUL IS HAVING A STRONG COMMUNITY.”
Dismantling myths of the industry and how cannabinoid medications work led to deeper conversations and connections that reveal the plant’s broader potential for healing and social change.
Cannademix, which has hosted everything from expungement clinics to job fairs, aims to inform both the community and legislators, bridging gaps that helped create legal markets in New Jersey and New York. Pushing for criminal justice reform and equity, Cannademix addresses the systemic harm caused by decades of prohibition.
“The War on Drugs is a war on people,” Alb says, calling it a class war rooted in colonialism.
He urges voters to support lawmakers who back home grow and reminds people that Cannabis consumers could swing elections. “We as a Cannabis community have an immense amount of voting power,” he says, adding that nearly 10% of the state’s population consume Cannabis. “As a community, our voice matters much more than people think, which is why events like Unity at American Dream are so important in showing the world our power.”
Through Cannademix, he mentors the next generation of students, professionals and policymakers beyond what chemistry and cannabinoid science can teach in textbooks: community. “Society does everything to strip people of that sense of connection,” Alb says. “Our industry is made up of undocumented people, and they contribute so much more than people think. In Cannabis, the only thing that makes you successful is having a strong community.”
@cannademix @thealbchemist
SHANETHA MARABLELEWIS
Army combat veteran Shanetha Marable-Lewis is a tireless advocate for veterans' access to Cannabis and alternative therapies, driven by a personal mission to save lives. Having lost her mother to addiction and fentanyl poisoning, and over 40 friends and family members to substance abuse, she is deeply passionate about serving veterans and patients suffering from PTSD and addiction.
Her work extends to bridging the gap between federal Cannabis access and veterans, addressing the current limitations of the Department of Veterans Affairs. Marable-Lewis aims to integrate Cannabis into the federal health care system, ensuring safe and affordable access for those who served. Her expertise led to her appointment by Maryland Gov. Wes Moore to the state’s Psychedelics Task Force as a researcher.
As executive director of Veterans Initiative 22 and an alumna of the University of Maryland’s Medical Cannabis Science and Therapeutics Graduate Program, she brings a unique perspective.
As chair of the Committee on Regulations and Governance for the Psychedelics Task Force, she is responsible for drafting a legislative report in Maryland on access models for DMT, mescaline and psilocybin. She also served as an expert witness for Veterans Initiative 22 in the DEA’s proposed national rescheduling of Cannabis. She hopes to pursue a doctorate in neuropsychopharmacology, focusing on Cannabis and natural psychedelic substances, believing these therapies hold the key to saving lives. veteransinitiative22.com
“...DEEPLY PASSIONATE ABOUT SERVING VETERANS AND PATIENTS SUFFERING FROM PTSD AND ADDICTION.”
MARYLAND
STORY BY WYATT EARLY
OREGON
CALIFORNIA
JOYCE CENALI
Joyce Cenali is a Cannabis executive who isn’t afraid to get her hands dirty. As chief operating officer of Sonoma Hills Farm, Cenali’s background includes both production and compliance.
“Relative to the farm back in the day, I was tagging Metrc onto the plants, I was putting plants in the ground,” Cenali says. “I’ve cloned off many a mother, but now we’ve been able to build a team that does a lot of that.”
SEAN BEEMAN
For over two decades, Sean Beeman was more than just a name in Oregon’s medical Cannabis community: he was a lifeline for countless folks looking to find healing and hope. As the founder of Oregon’s Genesis Pharms, Beeman poured his heart into providing plant-based medicine that truly impacted many individuals’ lives.
His journey into Cannabis cultivation and extraction was driven by his health struggles with hepatitis C. Fueled by a mission to bring relief to others, Beeman rarely allowed personal challenges (like a fire that wiped out the family home and farm) or patient obstacles (like financial shortfalls) to stand in the way of providing care for those pushing through everything from cancer to Crohn’s and everything in between.
Beeman’s approach to Cannabis wasn’t about growing plants; it was about growing trust and a sense of hope. His no-till, pesticide-free farming practices reflected his respect for the earth and the people he served. His products, from RSO to capsules and suppositories, were carefully crafted to improve quality of life. But what truly set him apart was his genuine care for the people who relied on his work.
The Oregon community (and beyond) was saddened to hear of Sean’s passing in early 2025. But his legacy of kindness, generosity and meaningful medicine will continue to inspire for years to come. @genesis_pharms
"BEEMAN’S APPROACH TO CANNABIS WASN’T ABOUT GROWING PLANTS; IT WAS ABOUT GROWING TRUST AND A SENSE OF HOPE. HIS NO-TILL, PESTICIDE-FREE FARMING PRACTICES REFLECTED HIS RESPECT FOR THE EARTH AND THE PEOPLE HE SERVED.
Today, Cenali coordinates with nurseries to procure Cannabis genetics and, after the flowers are grown and cured, works with the farm’s production team on quality control and locating sales channels for both collaborative and blind bulk releases. As co-founder of the Cannabis Media Council (CMC), Cenali is invested in creating and promoting collaborative media campaigns to reach new Cannabis customers.
“I want to see as much choice and as much consumer diversity as possible in terms of how products are going to flow to the consumer,” Cenali says. “I like to say that I want the plant to receive the first Super Bowl commercial and not some singular company just because they can pay the bill.”
The CMC’s “I’m High Right Now” campaign is currently running on Meta platforms, which are notorious for censoring Cannabis content, and has appeared in print in Vanity Fair. Cenali says she volunteers her time with the organization to build a Cannabis industry that includes small businesses alongside multi-state operators (MSO). “[MSOs] are going to exist and we appreciate their leadership and their ability to have lobbyists and whatnot, but we would just encourage those MSOs also think collectively and not singularly about who should have a chance to advertise and seek new consumers,” Cenali says. “It should be ‘all of the above’ as opposed to ‘some of the few.’” @joycewill4u
“I WANT TO SEE AS MUCH CHOICE AND AS MUCH CONSUMER DIVERSITY AS POSSIBLE IN TERMS OF HOW PRODUCTS ARE GOING TO FLOW TO THE CONSUMER.”
STORY
SAVING SOPHIE
Radical Love, Remarkable Science: How a Mother’s Faithful Persistence Sparked a Revolution in Pediatric Cancer Immune Therapy
When Tracy Ryan first cradled her newborn daughter Sophie, she envisioned a life filled with milestones and celebrations — not medical charts and prognosis reports. At 8-and-a-half months old, Sophie was diagnosed with an optic pathway glioma (OPG) — a rare, slow-growing brain tumor with a devastating persistence. Doctors offered no cure, only a revolving door of chemotherapy, invasive surgeries and soul-crushing uncertainty. Tracy refused to accept that prognosis. She didn’t collapse under the weight of fear, she rose to the calling. With Sophie’s father Josh by her side, this couple was determined to overcome the impossible. “I co-created this beautiful child and held her in my womb,” Tracy said. “I refuse to believe that anyone has more say in her outcome than we do.”
Tracy testifies
AS TEST RESULTS CAME IN, the diagnosis was documented as a low-grade brain tumor with a 90% survival rate and an unfortunate 85% recurrence rate. With minimal developments in childhood cancer therapy over the last 40 years, chemotherapy was the only treatment option.
Her immune system was compromised, and a growing cyst in her brain was affecting her motor function. High-dose carboplatin was the next conventional recommendation, a treatment known for its toxicity and harsh side effects.
The Ryans knew they needed to find a toxic-free option for treatment; at nine months old, medical Cannabis was Sophie’s first safe, pain-free option for therapy. The benefits were vast, including leading the Ryan family toward a global pediatric Cannabis advocacy journey. In 2013, Sophie was asked to star in the Netflix documentary “Weed the People.”
After bravely enduring more than 75 MRIs, 11 surgeries and eight failed chemo protocols, it became clear that Sophie’s journey toward health would embark on uncharted territory.
With a deep-rooted mother’s intuition and a fierce commitment to Sophie thriving, Tracy stepped out of the conventional medical current and into disruptive scientific territory. Her passion for curing Sophie eventually led to the launch of NKore BioTherapeutics, a cutting-edge biotech company advancing a new class of immune therapies called NK (natural killer) cell infusions. She launched the effort alongside co-founder Dr. Anahid Jewett, M.P.H., Ph.D., a UCLA scientist
whose breakthrough research in immune deficiency therapy has disrupted the medical industry. The Ryans made a brave choice to embrace the new NK cell therapy, holding faith that it would be the answer to their prayers.
In December 2023, Sophie became the first pediatric patient in the world to receive NKore’s experimental therapy, NK101. The infusion had no adverse side effects, and the results were almost immediate. Sophie’s vision improved for the first time in years, allowing her to read from 20 feet instead of just 12.
Between January and June 2024, her tumor volume appeared to grow by 60%, but the increase was small — just millimeters in dimension. The clinical team recognized this as pseudoprogression, a sign that immune cells were infiltrating the tumor and causing temporary swelling. By December 2024, scans showed clear signs of necrosis — cell death inside her once “incurable” tumor. Her immune system was revitalized, and for the first time in over a decade, Sophie’s childhood joy and vibrant energy returned. Was this a scientific miracle? Tracy would say it was an act of unshaken faith, a mother’s tenacity, an unwillingness to give up. “Her brain tumor is crumbling. Her immune system is thriving. This is not a miracle. It’s the future of cancer care as we know it,” she said.
As Sophie’s immunity continues to thrive, Tracy and the team at NKore have started to work with other patients facing life-threatening diagnoses.
One such patient is Jamie Grooms, a 64-year-old man with chronic lymphocytic leukemia who endured three years of targeted chemotherapy at the Mayo Clinic without ever reaching remission. Standard treatments had left his bone marrow with 20% tumor infiltration and debilitating side effects.
In December 2023, Jamie received a single low-dose infusion of NK101. Two months later, his tumor cells had dropped to 5%.
Great Spirit, Divine Mother, Friend Beloved God, We give thanks for the radiant souls of these warrior children, born into battle yet destined for brilliance. May every cell in their bodies remember its divine blueprint and rise in harmony with healing. Wrap their families in grace, their communities in strength, and their futures in the promise of longevity, joy, and vibrant life. We celebrate the miracle already unfolding, and trust that the light of recovery is not only possible — it is inevitable.
Following a second infusion in July 2024, Jamie’s tumor infiltration was reduced to just 0.23%. CT scans confirmed up to 70% reduction in lymph node size. His immune function rebounded, and his cancer entered partial remission. Most importantly, he felt alive and vibrant again.
These clinical stories are not isolated cases. They are data points in a growing body of evidence proving that NK cell therapy is not only safer but potentially more effective than traditional chemotherapies for certain cancers. In fact, these discoveries have forced some outdated therapies to the sidelines, paving the way for an era of less toxic, immune-focused treatment — especially for children.
Tracy’s advocacy didn’t stop at the clinic. Through her nonprofit, Saving Sophie, she became a national voice in pediatric cancer policy. She now speaks annually at the Congressional Pediatric Cancer Caucus, collaborates with Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles, and has made multiple visits to the White House to advocate for equitable funding.
In 2025, as a result of the current presidential administration, federal grant funding for pediatric cancer was cut from $160 million to $60 million, a huge deficit. This increases the need for community advocacy and donations to nonprofit charities. Please consider donating to Saving Sophie to help families in need.
You can learn more about Tracy and Sophie’s journey by watching the upcoming documentary, “Saving Sophie: The Road to a Cure” — a visual testament to love, science and revolution. It will be available for public viewing in 2026.
Their journey reminds us that the fight against cancer isn’t just in the labs or hospitals, it’s in the hearts of families. It’s in the decision to say “no” to limitation and “yes” to possibility. The journey of healing starts with a liberated mind that does not put blind faith in the system but instead stands in bold defiance of it.
Today, Sophie is not just surviving; she is thriving. Her life has catalyzed a world reimagined.
One mother’s choice to challenge the commercialized medical system that has long since been broken will continue to shape the legacy of immunotherapeutic medicine for the treatment of cancer in patients of all ages. This is a true American story of impactful disruption, a reminder, OGs, that with our voice and determined action, we can usher in a world renewed in faith.
PHOTOS BY AMANDA VILLEGAS
HIGHCRIMES
Cannabis businesses along the West Coast are struggling to defend themselves against armed robberies and dangerous heists, putting the people who tend our plants at risk and driving up the cost and risk of weed for consumers.
STORY by WES ABNEY @BEARDEDLORAX/LEAF NATION
The illegal drug business has always been dangerous; it’s the nature of criminality. Visions of narcoterrorists from the ’80s with MAC-11 automatic machine pistols fill the mind, or maybe it’s more Scarface, or gangster, but the streets bring heat when it comes to illegal narcotics. But how much of this is a function of illegality?
This magazine has long asserted that if you made toilet paper or ketchup illegal, there would be a fast and vast black market that would get violent quickly when the shit hits the fan. We saw a glimpse of this during the early days of COVID-19, when price gouging and supermarket fights over supplies hit the nation.
What’s the point of this allegory? When Cannabis was illegal, it was considered the softest of the drugs and the least likely to get a person shot or killed over. Robberies and scams happened, but the farmers and people who sold and smoked weed were rarely violent.
As the underground Cannabis scene merged into medical Cannabis in the early 2000s, the violence largely melted away, as permits for grows and small-time dispensaries popped up.
There would be the occasional robbery of either, but it was less frequent when the drug was illegal.
Even the early years of Cannabis legalization enjoyed a relatively peaceful scene. The players made a lot of money. The states went apeshit with regulations and enforcement. And the criminals waited for the hullabaloo to die down until weed shops were as common as boba and pho in Seattle, before the crime spree targeting Cannabis retailers and production facilities really began.
The weed game gets dangerous, but not for cops or robbers
When weed was illegal, calling the cops on a robbery meant going to jail, so the reports were almost never filed unless the police ended up at a scene by coincidence or in response to a violent crime.
While the same situation for petty crime might cause a shopkeeper to not report every missing Snickers bar, the expectation after legalization was that cops would help protect their businesses when targeted by criminals.
“We called the Seattle Police Department after our burglary alarm went off for the third time in a matter of weeks. Thieves were cutting through a wall in an adjacent unit they’d broken into and cut into our facility, where they were able to steal Cannabis waiting to be sold,” one Seattle grower told the Leaf, choosing to remain anonymous.
“The police didn’t respond for over 55 minutes — long enough that the burglary was over well before help arrived.”
> > CONTINUES PG. 32
Elevate your next adventure with THC-dominant cannabis, luxuriously blended into cream with three captivating scents.
bluesagethc.com
@bluesagetopicals
HIGHCRIMES
The issue doesn’t just affect grows. A trend started by a gang known as the Kia Boyz began smashing stolen cars through Cannabis retailers several years ago. One retailer in the Seattle area shared a story that after having their storefront smashed in by a car, they hired a contractor to rebuild the front of the store at great cost, only to have another Kia blow through the work in progress a few days later in a second smashand-grab. In these cases, a robbery happens so quickly that there is no danger of the police and criminals interacting.
While many Cannabis companies and owners are reluctant to go public about being robbed, Uncle Ike’s in Seattle has tracked the robberies informally, sharing the data publicly. Their data shows a disturbing trend: 40 robberies in 2021, 60 in 2022 and more than 100 in 2023. What’s most unsettling is that this data represents only reported incidents and likely does not reflect the full extent of the damage. According to Uncle Ike’s database, there are 339 confirmed robberies, with the most recent two occurring in 2025: on April 11, 2025, an armed robbery at Ruckus in Seattle, and on March 10 at West Seattle Marijuana, where an attempted armed robbery included shots fired.
For California, the smash-and-grab is old news and an ongoing problem. In Washington, Cannabis retailers now have reinforced concrete poles or planters, like those outside federal buildings, designed to deter and prevent vehicle attacks.
Nobody wants to be robbed, but very few companies want to authorize lethal force in a retail robbery, regardless of how much cash is (or in today’s world, isn’t) in a safe onsite.
Police often don’t respond quickly or enthusiastically to reports of armed robberies either. In many West Coast urban centers, they simply won’t respond to most non-life-threatening emergencies. In Portland, Oregon, it’s common to be put on hold when calling 911.
The experiment to legalize Cannabis was supposed to begin dismantling the War on Drugs, which has ruined lives through nearly a century of bad policy and discriminatory laws. Today’s Cannabis operators pay excessive state and federal taxes, can’t write off expenses because of tax code 280E, can’t legally purchase firearms or protect their businesses, and risk becoming victims of crime and law enforcement if they respond to a robbery themselves.
Lose-Lose scenario
But a lack of awareness and reporting left a huge target in between the two beleaguered states. Oregon’s Cannabis industry, a longestablished medicinal market, was not ready for a brash wave of robberies in 2024, even after the failed experiment to decriminalize drugs led to unprecedented street and crime issues.
The Leaf has encountered stories of growers sleeping at their facilities to prevent robberies, putting lives on the line while local police and the Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC) sit idly on the sidelines. There’s currently a movement to withhold state taxes on pot until the robbery issue is addressed by the OLCC and local law enforcement. For those living in West Coast cities or other American urban areas, the rise in crime and its spiraling effects on communities are undeniable. Nobody knows this better than the people growing and selling weed.
The War on Drugs hits below the belt
Our Founding Fathers railed against taxation without representation, which is a perfect description of the Cannabis industry today, with an additional caveat being a lack of protection, which is the icing on a gassy wedding cake.
Under federal law, Cannabis users are denied gun rights, a fundamental protection that is enshrined in the Second Amendment. The phrase “shall not be infringed” does not apply to legal Cannabis users. This effectively places Cannabis business owners in a more vulnerable class. When criminals know that an individual or community doesn’t have protection, they are more likely to rob, burglarize or otherwise prey upon that community. Cannabis businesses have the option to hire armed security, but that creates a third-party liability risk for both companies.
Law and justice are evolving practices that shift with political power and public will. Certainly there’s no public support to restart the War on Drugs or lock up nonviolent offenders of any kind. But policy change is needed to protect our industry and the people risking their safety to provide for others.
For Cannabis to truly be legal, our state and federal governments must ensure gun rights and the ability to protect personal liberty and property for all Cannabis users. Cannabis businesses need to feel safe and be able to count on police to treat them not as criminals, but as business owners who deserve protection and service. Most importantly, tax code 280E, which forces cash on site and prevents writeoffs and banking access, must end.
Cash-only industry endangers the system
Today, state governments play the role of the cartel, keeping their growers and sellers under the oppressive thumb of taxation and regulation, with the threat of force as a deterrent. This limits freedom for members while telling them to count on the government for protection. In Washington, where pot is taxed at 47% at the register, plus an additional 20% to 30% federal tax liability, the state takes all the cream and leaves a pittance for the industry to survive on.
“...POLICY CHANGE IS NEEDED TO PROTECT OUR INDUSTRY AND THE PEOPLE RISKING THEIR SAFETY TO PROVIDE FOR OTHERS.”
More than anything, perhaps this explains why so many players are leaving the industry to return to the black market, where there are no taxes, no regulation and the understanding that people are truly responsible for their own protection. Compared to taxation without representation and hour-long waits for police responses, it’s almost as if the industry was designed to fail the people risking it all to provide the plant.
The future of the plant and the industry lies in legal pathways, but until the government can secure a system that provides security and prosperity for those involved, the issues of criminality will always cut the industry on both sides.
Uncle Ike’s Founder Ian Eisenberg at one of his Seattle stores in 2018.
MAKE AN IMPACT
5 DAILY ACTS TO USHER IN A HEALED EARTH
IN THIS MODERN AGE of climate anxiety and overconsumption, it’s easy to feel powerless, but real impact starts with intentional daily choices. When we root our lifestyle in love for the Earth, even the smallest acts ripple outward, becoming regenerative blessings for the seven generations to come. Here are five soulful ways to live in alignment with Grandmother Earth. Each one is an invitation to return to the sacred cycle of reciprocity and create a positive impact every day.
#1
Smoke with intention and choose Earth-loving tools
Cannabis is more than a plant — it’s a teacher, a healer and an ally. How we consume it matters. Elevate your Cannabis consumption ritual by choosing organic, living-soil, sungrown flower that’s sustainably grown and packaged. Seek out local growers or Indigenous-owned brands that walk in harmony with the land. Ask your local budtender about brands that prioritize sustainable, full-circle growing practices. By supporting these businesses, we are fueling the cascade effect of regenerative agriculture, an impact that extends far beyond a pure vibrant toke. When it comes to consumption, choose locally made, functional glassware and organic, U.S.-sourced hemp wick over lighters. For storage, skip plastic packaging all together. Not only is the plastic toxic for the environment, but it also degrades the trichome and helix structure of your sacred herb.
IMPACT ACTION:
Swap disposable smokeware tools for longlasting, handmade ones. Support Cannabis growers and smokeware artisans rooted in regenerative practices.
For the freshest storage solution, reach for a reusable U.S.-made premium glass Mason jar — or better yet, the world’s first drop-proof, lightproof and child-resistant glass Mason jar: the RE:STASH jar. When your sesh is grounded in intention and care, from flower to flame, it becomes a sacred offering a moment of communion with the Earth.
#2
Bless your water and say no to plastic bottles
Water is life. It’s the original alchemical elixir of Earth and the first element in our being. Instead of contributing to plastic pollution, honor the element by using a refillable glass or stainless steel bottle. Avoid water stored in plastic at all costs. Even the so-called toxic-free or BPA-free plastic options contribute to a catastrophic, toxic production pipeline that harms our planet. Adopt the mindset that no plastic is safe for consumption, because if Earth Mother cannot regenerate it, then we should not be creating it. Treat ecological regions surrounded by water with the utmost care and respect. Choose cleaning supplies that have zero ecological impact, and never dispose of motor oil near waterways. Look up your local services for proper disposal of motor oils, lithium batteries and other severely toxic byproduct waste. When consuming water, whisper a blessing before you sip. Charge your water with positive spoken words and crystals like shungite to ensure it becomes a source of vibrant, refreshing hydration. Water holds memory, and we shape it with our gratitude and intention.
IMPACT ACTION:
Commit to going plastic-free for a week and experience the joy of a toxicfree world. Say a small blessing before each drink of water and feel your connection deepen.
Grow something native to support our pollinator ancestors
You don’t need a huge garden or a green thumb to become a cultivator of life, whether it’s basil in your kitchen, lavender in your garden, mint on your balcony or a single Cannabis plant in your backyard. When you grow something, you’re taking part in Earth’s most primal connection. Tending to a plant deepens your awareness, reconnects you to seasonal rhythms and nurtures reciprocity. Our native North American pollinators are currently facing an elevated extinction risk. Insects like bees, butterflies and moths are particularly vulnerable.
#4
Buy less, trade more, love local
IMPACT ACTION:
Start a mini herb garden this moon cycle. Learn from its native medicine. Speak to it with loving kindness. Give thanks with every harvest.
The world doesn’t need more stuff — it needs more soul. Break the cycle of overconsumption by supporting local artisans, farmers and creators who craft with care and integrity. Join a community trade group. Host a clothing or gear swap with your friends. When you shift from consumer to conscious community member, your resources stretch further and your footprint softens. Sharing and swapping is the original currency of Indigenous culture, and it’s time we return to the richness of exchange.
IMPACT ACTION: Choose one item you would normally buy new and instead trade, thrift or buy local. Make it an act of love.
Choose native wildflower species, herbs, edibles and locally sourced shrubs. Our pollinator community benefits greatly when we decide to garden with intention. The more we root into soil, the more we remember that we, too, are of the Earth.
#5
Reclaim the sacred cycle: reduce, reuse, recycle
We’ve heard the phrase before, but let’s elevate the understanding. Reduce by questioning your consumption. Do you really need it? Reuse by getting creative, such as by turning jars into stash holders, wrapping gifts with old scarves or saving pretty packaging for art projects. Recycle, yes, but make it sacred. Clean it, bless it and offer it back to the system with love. The Earth is a master recycler, so let’s learn from her example and treat every object as a temporary guest, not a throwaway.
IMPACT ACTION: Set up a recycling station in your home with intention. Burn sage or copal near it once a week to keep the energy high and mindful.
You don’t have to be perfect, you just have to be consciously present. When we live in reverent harmony toward our plant allies, our water, our community and above all our Earth, we become part of the solution. Remember, OGs, the power is already in your hands. Let your life be the ritual. Let your choices be the change.
Berry Boost
It’s June, and it’s all about the berries. You can use frozen berries, but if you have the opportunity to use fresh, their season is now, and you won’t be sorry. Jack Herer was my go-to sativa for years: reliable and always packed a punch. For a little while, I found that true sativas made me anxious, not an uncommon issue, but I’ve slowly gotten back on the sativa horse, and life is good. Oregon-based Pruf Cultivar’s Jack Herer is a stunning 26.5% THC — definitely a powerful smoking experience — but for the last few months, I have been sativa-related anxiety-free. I find that cooking with this strain mellows it out considerably, though I do think of it as a daytime, energetic way to medicate. Laurie@Laurieandmaryjane.com
Roasted Strawberry Fool
1 1/2 cups strawberries, trimmed/halved 1/2 cup sugar
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 teaspoons infused oil/melted infused butter
1 cup heavy cream
3 tablespoons powdered sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1. Heat oven to 340°F. In a baking dish, combine the strawberries, sugar and lemon juice. Roast for 20 minutes, stirring a few times. Puree in a blender. Allow to cool at room temperature, then refrigerate until thoroughly chilled. (This step can be done a day ahead.)
2. In a chilled bowl, combine the heavy cream with powdered sugar and vanilla extract. Whip until soft peaks form. Gently fold 1 cup of the chilled strawberry puree into the cream. Chill for 1 hour.
3. Place two serving glasses on your work surface. Spoon 3 tablespoons of the pureed berries into the bottom of each glass. Divide the cream mixture between the glasses, and top with 1 tablespoon of the puree.
Blackberry Smoothie
1 cup fresh blackberries
1 frozen banana, sliced before freezing, drizzled with lime juice
2 tablespoons lime juice
2/3 cup plain or vanilla Greek yogurt
3/4 cups almond or oat milk
2 to 4 tablespoons honey or agave
2 teaspoons infused coconut oil or melted infused butter Lime slices, for garnish
1. In a blender, combine all ingredients. Blend until smooth.
2. Divide between two glasses, and garnish with lime slices.
Blueberry
Buckwheat
Cake
Baking spray
1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup buckwheat flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup coconut oil or melted butter
3 tablespoons infused coconut oil or infused melted butter
2 eggs, beaten
3/4 cup buttermilk
1/2 cup maple syrup
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
Powdered sugar, for dusting
1. Heat oven to 340°F. Spray a 9-inch baking pan and set aside.
2. In a medium bowl, whisk together the all-purpose flour, buckwheat flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon and salt.
3. In another medium bowl, combine the oils or butters, eggs, buttermilk, maple syrup and vanilla extract.
4. Fold the dry ingredients into the buttermilk mixture until combined. Do not overmix.
5. Pour the batter into the prepared pan. Bake until the center is set, 25 to 30 minutes. Allow to cool thoroughly, then dust with powdered sugar.
MAKE GROWING EASY AGAIN
SIMPLIFY YOUR GROW BY SWITCHING TO A GRANULAR FERTILIZER THAT HAS BEEN SPECIALY FORMULATED FOR CANNABIS. IT’S AS SIMPLE AS MIXING IN WITH SOIL OR COCO THEN IT’S WATER ONLY AFTER THAT. BEEN
CUT COSTS REDUCE ERRORS INCREASE QUALITY AND YIELD MOST AFFORDABLE FERTILIZER AT SCALE
There’s no question that Cannabis is a gateway, but to where is the question. If you read all the classic anti-pot literature, the answer is straight into the arms of a heroin needle and a Grand Theft Auto-style shootout with police.
COINED IN THE ’70S and popularized in the ’80s, the concept of Cannabis as a stepping stone to a life of hard drugs has been used as an argument against the plant for almost 100 years. Even though many of us live in states that accept Cannabis as an “adult-use” substance like beer or wine, this administration’s pick for head of the FDA has already referred to Cannabis as a gateway drug. So, it might be worth having a look at how Cannabis came to be labeled a gateway, whether that science holds up, and what we’ve learned since.
Many attribute the term to works published in the 1970s by Dr. Robert DuPont and Dr. Denise Kandel. Tasked by the National Institute on Drug Abuse to study the causes of drug use, Kandel discovered a link between tobacco use and a proclivity for cocaine in animals and found that the statistical link between those substances in humans included the use of Cannabis. DuPont’s book, “Getting Tough on Gateway Drugs,” described weed as one of the most dangerous drugs there is and suggested that without it, the chain from legal substances to illicit ones breaks down. Each of these arguments was founded by the fact that hard drug users had also used Cannabis, but neither proved a link between using Cannabis and using harder drugs.
Kandel has since emphasized that framing Cannabis as the first stone in the chain ignores the giant boulder of easier-to-find substances like wine or nicotine. In fact, she and her husband, Nobel Prize-winning neurologist Dr. Eric Kandel, co-authored a paper on the molecular basis for nicotine as the real gateway drug. DuPont admitted in a 2000 interview that his stance on Cannabis has shifted profoundly over the years and that back then, in a meeting with President Richard Nixon, he was told: “If you make any hint of supporting decriminalization, you are history. Everything else, you figure it out. But that one, I’m telling you, that’s the deal.”
Looking at studies today, there does seem to be some evidence to support both cases for Cannabis leading to other types of drug use. A Colorado study examining whether or not legalization in the state had led to a rise in dangerous crime or drug abuse found no statistical evidence that smoking weed was leading to a rise in things like heroin or crack, nor were people being robbed on the street as a way to score the next joint.
“...framing Cannabis as the first stone in the chain ignores the giant boulder of easier-to-find substances like wine or nicotine.”
However, over in Europe, a Spanish study looked at adolescents to see if Cannabis use increased a chance of opioid use and concluded that there was an increased correlation between those who used opioids and people who also reported using Cannabis.
The American Addiction Centers published a survey showing Cannabis is far behind alcohol and tobacco in terms of the first substance people try. However, that number doubled for Cannabis as the second substance and stayed significantly high in the “third-tried” category. Still, to Kandel’s original point, tobacco and alcohol made up 89.6% of the first-tried category, which supports the thought that Cannabis is present but not the cause of any sort of drug trajectory. So will smoking weed put you on track to dangerous drug use? There are a ton of sociological, economic and behavioral factors that come into play around drug use. And while exposure to drugs during adolescence may increase the likelihood of future use, the data seems to suggest that weed might be along for the ride, but I don’t think it’s the one driving the car.