HEMP/CANNABIS

WHAT IS PHYTOCHROME IN CANNABIS?


By Stoney Tark March 30, 2017




If you’re asking, “What is phytochrome?,” chances are high that you cultivate cannabis. Understanding phytochrome and how this biological receptor truly functions, allows the grower to delve into the technical world of plant science and also to discover how to use this knowledge to their advantage in the grow room.

Understanding The Basics

Phytochrome is a pigment that is found within the leaves of all plants, as well as cannabis. The role of this pigment is to detect light to then allow the plant to grow accordingly based on the season or time to induce flower production. When light hits the surface of a leaf, there will be two types of light sensors at work: one which has the job of detecting blue light and one for detecting red light.

The one designed to sense red light is the phytochrome system.

Ultimately, the sensors will know when there are darkness periods or periods of shading that the plant can recognize as biological signals.

When a plant photosynthesizes, there is a chain reaction of events that occur naturally within the atmosphere. The plant absorbs carbon dioxide and light and in return produces sugars to feed itself. Light is the biological signal to activate photosynthesis, and then how the light is used can determine seed germination, stem elongation, chlorophyll synthesis and the induction of flowering.

The phytochrome system consists of two parts and they are defined as Pr and Pfr. Understanding plant wavelength requirements is something lighting companies have been working on for years, as well as understanding how nature is programmed with a 24 hour body clock known as circadian rhythm.

Circadian Rhythm In Cannabis Explained

In the same way that humans, animals and fungi have a naturally body clock, plants do too, and throughout the year they depend on specific lighting conditions. When growing cannabis, the plants will respond chemically to a light reduction or darkness period that can trigger hormones and induce pre-flowering, blooming and finally ripening of the cannabis buds.

There can be consequences that can lead to genetic problems when changing the circadian rhythm and this is why cannabis plants use two types of phytochrome which are explained below.

Light cycles used during the vegetative cycle will usually range from 16 – 18 hours of light and the plants at this time will respond to darkness or shading periods of 6 – 8 hours. Naturally, a cannabis plant growing outdoors will grow with little internodal spacing and can be trained to grow more wide than tall. When flowering is induced in a cannabis plant, this will signify that hormonal changes have occurred within the plant and can be the time when growing cannabis indoors gets challenging. Receiving only 12 hours or less of light, the plant will react in accordance to what it believe is the change in season.

Phytochrome In Cannabis – Pr

The Pr represents the light absorption at a peak of 666 nm, whilst Pfr represents the light absorption from the range of 705 – 740 nm. When Pr absorbs red light, it will then be converted to Pfr.

Technically this wavelength of light is classed as red light, and during this time, red light changes phytochrome to its biologically active form. Plants that are dark green and usually with short internodal spaces are an expression of Pr range being utilized.

Phytochrome In Cannabis – Pfr

The ‘fr’ stands for far red, and this determines wavelengths or red light that are not Pr but form in the range of 705 – 740 nm, which absorbs at a peak of 730 nm. In the same way that Pr is converted to Pfr, the same occurs when Pfr absorbs far red light and is then converted back to the Pr form.

It sounds complicated and what the relevance of each one does can be hard to understand, however the Pfr phytochrome is responsible for inducing flowering as it corresponds to the amount of available light or shading that is present. There is a role for phytochrome in controlling gene expression, and these can cover the factors of stem elongation, stomatal function and light sensitivity in terms of floral production and plant metabolism.

Manipulating Phytochrome As A Cannabis Grower

Studies have proven that the stretching period that growers experience when inducing flowering can be controlled and manipulated to allow the cannabis plant to stay shorter rather than grow taller. Research has shown that plants treated with far red light focused their energy on root development and growth.

By eliminating the need for the plant to stretch to the highest point, the plant can focus on vigor and developing new shoots, stems and flower sets. The production of chlorophyll will be higher, and as result, the darker leaves produced will attract more sunlight as opposed to lighter green plants.

It is commercially known that blue light at a spectrum of 6400 k is what plants need to grow well. This is classed as a soft blue light and found in most types of fluorescent lighting.

In the same way that the plants require a level of red spectrum in order to perform the next stage of their life cycle and flower. The phytochrome process can ruin your plants by sending the wrong biological signals at the wrong time. These can be accidental errors but can cause enough stress and trauma to the plant, that it can cause the plant to hermaphrodite or experience serious problems with metabolism and function, especially if the circadian rhythm is disrupted.

Conclusion

When understanding the red light spectrum and the plants’ requirements, then you will understand how the phytochrome system works to start the cannabis plants genetic clock and keep it in check.

There is a fine balancing between the plant absorption to lighting and shading. The outcome and variables associated with this natural balancing act can lead to the start and end performance of the cannabis plant.

High levels of 705 – 740 nm allow plants to detect that they are being shaded, which as a result will cause stem elongation. When there is more of 705 – 740 nm, then the leaf development will be smaller than normal and the branching will be significantly less.
 
10 POT PRODUCTS & THC TECH YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT


By Mark Miller March 17, 2017




Cannabis legalization doesn’t only mean blazing great weed and banking big-time profits, it also brings astonishing advances in ancillary pot products and tech that seems to transcend itself each new year.

With that in mind, we’ve compiled an unbiased list of 10 of the latest and greatest offerings in ganja gear that both augment your personal cannabis experience while expanding the industry entire, from cultivation to consumption—and beyond.

1. Growing Your Own Is A “Re-Leaf”

Leaf-1024x592.jpg


What It Is:
Now that it’s legal to grow pot in California and Massachusetts, thousands of new growers will eventually be cultivating indoors. But not all these doobie-newbies have the physical space or the experience to produce high quality bud, so enter: LEAF. As profiled by Forbes, LEAF is a self-contained grow-chamber resembling a little refrigerator that fits snugly in any private residence.

Who Makes It:LEAF, formed by Yoni Ofir, an Israeli military vet who utilizes medicinal cannabis to treat anxiety.

Why It’s Better:
LEAF’s “plug-n-plant” system makes it user-friendly for the novice ganja grower. The device’s drying mode allows for rapid and efficient curing of flowers. Its smartphone-operated humidity and temperature control renders it ideal for any hipster hempster.

Where To Get It:
getleaf.co

2. Jack (Herer) In The Box

Cash-Crop-508x1024.jpg


What It Is:
Here’s a product perfect for California’s brand-new recreational law permitting up to half-a-dozen plants cultivated per residence.It’s Cash Crop 5.0—6 Plant LED Hydroponics Grow Box.This bud box offers options of going two or three-feet tall, with promises to produce up to five pounds of crop annually.

Who Makes It:
Dealzer, a military veteran owned and operated company located in Paducah, Kentucky.

Why It’s Better:
Besides the Cash Crop’s aforementioned precise plant space for meeting Prop 64 legal requirements, the quasar LED lighting holds a perfect spectrum while giving off no heat. And if you ever have problems, they offer unlimited free tech support.

Where To Get It:
hdealzer.com

3. Lease-To-Own Can Be A Bud’s Best Friend

Intiva-Extraction.jpg


What It Is:
The INTIVA C-102 Supercritical C02 Extraction System. Aspiring cannabis companies can get over on the still-behind-the-times big banks that exclude the billion-dollar legal bud industry from receiving financial services enabling large purchases with this lease-to-own supercritical C02 extraction system to create concentrates. The C-102 is now available nationwide after a modest pilot program in California.

Who Makes It:
INTIVA, a multinational corp that operates in the U.S., Canada and Israel.

Why It’s Better:
As detailed by LinkedIn, the C-102 proprietary extraction device is designed for 20-liter capacity, yet just one person can rapidly empty, clean and reload the system.The aforementioned innovative leasing program allows start-ups to conserve their capital for other financial concerns.

Where To Get It:
intivaextractionsystems.com

4. Reefer Recycling

N2-Packaging-1024x582.jpg


What It Is:
A rounded recyclable marijuana tin that stores one-eighth of supremely fresh flowers from producer Honest Marijuana, without pissing off Mother Nature

As noted by Greenerpackage.com, the tin cans are inert to temperature fluctuations, which maintains the robustness of the aroma of the cannabis’ terpenes, enhancing the consumption experience.

Who Makes It:
The tin is manufactured by N2 Packaging Systems LLC, the weed inside is from Honest Marijuana.

Why It’s Better:
Hermetically sealed for ultimate freshness via a patented packaging system, the tin is nitrogen dosed to remove all oxygen and prevent damaging oxidation of the product.

Where To Get It:
n2pack.com

5. Keep Your Mind Candy Handy

Kargo2-1024x870.jpg


What It Is:
Tired of misplacing your marijuana after you’ve had a couple bong rips? Wait, wasn’t it right over…there? That’s no longer an issue thanks to the Kargo 2, combining a seven-inch water-pipe with a built-in stash jar to safely store your flowers.

Who Makes It:
420 Science, which originated hawking a modest jar line in 2004 and has now expanded to create innovative products.

Why It’s Better:
A more compact, convenient version of the original, the Kargo 2 offers three different percolators, including the “Hammerhead Perc,” which pushes all water and bubbles to the sides of the chamber—meaning you can rip the bong as hard as you like for a cool smooth hit without drinking any nasty water in the process!

Where To Get It:
420science.com

6. Patch Up Your Pain And Stress

Transdermal-Patch-1024x576.jpg


What It Is:
A cannabis transdermal patch that provides all-day continuous mood elevation and symptomatic relief. A consistent flow of cannabinoids enters directly into your grateful body and mind without the cough and smoky fingers of combustion, or the sugars and fat of edibles.

Who Makes It:
Manna Molecular Science

Why It’s Better:
Manna Molecular utilizes a proprietary 3D printer dubbed the MannaBot One to uniformly dose their transdermal patches nationwide.

Where To Get It:
mannamolecular.com

7. Become A “Pot Pod Person”

CannaCloud-1024x801.jpg


What It Is:
The CannaCloud Vaporizer has been hyped as the “Keurig of cannabis”—so dubbed because its groundbreaking feature of single-serve “pods” available in sativa, indica, hybrid and CBD. The CannaMatic is the device’s automated filtration system.

Who Makes It:
CannaKorp, based in newly legal Boston.

Why It’s Better:
It provides a convenient and consistent method of dose-controlled cannabinoid medicine to patients.

Where To Get It:
cannakorp.com

8. Dab High On The Fly

SOURCE_nail_Signature_Kit_Temp_Control_2017_SOURCE_volt_Max_enail_eRig_portable_enail_510_enail_titanium_ceramic_quartz.jpg


What It Is:
The SOURCE nail Portable E-nail & Vape Pen, with a temperature control eRig, enables the user to experience the soaring highs that only a blast of dabs can truly provide without having to be stuck indoors.

Who Makes It:
SOURCEvapes

Why It’s Better:
It’s supposedly the only eRig on the market functioning as both a portable e-nail and vape pen. It heats up in only seven seconds, and the split-glass bubbler promises better airflow

Where To Get It:
sourcevapes.com

9. Potent Pen

Amstercan-1024x212.jpg


What It Is:
Ask 10 different reviewers, and you’ll get 10 different recommendations for vape pens; so here’s another: Amster-can, the pen with its most potent oil registering a THC concentration of over 85 percent, approaching dab-like effects.

Who Makes It:
Advantis Corp., with oil manufactured in conjunction with medical pot co-op Natural Elements.

Why It’s Better:
Lab testing confirms the higher potency of the Amster-can oil, guaranteed to remain 100 percent organic from seed to cartridge.

Where To Get It:
advantiscorp.com

10. Respect Your Bong, Protect Your Bong

Oil-Slick-1024x576.jpg


What It Is:
If you’re a social smoker with lots of friends you regularly invite over to your crib for extended bong sessions, then you might want to check out the Slick Shield Bong Condom. Utilizing medical-grade silicone that conforms to the size and shape of any pipe’s mouthpiece, it promises to stretch and cling properly as to never block airflow from the chamber while keeping germs away.

Who Makes It:
Oil Slick, located in Belgium.

Why It’s Better:
Just slip on your bong condom, and you’re ready for action, instead of having to use smelly annoying alcohol swabs to sterilize your glass.

Where To Get It:
aqualabtechnologies.com
 
20 MUST-HAVE CANNABIS-INFUSED BODY PRODUCTS


By Sara Brittany Somerset May 09, 2017




Cannabis-infused beauty products have been around (covertly) for centuries. With legalization sweeping the nation, many more canna-beauty products are coming out of the closet. In fact, so many new products are inundating the market, it’s hard to tell the real deal from the snake oil.

To help sift through various strains of hemp oil hair products and marijuana mud masks, HIGH TIMES has put together a comprehensive, unisex, head-to-toe guide of our favorite canna-scents, serums, lotions and potions.

I have already written about the anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant benefits of cannabidiol (CBD) to help to heal acne, reduce fine lines and wrinkles, and smooth and brighten skin, including a DIY recipe for a THC facial.

Below is a comprehensive product guide to what you can invest in, rather than invent.

Forget Head & Shoulders. Cibaderm’s CBD Hemp Oil Natural Shampoo is a cleansing cannabidiol shampoo that will work wonders for your hair and scalp and is excellent for all hair types. This product contains zero artificial dyes and scents, or sulphates, and is totally free of the toxic paraben sisters, ethyl and methyl.

cibaderm_cbd_hemp_oil_shampoo.jpg.jpg


Nature’s Gate Hemp Nourishing Shampoo & Conditioner are the perfect, dynamic duo for people with dry, thick, wavy or frizzy hair. Hemp oil, rich in omega fatty acids, helps restore moisture and add shine. The renewing properties of milk thistle, elderflower and allspice leave hair silky soft and smooth. In addition to being vegan and cruelty free, they cost a combined $12. How can you beat that?

While Malin + Goetz Hair Pomade isn’t obvious, or particularly pungent—like The Body Shop’s ubiquitous array of cheesy, lime green colored hemp products—it discreetly contains cannabis sativa seed, synthesized with botanical meadowfoam seed and soybean, with absorbent fatty acids for moisture, definition and texture. Yucca and aloe plant extracts help prevent damage and protect your hair from breakage.

hair-pomade_Hi.jpg


Ever since Fresh did away with their covetable Cannabis Rose body cream, it’s been tough to find a comparable cream. Extremely knowledgeable and helpful Fresh skin care consultant Katherine Mastrosimone, from the Spring Street, Soho store in New York City, told us, “Fresh wanted to go paraben-free.” Hallelujah! (It might still be available in a dwindling supply on Ebay.)

The closest we could come to the perfection that was Cannabis Rose body cream is Kush Creams Aloe-Based Face and Eye Cream. This rich, aloe-based cream can be applied during the day under makeup and at night as well. Aloe, known for it’s skin-soothing properties, is combined with premium organic cannabis-infused emu oil and full cannabis extract to work with your natural pH. It’s scent-free and hypoallergenic for even the most sensitive of skin types. While we don’t normally recommend using body creams on your face, you will want to slather this nourishing face cream all over your body.

Thankfully, Fresh still makes delicious scents, Cannabis Rose and Cannabis Santal—the latter of which, I am told actor Bruce Willis buys by the case. Cannabis Santal originally debuted as a men’s scent; however, it was quickly coveted and worn by both sexes. How a scent reacts to your body’s personal pH is definitely more important than whom it’s targeted towards. With top notes of bergamot, Brazilian orange and black plum; middle notes of patchouli, cannabis accord and rose; and base notes of chocolate, vetiver and vanilla musk, it is an irresistible combination, reminiscent of all things scrumptious and sexy. The Cannabis Santal scent also comes in a candle.

CANNABIS-SANTAL-100ML.jpg


Cannabis Santal’s sister scent, Cannabis Rose, is a sultry, floral extension of its predecessor. Cannabis Rose blends top notes of Bulgarian rose, pomegranate flower and bergamot; middle notes of cannabis accord, sheer jasmine and dark chocolate; and base notes of white musk, patchouli and oolong tea.

While I am not normally a fan of patchouli, I tried both perfumes, for one week each, and was told I smell, “insanely fuckable.” Whoa, thanks, Fresh! Now all I need is some canna-mace!

CANNABIS-ROSE-EDP-100ML.jpg


Both scents are packaged in beautiful, artisanal glass bottles. Not surprising, considering Fresh co-founder, Alina Roytberg, is a graduate of Parson’s School of Design. (She should consult for La Prairie. Their Midnight Rain scent bottle looks like a sparkly sperm cell, rather than a raindrop.)

Now that you smell enticingly cannabis-ly sexy, it’s time to move on to makeup.

Take it from someone who has tried almost every mascara on the market, no matter what they promise, I have never, ever found one that doesn’t clump, or even worse, flake off onto my under-eyes and stick to my concealer, making me look like a cross between an exhausted, heroin-chic raccoon and Bette Davis in Whatever Happened to Baby Jane. This is annoying and disappointing, considering I want to wear mascara to make my eyes look spectacular, not scary.

I have tried waterproof mascara (Dior Floor Show) and designer mascara (Chanel). I tried sealing both in with a topcoat of clear mascara, to no avail. I had given up on mascara completely and opted for dying my lashes with henna (and wearing castor oil on my lashes at night, while I slept), until I discovered Modster Big Instant Lash Enhancing Mascara, by Ardency Inn. This first-of-its-kind mascara is formulated with, and boosted by, hemp protein. Hemp protein will add major volume to eyelashes, while enabling keratin creation, a process known to strengthen the lash from within, giving it plenty of body and resilience over time. Modster Big Lash is also vegan and 100 percent cruelty-free, which means bunnies without tear ducts weren’t blinded in its product-testing phase. Awesome.

Ardency-Inn-Modster-Big-Lash.jpg


Although hemp eyeliners aren’t common, you can find a variety of colors of handmade organic mineral eyeliner, which contain organic hemp seed oil, on Etsy.

During my tenure at Aveda, prior to its acquisition by Estee Lauder, I learned that, unlike the rest of your skin, your eyes don’t secrete as much sebum as the rest of your face, and your lips don’t secrete sebum at all. Secreting sebum is our body’s natural way of balancing moisture on our skin’s surface. Some Europeans are so concerned about stripping their sebum, they use it as a reason for not bathing daily.

Lack of sebum on the lips is one of the reasons why, in addition to dehydration and being exposed to inclement weather, our lips become “chapped.” When you apply lip balm, you need to be absolutely sure it contains the most natural and beneficial ingredients possible because, as you inadvertently lick your lips throughout the day, you will definitely ingest it. How much petroleum derived from whale fat (Vaseline) or cancer-causing chemicals, do you really want to swallow?

The best way to ensure that your lips are going to be soft, sensual and safe, is to make your own DIY lip balm. Otherwise, use coconut oil. Coconut is one of the world’s most nourishing super-foods and is a staple in modern, healthy diets. It is also versatile as an all-purpose skin softener and moisturizer.

16oz-coconut-1.jpg


Ojai Energetics’ CBD Coconut oil combines bio-dynamically grown, raw and cold-pressed coconut oil with 150 mg of CBD in every jar. Slather it directly on the skin as a calming and soothing balm, and to combat ashiness and dry skin (or spread it on toast—it’s edible!).

If you want another lip balm that discreetly gives you a buzz, MOTA’s lip balm kicks Chapstick’s ass. It is a seriously lip-loving, cannabis-kissed medication, designed exclusively for your pot-lovin’ pout. Skin-friendly CBD, plus THC, are readily absorbed by the lips. MOTA contains 100 mg of THC and five mg of CBD. Their lip balm is blended with soothing emollients including fully organic cocoa butter, coconut oil, grapeseed oil, shea butter and beeswax.

Now that your lips are well looked after, it’s time to work on that beard.

If you have a scraggly beard that’s in need of fluffing, then Damn Fine Beard Care will work for you. We’re looking at you, population of Philadelphia, with your gnarly, bushy, greasy-looking Rick Ross beards, James Harden wannabees and Williamsburg hipsters. This beard balm is made in the hemp-capital of Colorado and contains hemp seed oil and other organic ingredients.

Dark Waters’ Hemp Shave Oil, made in South Africa, is an all-purpose shaving oil that contains hemp seed oil to protect and nourish your skin before and after shaving. Dark Waters’ Hemp Beard Oil is a unique blend of 80 percent cold-pressed hemp seed oil, plus grapeseed oil and aromas of patchouli, tea tree and sweet orange essential oils to help nourish, moisturize and condition your beard, leaving it feeling soft and manageable. Never mind the campy, Pirates of the Caribbean-looking packaging or the absinth green color. Just pour it into a generic, travel-sized bottle.

Screenshot-2017-04-13-14.17.02.jpg


Now that your face is squared away, let’s focus on your body.

Hemp Hemp Hooray’s Night Cream will help you maintain a beautiful glow and will also repair dry/sun-damaged skin.

Marley Natural’s Body Care Formulas are derived by an extraction process, which utilizes cold-pressed hemp and cannabis sativa seed oil to capture the purest form of its nourishing, nutrient-rich benefits. The oils are combined with home-grown, island-sourced Jamaican botanical ingredient blends, such as lemongrass, ginger and cerassee. All of their formulas are paraben, sulfate and cruelty free. Start your day off with Marley Natural Hemp Seed Body Wash, while singing, “I Shot the Sheriff…” in the shower.

MN-BodyWash-Float.jpg


Follow up with Marley Natural Hemp Seed Body Lotion. It contains marula, baobab and sesame oils, as well as nourishing shea butter. Infused with subtle notes of rosemary and lavender, it smells as good as it feels. Is this love that I’m feeling?

If you’re the type of person who prefers using soap rather than body wash, VIDA’s Lemon Tree Soap does way more than make you come clean. Each bar of Lemon Tree Soap contains 100 mg of THC, which Vida claims is capable of relieving stress, insomnia, pain and even arthritis. My lifelong crush, Sir Patrick Stuart, uses CBD spray to alleviate his arthritis pain. If I ever manage to arrange a meet-cute between us, somewhere other than Comic Con, I will definitely gift him with a bar of Vida.

Comedienne Whoopi Goldberg founded her very own medical marijuana company, Whoopi & Maya, which is staffed by some HIGH TIMES alumni. So, even though we are biased, it truly is a revolutionary line of products, designed and intended for easing the stress and strain of period pain. I wonder if she got the recipe from Donisha Prendergast’s grandmother. W&M’s relaxing, epsom-salt-based, THC-infused bath soak is available in lavender and unscented from California dispensaries.

beautyproducts-timothy-white-credit.jpg

PHOTO BY TIMOTHY WHITE

Don’t forget about your feet—especially if you have been on them all day! Pure CBD Foot Cream by CBD For Life contains cannabinoid extracts, which will moisturize tired and overworked feet. The cool, black, masculine packaging, in a portable five-ounce container, is perfect for your gym bag.

CBD_FootCream650x650_1024x1024.jpg


After a tiring, stressful day, massage some Apothecanna Calming Crème into your work-weary body. (See what they did there? Apothecary + Cannabis.) Apothecanna Calming Crème contains soothing chamomile and, of course, cannabis, which is antibacterial and anti-inflammatory. Apply it directly on areas that are holding tension, such as your neck from staring too long at a computer screen, and lower back from sitting all day in an office chair. Apply it directly to your temples, chest and pulse points to relieve anxiety in times of extreme stress. Use after physical activity and before bedtime to relax your body and calm your mind.

apothecanna_calming_cream.jpg


There are still a plethora of pot products we didn’t get to cover, because while web space is infinite, your attention span is not. What’s your favorite canna-beauty product?
 
HIGHER TECH: THE GEEKS ARE TAKING OVER THE CANNABIS INDUSTRY


By Robyn Griggs Lawrence July 20, 2017




Cannabis is one of the world’s fastest-growing industries, currently worth $7.2 billion and projected to be valued at $20.5 billion by 2020, while creating nearly 300,000 new jobs. Those numbers, from the marijuana-business data firm New Frontier, have made the tech world sit up and take notice: They’ve been cited everywhere from Wired to Fortune to PC Magazine, in articles encouraging geeks and suits to launch or invest in startups serving the upstart industry.

Last October, when Richard Branson keynoted the New West Summit 2.0—billed as “the first conference to focus exclusively on the game-changing, disruptive developments in technology, investment and media within the cannabis space”—he told the crowd of more than 1,000 gathered in San Francisco that cannabis “has enormous potential, with the ability to do a lot of good.”

The New West Summit 2.0 was an important event in the evolution of cannabis, because, as Harborside Health Center founder and CEO Steve DeAngelo explained to CNET, “this plant has been illegal and underground since the invention of technology.”

As the cannabis industry moves from prohibition’s black-market obscurity to a new age of grueling transparency and highly competitive legal markets, the “geeks” are catching up with the growers. Tech companies are eagerly offering solutions to cannabusinesses for everything from monitoring grow-op conditions to analyzing point-of-sale data, as well as developing apps and technologies to improve cultivation, extraction and ingestion.

Sweet Leaf Marijuana, the nation’s fifth-largest cannabis producer, processor and retailer, with 13 outlets in Colorado, Oregon, Illinois and Massachusetts, is a prime target for every new technology developed for the cannabis industry. These days, the Denver-based company gets so many calls from tech companies that the front desk has been trained to wean them out.

“They see us as cash cows,” said Sweet Leaf vice president Nichole West.

“For us, everything costs three times as much,” added Sweet Leaf co-founder Matthew Aiken. “The marijuana light bulb? It’s really expensive.”

Sweet Leaf was started in 2010 by three partners with $9,000 and co-founder Christian Johnson’s American Express card; last year, it earned $70 million and now employs 350 people. To build this mini-empire, Sweet Leaf has reinvested more than 80 percent of its profits, much of that to keep up with technology. And, for the most part, the investment pays off: A Futurola machine that cranks out 100 joints in 10 minutes paid for itself in 10 days.

In Colorado, cannabis plants are tracked digitally from seed to sale, and grow ops and retail outlets must be monitored by systems that require a whole lot of bandwidth. Sweet Leaf uses Complia software for its compliance documentation as well as Flow Hub, point-of-sale software that automatically reports to the state’s cannabis-tracking system. At the company’s retail stores, employees can scan the barcode from customers’ IDs and immediately update their information, speeding up the check-in process by about 70 percent. And because the software tracks plants from seed to sale, it also provides helpful data on strain yields.

Keeping up with technology is expensive, said Johnson, who measures Sweet Leaf’s growth not by profits or even plants but by the number of grow lights (the company started with around 40 and currently boasts 3,500). He’s happy with the Nanolux DE Commercial Series lights used in Sweet Leaf’s 250,000 square feet of warehouse space in Colorado, because the exposed bulbs don’t have to be cooled and are easier to clean and change.

During a tour of the company’s cavernous West Denver warehouse, which produces about 65 pounds of cannabis per day, Johnson—who built houses, restaurants and fiber-optic networks before starting Sweet Leaf—looked around at the concrete walls. “With indoor cultivation, there’s no way to save money,” he lamented. “How much longer are we going to be growing marijuana in warehouses? This was all state-of-the-art three years ago.”

sweet-leaf-1024x640.jpg

SWEET LEAF PRODUCES ABOUT 65 POUNDS OF CANNABIS PER DAY WITHIN 250,000 SQUARE FEET OF WAREHOUSE SPACE.

In Sweet Leaf’s growrooms, an automated sun rises and sets, sensors monitor humidity and CO2 levels, and Doseatron machines inject nutrients and chemicals into water lines. Yet, West insisted, “our farming systems are still very farm.” There are certain things the Sweet Leaf team doesn’t believe should be automated, she explained: “We don’t want to lose the human connection.”

As a consumer, West is equally selective. She wants to choose her buds and watch a budtender package them; she hates buying cannabis that was separated, weighed and packaged by a machine. It’s like the difference between ordering hand-cut steaks from a neighborhood butcher and grabbing a plastic-encased tube of ground beef from the grocery store.

When it comes to her job as chief buyer for Sweet Leaf’s stores, however, West is decidedly new-school. She sees just about every new tech innovation for ingesting cannabis before it hits the market. Before any vaporizer, rosin or transdermal patch makes it onto Sweet Leaf’s shelves, West distributes samples to the managers and budtenders and records their evaluations about taste, effects and marketability on a spreadsheet she’s been building since 2015.

“Look at this data I’ve compiled!” West said as she pulled the spreadsheet up on a large monitor in her Denver office. In an industry starved for data, West knows that this spreadsheet may be one of the company’s most valuable assets.

West’s data—and her instincts—tell her that transdermal technology will be the next big thing among cannabis consumers. Sales of flowers still crush everything else in Sweet Leaf’s stores, but transdermal patches are on the rise, accounting for 7 percent of sales and, more importantly, appealing to the 50-to-60-year-old demographic that is Sweet Leaf’s largest customer base.

“Everyone—people you never would have thought would be interested in cannabis—is utilizing that technology,” West said. “Transdermal technology is really bringing people out of the woodwork … more than the vape pen.”

Transdermal technology isn’t new, but it’s relatively new to the cannabis industry. It emerged in the late 20th century with nicotine and fentanyl patches, and it crossed over to the cannabis industry in 2013. Mary’s Medicinals demonstrated the very first transdermal THC patch, which had been 10 years in the making, at the first HIGH TIMES US Cannabis Cup in San Francisco. When it’s placed on a venous part of the body (an ankle or inside the wrist), the patch is activated by body heat to begin releasing controlled doses of medication directly into the bloodstream, bypassing the liver and gastrointestinal tract.

Dr. Noel Palmer, Mary’s chief scientist, likens the delivery of THC, CBD and other cannabinoids through timed-release transdermal patches to “smoking, but much slower.” And because the cannabinoids don’t get broken down in the liver or digestive system, he added, they deliver more potent medicine.

MarysMeds-1024x640.jpg

MARY’S MEDICINALS TESTS FOR CANNABINOID AND TERPENE LEVELS, PESTICIDES AND ADULTERANTS THREE TIMES BEFORE PRODUCTS LEAVE THE FACILITY.

Mary’s Medicinals, a $6 million Denver-based company with 26 employees, develops cutting-edge approaches for isolating, manufacturing and delivering medicinal cannabis. It’s the leading producer of pharmaceutical-grade cannabis products, now available at about 1,000 retail outlets in Colorado, Arizona, Oregon, Nevada, Vermont and Washington. Even more significantly, Mary’s was awarded a US patent for its transdermal cannabinoid-gel technology—a cannabis-industry first.

“We found a niche for people who were curious about cannabis therapeutics or wanted alternative delivery mechanisms,” Palmer said. “That’s where we formed our reputation and our name, and that’s where we’re really doing good.”

Palmer is most enthusiastic about Mary’s gel pen. According to the patent, the gel is composed of a surfactant (lecithin organogel), a cannabinoid such as THC or CBD, and sometimes an exogenous terpene that are “diffused into the bloodstream of the user” to treat pain, nausea and emesis, convulsions, muscle spasm, inflammation, depression or cachexia. Every time a user squeezes the pen, it delivers gel with 2 milligrams of THC or CBD, which are quickly absorbed into the bloodstream when the gel is rubbed onto the skin. It’s an especially welcome breakthrough for chemo patients experiencing nausea.

Mary’s was also one of the first manufacturers of cannabis-infused products in Colorado to employ in-house HPLC (high-pressure liquid chromatography) testing equipment to separate, identify and quantify cannabis compounds. The company tests for cannabinoid and terpene levels, as well as for pesticides and other adulterants, several times: first when the cannabis comes into the lab; a second time when it’s distilled into oil using old-fashioned alcohol (because, as Palmer said, “you don’t need a Ferrari to drive around the block”); and a third time when it’s formulated into products. No product goes out the door until internal testing has assured that it will pass state-mandated third-party tests for cannabinoid levels and pesticides.

“You have to test,” said Mary’s chief executive officer, Liz Honderd. “You have no way of knowing if you’re accurately dosing without testing. That’s why our internal testing is above and beyond.”

In the cannabis industry, companies are spending a lot of money and brainpower to make guaranteed dosage the new norm. At the Ebbu labs overlooking Floyd Hill west of Evergreen, Colorado, scientists have spent two years and $9 million developing proprietary pharmacological technology that extracts, isolates, and recombines cannabinoids and terpenes to deliver predicable, consistent results. Unlike Big Pharma’s mono-pharmacological approach of relying on single, isolated compounds, Ebbu—the name purposely means nothing and was chosen from a list of open domain names—is playing with poly-pharmacology. Its scientists use custom SuperSep 1000 chromatography equipment from the global pharmaceutical-technology provider Novasep to isolate and purify up to 18 different cannabinoids at the same time so they can be combined in new formations.

Led by the company’s chief scientist, Dr. Brian Reid, the Ebbu team grows live cells with a variety of special human receptors that respond to THC, CBD and other cannabinoids, then uses delicate equipment to measure the biological reaction when different combinations of cannabinoids and terpenes are introduced to these cells. It’s Dr. Frankenstein meets the “entourage effect” (the theory that cannabis is most effective when all of its cannabinoids, terpenes and other compounds remain intact). “This is the real fun, and where we diverge from what pharmaceutical companies do,” said Reid, who left the University of Colorado to build and run Ebbu’s labs. “We take all the things Mother Nature has given us and mix and match them to a different effect. We’re taking apart the entourage effect and recombining it to make consistent products with distinctive experiences.”

“The ‘entourage effect,’ to this point, has been this magic voodoo term,” added Ebbu CEO Jon Cooper. But they mean to demystify it.

To that end, in November of 2016, Ebbu introduced Bold Genesis, a vaporizer and patented high-potency cannabis oil that promises to deliver “predictable and reliable consistency,” according to the company’s press release. By isolating various cannabinoids and recombining them to create a pharmacologically consistent product, “we believe we have created something that is entirely new,” said Ebbu scientist Jon Martin. The Ebbu team has identified three cannabinoids and three terpenes that enhance THC’s effect at cannabinoid receptors in the human brain to induce “a long-lasting, potent but clearheaded experience ideal for any type of social setting,” Martin continued.

According to Cooper, Bold Genesis delivers a lucid and functional high: “Whatever you’re doing, you just want to do more of it.”

ebbu-zeus-1024x640.jpg

EBBU’S ZEUS IS A SUPERCRITICAL FLUID CHROMATOGRAPHY MACHINE THAT CAN PURIFY UP TO 18 DIFFERENT CANNABINOIDS AT A TIME.

Ebbu’s scientific team, led by four PhDs with deep roots in the commercial-drug industry, has also been collecting data from a pool of about 500 volunteers for a premium oil line called Feelings, which will offer formulas like “Chill,” “Energy,” “Create” and “Bliss.” They’ve built “a huge data set of how each formulation works, from early dose to late dosage,” Cooper said. Ebbu has developed three prototypes and plans to launch Feelings later this year.

In the company’s R&D lab, lined with vials of concentrated cannabinoids designed to deliver specific moods or soothe certain aches, scientists are developing water-soluble solutions and other innovative delivery mechanisms that can offer cannabis products in single-serve, premeasured doses to be mixed with liquid or dissolved under the tongue.

Ebbu is also innovating out of necessity. In order to make many of its formulations, the company needs hard-to-find cannabinoids like CBG and CBD-V (the ones most people have never heard of). To meet those needs, Ebbu’s genetics division is breeding plants high in such rarefied cannabinoids and terpenes.

Cooper won’t say much about the company’s work with genetics, except that Ebbu’s scientists are also working on plants that will increase the yields of these harder-to-get cannabinoids. “THC and CBD are commodities now, but there’s a lot of important potential value in other compounds,” Cooper said. “The problem is, you can’t get them. We’re working on a number of things that would allow us to access these other compounds.”

For Ebbu’s purposes, the individual traits that have traditionally made cannabis strains attractive no longer apply. “We don’t really care about strains, but more about how much CBG and CBN we can get out of plants,” Cooper said. “It becomes more of a math formula at that point.”
 
5 CONDITIONS YOU DIDN’T KNOW COULD BE TREATED WITH POT


By Mark Miller July 19, 2017




Cover photo by Jesse Faatz.

As the research continues, the list of conditions that can be treated with cannabis continues to grow.

1. Autism

20151201WhatIsAutism-844-2.jpg


As profiled by Philly.com in April, former teen mall stoner turned “canna-mom” Erica Daniels righteously defends administering a cannabinoid spray to her 12-year-old son Leo, who is severely autistic and unable to communicate significantly. Cannabis has dramatically improved Leo’s life and well-being, with no negative side effects. Erica has since established a nonprofit called Hope4Leo.org.

2. Fibromyalgia

fibromyalgia-s1-photo-of-pain-locations.jpg


This disorder is characterized by widespread musculoskeletal pain, with symptoms like fatigue, numbness and tingling. Recently, OWC Pharmaceutical Research delivered a promising presentation at a forum held in the European city-state of Monaco on the human endocannabinoid system and cannabis, highlighting the potential benefits to fibromyalgia patients using compounds like CBD in pain management.

3. Eczema

itchy-eczema-by-getty-images-56a307a33df78cf7727b8e10.jpg


A meta-analysis conducted by researchers at the University of Colorado and published in the American Academy of Dermatology determined that pharmaceuticals containing cannabinoids could prove effective against eczema (also called dermatitis), an inflammation of the skin. In one of the studies cited, cannabinoid-based creams completely eliminated severe itching in over a third of the patients who applied it twice a day for just three weeks.

4. Lupus

493x335_lupus_overview_slideshow.jpg


The use of cannabis to treat this autoimmune disease, which spreads inflammation throughout the body, even into the brain, has been recognized by the Hawaii State Legislature. Lawmakers included it as one of the qualifying conditions for medical cannabis use in Senate Bill 174, which passed in April 2017. Cannabinoids reduce the inflammation caused by lupus along with its associated pain.

5. Parkinson’s Disease

493x335_parkinsons_brain_stimulation.jpg


The Institute of Cannabis Research at Colorado State University, Pueblo, hosted a conference that included the latest developments in the cannabidiol (CBD) treatment of Parkinson’s, the neuro-degenerative disorder. A study published in the October 2016 journal Parkinson’s Disease concluded that medical cannabis was effective in treating both the motor and non-motor symptoms of the disease as well as slowing its progress.
 
WALL STREET PREDICTS POT WILL HURT BEER SALES


By Mike Adams April 21, 2017




Despite the fact that marijuana remains illegal in the eyes of the United States government, analysts on Wall Street are predicting the cannabis industry could soon put a hefty dent in beer sales.

According to a report from CNBC, New York investment bank Cowen Group recently downgraded its market performance rating for Molson Coors Brewing Co (TAP), a major producer of mainstream beer brands like Coors Light, Fosters and Miller High Life, because it is convinced the company, whose net saleswere close to $11 billion in 2016, will suffer some loss in the coming years because more people are interested in weed.

In a letter sent to their clients on Thursday morning, Cowen analyst Vivien Azer wrote: “We believe alcohol could be under pressure for the next decade, based on our data analysis covering 80 years of alcohol and 35 years of cannabis incidence in the US. Since 1980, we have seen 3 distinct substitution cycles between alcohol and cannabis; we are entering another cycle.”

The letter went on explain how an overall increase in cannabis use has affected the past three cycles of alcohol consumption. Azer said historical data shows beer sales could soon drop by around 22 percent, the same as they did several decades ago, due to a “notable inverse correlation with cannabis use.”

“For TAP, the emerging cannabis category could prove more problematic, given the company’s exposure to mainstream beer in both the US and Canada,” she wrote. “While we are confident in TAP’s ability to generate their targeted cost savings, we are lowering our volume outlook to reflect our expectations for persistent volume headwinds for the beer industries in these two markets.”

This is not the first time Cowen has warned investors that the brewing industry could suffer because of legal weed. Earlier last year, the company released a report suggesting that craft beer sales in legal states, like Colorado and Washington, were not as competitive ever since marijuana products became legally available in retail outlets.

But this does not necessarily mean that the cannabis industry is killing the alcohol trade.

A report published earlier this year by market analysis firm Bernstein found that legal marijuana was not tearing away at the alcohol trade. In fact, the report, titled “Weekend Consumer Blast: Beer & Weed Revisited,” concluded that, “beer and weed are complements rather than substitutes.”

Nevertheless, Cowen has squashed Molson Coors target price, bringing it down from $120 to $105.

“Coming out of the recession, alcohol’s recovery has been uneven, while cannabis incidence (and legal sales) have both risen markedly,” Azer wrote. “We believe this sets up the alcoholic beverage category for another cycle of falling per capita consumption. With cannabis adoption accelerating, alcohol volumes will remain under pressure.”
 
WHY THE ROSIN REVOLUTION IS REAL


By HT Sponsor March 03, 2017

Sponsored by Pure Pressure




This post is sponsored by Pure Pressure.

More often than not, the word “revolution” is used hyperbolically—i.e. very few things are legitimately revolutionary. Rosin extraction is an exception to the common misuse of this very powerful word.

The entire cannabis industry should take note: Rosin’s revolution is underway and will profoundly impact patients, consumers and businesses. Now emerging from relative obscurity in a concentrate market dominated by BHO, rosin is no longer confined to the realm of hobbyist’s hair straighteners and repurposed shop presses.

With the evolution in rosin press technology, rosin can now be produced on a commercial scale cheaply and safely. It comes as no surprise to many that concentrated cannabis products, such as shatter, wax, pre-filled vape pens and related extracts are in incredible demand across the country. For example, Colorado saw a surge of over 125 percent growth in concentrate sales between Q1 of 2015 and 2016, which is likely to be replicated in other maturing markets.

Patients and consumers alike are finding out that concentrates typically act as very potent medicines and offer unparalleled relief, flavors and experiences. On top of all of this momentum, rosin is uniquely poised to become product of choice and preferred extraction method by many.

The bottom line is that rosin is the cheapest, safest and easiest way to create full melt, dab-friendly cannabis concentrates.

Demand for Rosin Will Increase Exponentially

Rosin is on track to become one of the connoisseur’s primary concentrates of choice and a big part of the extraction product mix of nearly every cannabis business operation for the following reasons:

  • Rosin is 100 percent free of solvents, so it is certain that health conscious consumers will seek it out, perhaps exclusively. Additionally, contaminants and pesticides aren’t removed in the rosin extraction process, so product testing yields transparent source-material results, further increasing rosin’s potential value.
  • Rosin is just as potent as BHO and other concentrates by cannabinoid percentage, typically in the 70 percent range, but has also been known to test in the high 80 percentage range and beyond.
  • Rosin extraction is extremely safe with absolutely no risk of explosion, ignition or serious bodily harm that are possible with flammable solvents.
  • Rosin is significantly cheaper to produce compared to solvent-based extraction methods, often with comparable yields. The startup costs required for extracting rosin are dramatically less than any solvent-based, closed-loop system.
  • Rosin is often extracted from premium quality material, not questionable bulk trim. Terpene preservation in rosin is also very high, and some rosin has been tested at nearly 13 percent total terpene content or more.
  • Rosin can be manipulated into nearly all popular textures or consistencies, such as shatter, wax, crumble, budder, sugar, etc., so that virtually anyone can enjoy their favorite type of concentrate free of solvents.
  • Rosin can be made profitably from virtually any starting material available, including dry sift, flowers, bubble hash or sifted trim, and typically retails anywhere from $40 – $80 per gram recreationally.
If that isn’t enough to convince you that rosin has massive potential, read on.

Simply put, rosin is extremely safe to extract and multitudes cheaper to produce than other competing methods. For these reasons, it’s immediately clear that rosin will have a very prominent place in the burgeoning cannabis industry.

Image2-1024x640.jpg


Safety Is Key

In doing away with butane, propane, alcohol, CO2 and other solvent-based methods, rosin is easily one of the safest ways to produce highly desirable cannabis concentrates. There is never a risk of explosion or dangerous ignition, which is hugely important. This means that rosin extraction provides a few critical benefits.

First and foremost, extracting rosin never puts a lab technician or extractor in harms way. Secondly, the amount of ancillary equipment required to handle the extraction process itself is negligible, so that the ventilation and storage of dangerous solvents is no longer part of the equation. Safety is a crucial aspect of cannabis extraction that regulators are demanding given the news stories that have circulated about amateurs blowing themselves and their homes apart.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, the caregiver and medicinal at-home extraction market is expanding rapidly right alongside licensed laboratories, which resembles in many ways the wildly popular craft brewing scene. At the time of writing, anyone can buy closed-loop extraction systems generally with or without proper licensure, and the same goes for rosin presses.

Producing rosin is the only truly viable and safe extraction method alongside hash washing, especially so in a non-laboratory setting. The safety of extracting rosin massively benefits caregivers and patients alike so that they can create their own concentrates without risking life and limb or a felony.

Image3-1024x640.jpg


Rosin Is Inexpensive to Make

Many people tend to think that rosin will simply remain a cottage industry, one carried out only on a very small scale. Rosin extraction technology is developing at light speed, and now many businesses, such as the current industry leader PurePressure, are offering commercial-scale rosin presses that have outputs comparable to small and medium sized closed-loop extraction systems that cost around 10 times less.

That is not a typo.

For example, the Pikes Peak rosin press costs under $6,000 and can process four pounds or more of flower per day or easily double that amount of dry sift or hash, with a single operator in one day. This amount of material processed per day is similar to a smaller closed-loop extraction systems, which run between $40,000 – $80,000 or more by themselves. The price difference is especially staggering when every factor necessary to run a solvent-based extraction unit is taken into account.

When weighing the costs of rosin production against virtually any other extraction method, it becomes clear why rosin is going to revolutionize cannabis.

If you add up all of the costs of closed-loop extraction, it quickly becomes apparent how expensive it really is. Here is a list of what is necessary to get a closed-loop system operational:

  1. The solvent-based extraction machine itself
  2. Recirculators, pumps, vacuum purge ovens and other ancillary equipment
  3. Specialized HVAC requirements
  4. Significant laboratory square footage
  5. Extra construction and blast-proof building requirements
  6. Expert lead extraction artists and technicians that command hefty salaries
  7. Massive investment of time before anything is being extracted at all
Add all of that up and a typical business is looking at hundreds of thousands of dollars on the low end just to get started with BHO or CO2 extraction.

Producing rosin, on the other hand, does away with pretty much all of these extra costs.

All you need to get going with rosin is a press, often with an air compressor and the inexpensive accessories necessary to collect the rosin itself. Since rosin extraction is fundamentally simple, the labor costs involved are also quite a bit lessened. This is not to take anything away from the skill and expertise of professional extractors whatsoever, but it goes to show that methodologies for extracting rosin can be successfully executed and learned by employees with less experience.

Basic rosin extraction set up: $3,000 – $10,000

Basic closed-loop extraction set up: $100,000 – $200,000, often more

Another huge benefit with rosin, especially for new labs and caregivers, is that you can get started with rosin and produce incredible concentrates same-day. Conversely, closed-loop systems typically require months of planning to execute and begin processing. When it comes to the bang for your buck, as well as your time, producing rosin is a no-brainer for anyone interested in producing concentrates.

Image4-1024x640.jpg


Conclusion

Rosin technology and extraction methods are certain to be ubiquitous in the cannabis industry going forward.

Regulators and politicians across the United States are keeping close tabs on existing cannabis state markets, so without a doubt solvent-less extraction methods are viewed favorably when compared to BHO and other highly flammable alternatives.

Recently legalized states, both medical and recreational, are formulating new laws to regulate cannabis cultivation, processing, distribution and sales. Safety will be a carefully considered element by these lawmakers, and rosin extraction fits comfortably into framework that satisfies legislators and fire departments alike.

When you consider the natural progression of technology toward automation, rosin is well on its way to compete output-wise with massive scale solvent-based extraction systems.

According to ArcView, the cannabis industry is already worth a whopping $6.7 billion, with expectations to grow to over $20 billion by 2021. We can only speculate how the concentrates market will concurrently grow nationally, but if Colorado, the country’s most mature recreational market, is any indication, it’s almost certain to grow dramatically across the country.

It is easy to envision a future where rosin presses are commonplace in all dispensaries, so that customers can simply purchase flower and press it on the spot into dabs.

All aspects considered—from safety, to cost, to ease of use—rosin is a clear frontrunner for being the most widely practiced method of extraction.

The general consensus is growing strongly in favor of a true rosin revolution. We strongly believe that this new wave of solvent-less concentrate production will empower patients and growers, as well as businesses ,big and small.

There’s no telling exactly what will happen in the next few years as the cannabis industry evolves, but you can be sure that rosin will be a big part of it.

Follow PurePressure on Social Media
YouTube: Pure Pressure
Facebook: /GoPurePressure
Instagram: @GoPurePressure
MassRoots: @GoPurepressure
 
KUSH GETS SERIOUS


By Green Born Identity September 25, 2017




Before the legendary cannabis-breeding company Serious Seeds unveiled a new strain called Serious Kush, they asked a trusted grower to try out four potential versions and assess the flavor, aroma, and potency of each. Our cultivation correspondent reports on the results.

A NEW STAR IS BORN
There’s no end in sight for the global phenomenon known as “Kushmania,” with new Kush-based strains and phenotypes popping out of the ground like mushrooms every month. But one variety stands out from the rest as a rare and precious specimen that deserves special attention. This new strain comes from Serious Seeds, the renowned and long-established seed company based in the Netherlands. The strain is called Serious Kush, and it consists of one of their classic best-sellers, White Russian, crossed with the legendary OG Kush.

While Serious Seeds have slightly stepped up the frequency with which they release new strains in recent years, they’re still laudably pursuing their strict quality-before-quantity policy, so the expectations for this new Kush variety were high. And according to Serious breeder Simon, their customers won’t be disappointed: “I’m personally very happy with the result of the Serious Kush. Also, many very experienced people who tried it remark to me that this version is, quote, ‘the best they’ve ever smoked’!”

SERIOUS HISTORY
For well over two decades, Serious Seeds have been at the forefront of marijuana breeding. Founded in Amsterdam in 1995 by Simon, the company has won multiple Cannabis Cups and was one of the inaugural entrants in our High Times Seed Bank Hall of Fame back in 2007. While many other companies have expanded their line to include several dozen varieties or even more, Simon and his team have focused on just a handful of strains and kept them bred true, with superb flavor, scent and potency as well as impeccable germination rates.

kush-gets-serious3-645x1000.jpg

SERIOUS KUSH PACKS ON WEIGHT AS IT MATURES. (PHOTO BY GREEN BORN IDENTITY)

The Serious stable of strains includes such stalwarts as AK-47, Kali Mist, Bubble Gum and White Russian. The seeds for these award-winning strains are produced in small batches and thus are always hand-selected and fresh. Simon’s emphasis on stability and consistency may have cost him a few dollars over the years, but the reputation he’s built for his products remains impeccable. That’s why we—and the rest of the world’s cannabis connoisseurs—have been so anxiously awaiting a new release from the Serious team.

BREEDING KUSH
Asked why he created Serious Kush, Simon said: “A few years ago, while I was on a trip to Canada, somebody gave me very resinous buds of an accidental cross between White Russian and OG Kush.” The potent strain quickly became a favorite among the people who tried it. “It was a great combo—a more subtle but clear and fuel-like ‘Kushy’ taste combined with the structure and yield of White Russian, which even after smoking for a long period doesn’t lose its strength and attractiveness. So I decided to start an actual breeding project back home with White Russian and OG Kush.”

kush-gets-serious5.jpg

BREEDER SIMON EXAMINES A LAB SPECIMEN. (PHOTO BY GREEN BORN IDENTITY)

The whole process for breeding Serious Kush took about a year and a half. After the initial selection stage for possible parents, Simon ended up with four different parent combos, from which a clear winner eventually emerged. As Simon notes, the keeper pheno offers a nice new blend of Kush’s trademark fuel aroma with the sweet and spicy undertones of White Russian. Serious Kush grows to a height of 75 to 85 centimeters when given four weeks of vegetative time, then requires 56 to 63 days in the flowering stage to mature, after which growers are rewarded with 300 to 450 grams per square meter.

kush-gets-serious4.jpg

SIMON AND PAUL OF SERIOUS SEEDS SEEM HAPPY WITH THE RESULTS. (PHOTO BY GREEN BORN IDENTITY)

GROWING SERIOUSLY
It was with a good deal of excitement and pride that Mr. Power Planter approached the opportunity to become a part of this important new breeding project. This was at the crucial stage when Simon—still not sure which cross would ultimately prove to be the best—wanted to see those different parent lines grown out next to one another. As Simon reports, “By this time, we had plants of the same crosses growing at different locations, but Mr. PP was the first to offer a head-to-head comparison of those lines. So his work was very helpful to give us strong hints toward finding the favorite for which we were searching.”

For this test, Mr. Power Planter received four different White Russian x OG Kush lines in the form of 10 feminized seeds each. Although he knew these seeds were fresh and in optimum condition, he was stunned by the fact that every single one of them sprouted perfectly. A germination rate of 100% from 40 seeds is undoubtedly an impressive achievement. It turned out to be a great start!

kush-gets-serious1-799x1000.jpg

SERIOUS KUSH EXHIBITS EXTENSIVE BRANCHING. (PHOTO BY GREEN BORN IDENTITY)

After Mr. Power Planter had transplanted them into 7.5-liter pots, the plants grew beautifully in the vegetative stage. All of them displayed that typical Serious quality, defined by healthy, vigorous and compact growth on strong branches. In the veg stage, the four lines didn’t show much difference, apart from the fact that two were growing a bit more compactly—but aside from that, all of the plants resembled each other fairly closely, with similar or identical growth patterns and the same medium-broad, dark-green shade leaves.

KUSH FLOWERS
“Simon seems to have done an excellent breeding job up to this point,” Mr. Power Planter noted, “as there already is a pretty good degree of vegetative uniformity, both within and among these four lines.” When he switched the 40 plants to the flowering stage after four weeks of veg growth, they were about 40 to 55 cm tall. Pre-flowering set in about a week later, with all of the plants exhibiting what Mr. Power Planter wanted to see: female flowers.

Stem elongation continued until week four of the flowering stage and naturally revealed a bit more dissimilarity between the lines due to somewhat different stretching behavior. This led to a couple of plants looking like dense indica bushes later on—albeit very well-branched indica bushes—while the others were taller and had a more open branching structure.

More differences became evident in terms of bud formation. While the buds overall were clearly on the indica side, some of them gradually differed in shape and calyx-to-leaf-ratio—no huge surprise when you have four different lines growing. But after eight weeks of flowering, all of the buds had three crucial things in common: They were all extremely big, extremely dense and extremely resinous!

kush-gets-serious2.jpg

SERIOUS KUSH COLAS SWELL UNDER GROW LIGHTS. (PHOTO BY GREEN BORN IDENTITY)

As far as the eye could see, Mr. Power Planter’s sizable growroom was crowded with huge, fat head buds and heavily bud-laden side branches. “Now this is some really serious—even insane—overall quality!” he said enthusiastically. “When I heard that I would grow four different genetic lines from an intermediate stage of breeding, I had expected that only one or two would perform very well—but certainly not all of them to rock the show in such a stunning manner! Simply amazing … some of these plants are among the most resinous cannabis specimens I’ve ever witnessed. They’re so white that one gets almost blinded by the incredible abundance of resin that seems be to dripping out of the buds!”

SERIOUS SCENTS
“The super-rich aroma of these plants is likewise impressive,” Mr. Power Planter continued. “Here we have a higher degree of variation as a matter of course, with two of the four lines basically giving off that typical Kush odor, sweetened with a sugary note of White Russian. I presume that these two lines will be shortlisted by Simon, as a ‘Kushy’ aroma certainly is an important selection criterion for him.”

The flowering times ran approximately eight to 10 weeks, with most of the plants maturing between weeks eight and nine. When Simon came to inspect the plants after eight weeks of flowering, he was stoked by the sight of Mr. Power Planter’s results. He happily sniffed around the growroom, busily made notes about the plants’ characteristics and took some photos. “Making a decision is not going to be easy indeed,” he told Mr. Power Planter. “And, of course, I also need to include the actual dry end-products into my choice.”

YIELDING KUSH
Once Mr. Power Planter had harvested and dried his entire White Russian x OG Kush crop, the average yield turned out to be about 90 grams per plant, which Mr. PP considered highly remarkable for an experimental strain. He had also gained an abundance of heavily resinous leafy material from the harvest that would later be processed into plenty of primo hashish. Without a doubt, this new Serious strain had proven to be a supremely productive hash plant as well.

kush-gets-serious7-678x1000.jpg

DRY SERIOUS KUSH BUD PACKS AN INDICA PUNCH. (PHOTO BY GREEN BORN IDENTITY)

Simon was keen to get some detailed feedback as soon as possible. Given the sheer mass of buds harvested, test-smoking them all in a short period of time would be an impossible task, so Mr. Power Planter—together with a couple of friends—decided to focus on a range of selected specimens from each of the four lines.

SERIOUS TESTING
All of these superb and incredibly frosty buds looked and smelled like true champions. The fuel scent produced by two of the lines had not only survived the drying process but had even gained in intensity, though mixed with notes of sweetness and spiciness. The other two lines were sweet and savory, also promising a delicious taste experience.

Test-smoking the dried buds felt like an exciting feast. The guys weren’t surprised at all when every single nugget they sampled turned out to pack a jaw-dropping indica punch that brought on a tremendously strong sensation of stoniness and relaxation—one potent enough to astound even jaded smokers like Mr. Power Planter and his pals. As Mr. PP reported: “This is eye-rollingly intense marijuana coming with all the hallmarks desired from a mighty Kush strain—a full-blast body-and-head turn lasting for hours and providing a deep, long-lasting breath of blissful relaxation that gives you glazed eyes and a feeling of having your head in the clouds.

“These indica-driven effects are great for unwinding and alleviating stress and pain, so I’m sure that Serious Kush will become very popular with medical patients. Some of the buds also revealed a lofty sativaeffect after the first tokes—which sooner or later gave way to that mighty indica hammer, though. As for the flavor, all the buds delivered an intense burst of spicy sweetness that lingered on the tongue and palate very long—a yummy full-mouth taste that was deeply enjoyed by all of us.”

kush-gets-serious6.jpg

SIMON SHOWS OFF HIS NEWEST CREATION. (PHOTO BY GREEN BORN IDENTITY)

All four of the potential Serious Kush lines had passed Mr. Power Planter’s test grow with flying colors. After Simon was able to test a selection of the dry buds himself, he reported several weeks later that he’d chosen line number three as the winner—one of the two lines with a powerful Kush aroma—and would continue the breeding process with the parental combination from which it had emerged.

It didn’t take long for Simon to announce the official name of his new strain, Serious Kush, and promise that it would hit the market in early 2017. Mr. Power Planter and his friends were absolutely certain that when it did, Serious Kush would capture the hearts of Kush fans everywhere. The first official confirmation came when Mr. Power Planter’s friend Cloudz entered Serious Kush (at that point still called White Russian Kush) into the ICMag Cup 2016 and took home third place in the Indica Growers category.

GROW KUSH MAGAZINE OCT17ISSUE
 
THE ULTIMATE HIGH TIMES GUIDE: HOW TO HYDRO


By Nico Escondido January 18, 2017




The idea of growing cannabis hydroponically isn’t nearly as frightening as it once was. When hydroponic growing was first unveiled to the general public, it was depicted as something used in large-format, commercial-size grows. Dutch botanists used it in their massive tulip greenhouses, and big names like Epcot and NASA were advertising the concept as the “way of the future” and a possible solution for growing food in space colonies with zero gravity. All of this made hydroponics sound like a daunting prospect for any would-be gardener, so it’s easy to see why cannabis growers didn’t take to it immediately—especially those growing at home.

Today, a lot has changed in terms of the perception and impact that hydroponics has had on cannabis growers. While hydroponic growing, by definition, simply means cultivating plants without soil, there are still many moving parts and technical aspects to consider. However, as hydro growing has moved into the mainstream, new advances in equipment, mediums and nutrients have made hydroponic systems the most widely used method of cannabis cultivation around the world. Here’s an overview of three of the easiest and most effective hydro systems on the market, as well as a glimpse of where hydroponics might be headed in the future.

Top-Feed Hydroponic Growing

Perhaps the most popular—and convenient—hydro system in use today is the top-feed setup. Utilizing either drip or spray emitters that are staked directly into the surface of the medium, these systems offer simple and reliable water and nutrient delivery to individual plant sites.

Top-feed systems are usually drain-to-waste, but they can also be used as a recirculating system. Most often, these systems use flood tables to hold the plant containers and catch the runoff from each plant site. This runoff can be collected and either directed back to the main reservoir or siphoned out to a drain.

IMG_4563-683x1024.jpg

THIS DBC SYSTEM UTILIZES LARGE CONTAINER BUCKETS AND METAL TRELLISING TO SUPPORT SUPER-CHARGED PLANT GROWTH.

Plant sites within the flood table can use various types of grow medium. Advanced growers knowledgeable in nutrient-dosing programs might prefer to use rockwool slabs or large 8-inch cubes to hold their plants, while beginners may choose fabric pots with a soilless peat- or coco-based medium, which is much more forgiving when it comes to mistakes with fertilizers.

The primary concern in these systems is clogging the thin spaghetti tubes that feed the emitters, as well as clogging the emitters themselves. Some new growers may be turned off by this “moving parts” aspect, as these systems do require larger reservoirs, pumps and timers—but overall, top-feed systems offer flexibility, scalability and customization for all growers, whether you’re a beginner or someone with years of experience.

Flood-and-Drain Systems

One of the first hydroponic systems to hit the market, flood-and-drain (also known as ebb-and-flow) tables are simple to set up and easy to use. The system involves using flood tables to house the porous containers so that when the table is flooded, the medium holding the plants’ roots becomes saturated with water and nutrients.

Flood-and-drain systems commonly use “netted” containers (Gro Pro, Current Culture, etc.) or Smart Pots to hold the individual plants. These plastic pots have wide openings or slits around the sides and bottom to allow the water and nutrient solution to completely flood the interior of the pots. This allows the medium to soak up and retain large amounts of moisture.

roots-1024x640.jpg


Depending on the medium and nutrient program being used, flood-and-drain systems can be drain-to-waste or can recirculate the water. For home growers, the latter can be achieved simply by housing the system reservoir directly beneath the flood table. In this case, the water is usually only recirculated for a one- or two-day period (perhaps more if only purified water and no nutrients are used) before the reservoir is emptied and refilled with fresh water.

Deep-Water Culture

Deep-water culture (DWC) systems represent an all-in-one turnkey solution for hydroponic growers and offer good scalability for both small and medium-size growrooms. DWC systems use large (usually 5-gallon) buckets to hold the individual plants, which rest in a netted pot nestled into a hole in the bucket’s lid. The buckets are daisy-chained together by water lines at the base of each. A reservoir-and-pump system fills each plant site with water, which rises from the bottom to the top of each site. The roots hang down into the buckets and suck up water and nutrients.

One great aspect of DWC systems is that the pump timer can be set to fill and drain the buckets on any schedule, meaning that roots can sit in water for several minutes at a time, several times a day. When no water is present in the buckets, the roots are efficiently aerated. This is especially beneficial during the dark cycle, when the above-surface plant is “asleep” and the roots are working, growing and breathing in oxygen (remember, roots breathe in O2 while the rest of the plant breathes in CO2).

DWC systems are known to grow large root systems, resulting in massive plants. As a result, these systems deliver some of the largest yields of any hydro setup. Single-reservoir DWC systems range from two to 12 plants sites; however, they can get much larger if additional reservoir-and-pump systems are added. Because this is relatively easy to do, DWC growers can scale these systems up to commercial-size operations, garnering huge yields with each cycle. Home growers can max out their yields as well by using smart trelliswork around the plant sites in conjunction with good topping techniques. With the dissemination of more and more reliable cultivation information on the subject, DWC systems are on the rise and may soon be the home grower’s top choice.

Hydro Nutrient Programs

Perhaps the most difficult aspect of hydroponic gardening is the implementation of an effective nutrient program. When dealing with water culture, the old adage of “Less is more” certainly holds true. For beginners, it is definitely important to remember that you can always increase the dosage, but it’s extremely difficult to remedy overfeeding.

top-feed-side-view-683x1024.jpg

A COMBINATION OF TOP-FEED AND NUTRIENT FILM TECHNIQUE (NFT) MAKE THIS HYBRID SYSTEM EXTREMELY EFFECTIVE.

As an example, studies have shown that gardens using nutrient solutions with high parts-per-million (ppm) levels of dissolved solids were consuming less water on a daily basis. When the ppm was lowered, the plants drank much more. The reason is that the high ppm levels created by overfertilizing caused higher osmotic pressure at the molecular level. Essentially, the plants were unable to absorb moisture due to the higher presence of dissolved minerals. The result was a big decline in both yields and potency.

For this reason, many hydro growers chose to use milder, liquid-based nutrients; more often than not, organic (or even veganic) nutrient solutions provide the best results. Also, synthetic nutrients are mostly salt-based. This not only increases ppm levels, but synthetic nutrients also don’t dissolve as easily and tend to clog irrigation lines and drip emitters.

There are currently many excellent brands offering organic nutrients created just for hydroponics. General Hydroponics, Advanced Nutrients, Botanicare and Pure Life Veganix all have excellent lines for hydro growing. Remember, when creating nutrient programs for your system, it is essential to have a pH and EC (electrical conductivity) meter on hand to help you evaluate doses and ratios. You should never rely solely on the manufacturer’s instructions, as these tend to go above and beyond what the plants actually need. As a rule of thumb, keep your nutrient solution at a pH of 6.0 and the EC between 2.0 and 3.0.

IMG_0526-683x1024.jpg

PLANT ROOTS GROW DOWN INTO THE TROUGH TO SOAK UP ADDITIONAL NUTRIENT SOLUTION.

Hybrid Hydro: The Future of Hydroponics

With an eye toward the future, many advanced growers are now customizing their hydro systems to accommodate their space, strain and yield requirements. Given that the objective of hydroponics is to provide adequate moisture so that minerals dissolved in the water can be easily absorbed by the roots, the opportunity for new ideas and approaches is clear. In the past, these have led to the advent of new or improved hydro systems, which now number in the dozens. Recently, we found such a system in use at the Breakwater Alternative Health Center in Cranbury, New Jersey.

Top Feed + NFT

Nutrient-film technique, or NFT, is another type of hydroponic cultivation in wide use today by large-format, commercial-size grow ops. In this setup, plants are suspended in the medium with their roots hanging down, much like a DWC system. However, instead of being contained in a flood bucket, the roots dangle into a trough that sits at a very slight angle so that the water poured into it will collect and drain at one end. This trough provides a thick, constant flow of water—or nutrient film—that the roots soak up as needed. As an added bonus, due to the exposed nature of the trough, the root zone lives in the open air, giving the roots access to enormous amounts of oxygen.

At Breakwater, the troughs in the flowering rooms are engineered to continuously flow with the nutrient solution (dissolved nutrients in filtered water) via a top-feed irrigation system. The benefits here are twofold. First, the bulk of the plants’ roots sit in a firm medium (HEC in this case) that supports them while also retaining some moisture. Second, rather than drain-to-waste, the nutrient solution collects in the trough that runs beneath all of the plants in a row, allowing the dangling roots that have grown out of the containers to sap up additional nutrient solution as needed. At the end of the trough, the water is collected and redirected to the main reservoirs for a continual (nonstop) flow back through the gardens.

Advanced Hydro

The larger yields associated with hydroponic growing are directly correlated with faster growth.

“The biggest advantage to hydroponics is the growth rate of the plants,” confirms Joe Bender, chief horticulturalist at Breakwater Alternative Health Center. “A constantly recirculating nutrient solution ensures that the roots are always bathed in a steady supply of nutrients, while still constantly providing plenty of oxygen for the roots.”

top-feed-spray-1024x640.jpg

SPRAY-EMITTERS IN A TOP-FEED SYSTEM WITH SOILLESS MEDIUM.

Since roots need oxygen for respiration, Bender explains, a potting mix won’t hold the optimal amount of oxygen to sustain the accelerated growth that hydroponics creates. “A freshly watered potting mix, such as peat, perlite and vermiculite in a 3:1:1 ratio, holds less oxygen than is ideal for roots. Therefore, plants grown in potting mix must dry between waterings in order to provide sufficient oxygen to the roots,” he observes. “As a potting mix dries, it gradually allows more oxygen to reach the roots, but simultaneously water and dissolved nutrients become harder for the roots to absorb, and the solution in the area surrounding the roots becomes depleted of nutrients—unlike in a hydroponic system, which constantly replenishes this would-be depletion zone. The combination of constantly available, optimal levels of both water and oxygen in a hydroponic system allows plants to grow much faster.”

Breakwater avoids oxygenating the reservoirs with air pumps, because the growers don’t want to force microbes from the air into the solution—not to mention that keeping the nutrient solution cool (the reservoirs are maintained at 66.5°F) allows it to hold the maximum possible amount of dissolved oxygen. Furthermore, the nutrients pouring from the drippers and through the pebbles in the pots, then pouring from the troughs into the collection gutters along the wall, then circulating from the gutters to the return reservoir, and finally getting pumped and dumped back into the main tank—all at a very high rate of flow—allows enormous amounts of oxygen to efficiently dissolve into the water. And this process is constant, 24 hours a day.

However, one drawback with any hydroponic system—especially one that runs nonstop—is algae, which clogs the drippers, is difficult to clean post-harvest, and decreases the oxygen content of the nutrient solution. Algae’s effect on the dissolved-oxygen concentration in the Breakwater system hasn’t been causing any problems (i.e., no root rot, with healthy-looking roots and plants), but steps have recently been taken to keep light from reaching the nutrient solution. Since algae can be expected to be a nuisance in any hydroponic system, growers should design their setups to minimize the nutrient solution’s exposure to light as much as possible.

Reaping the Rewards

With 480 plants per flowering room, the hybrid hydro system at Breakwater helps ensure that the plants always have enough water and nutrients on demand. With a vegetative cycle of just two weeks and a flowering cycle that ranges from seven and a half weeks (60 days) to 11 weeks, depending on the strain, the average yield here is around 125 pounds per flowering room, with maximum yields climbing as high as 186 pounds per room. With 88 lights per room, this system produces over 2 pounds per 1,000-watt lamp.

The max yields are achieved when Breakwater grows its best-yielding strains, notably AK-47 and Bubblegum, both propagated from seed from the Dutch breeders at Serious Seeds. Other popular strains among the patients at Breakwater include Dutch Passion’s Orange Bud (an inbred Skunk selection), an incredibly rare pheno of the Lemon G, and the highly medicinal Cannatonic, which has a 1:1 ratio of CBD and THC. The combination of high-quality genetics with an ingenious, commercial-size hydroponic facility means that these New Jersey flowers will hold their own against those of any other dispensary nationwide.
 
THE STORY OF KUSH


By Danny Danko October 06, 2016




Danny Danko travels in search of the mysterious truth behind the murky history of the legendary cannabis variety known as the Kush. Bonus: Danny’s Top 10 Kush Strains.

Origins of the Kush

The disputed region known as the Hindu Kush shares its boundaries with Pakistan and Afghanistan just north of Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir. The area has long been known for its ongoing conflicts as well as its history of cannabis and hashish production. Part of the legendary Himalayas mountain range, the fertile valleys and hillsides of the Hindu Kush have, for centuries, produced the world’s finest hash. Years of natural and human selection for the most resinous, indica-dominant plants have resulted in short, stocky bushes covered with huge, shiny trichomes.

In the 1960s and early ’70s, intrepid travelers on the “Hippie Trail” (including members of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love) returned to the US, Canada and Europe with primo seeds and began growing Afghani, Skunk and Kush strains in earnest. Sadly, in 1973, bowing to pressure from the United States, the newly self-appointed president of Afghanistan, who took power in a bloodless coup against the long-serving and hashish-friendly Afghan king, declared the production and sale of hashish illegal. He was overthrown by Afghan Communists in 1978, and the country was invaded by the Soviets in 1979, sparking another 30 years of warfare and bloodshed that continue to this day.

The Afghani hashish of the pre-war era remains legendary among older heads, and the strains that it spawned changed the cannabis growing scene completely. The indica-dominant genetics shortened typical flowering times, allowing plants to be grown all the way up to Alaska. In the process, the concept of “homegrown” changed from a term of derision to a point of pride.

Kush and the HIGH TIMES Cannabis Cup
Many Kush varieties have won prizes for their breeders at our annual pot-tasting festival in Amsterdam each November. From the original Skunks of the 1980s to the Kushage, Vanilla and Kaia Kush of the current era, the strain’s potency and flavor are undeniable. While Haze varieties dominate the sativacategory in the seed-bank contest, Kushes traditionally prevail among the indicas. Kush strains have also provided the genetic basis for many perennial winners that don’t have the word “Kush” in their names, such as White Widow, Sensi Star and AK-47.

Breeders know that one of the best ways to wow discerning judges is to use genetics laden with Afghani heritage. Long prized for its medicinal properties, this is the bud known for its “couch-lock” – a perfect strain for an evening nightcap, but also one capable of changing all your plans when puffed at mid-day. The intense citrus flavor, skunky odor and extremely long-lasting stone aren’t soon forgotten.

The Kush and the HIGH TIMES Cannabis Cup have a long and storied history – one that’s guaranteed to continue for many years to come. Future Cups are sure to be won by plants bearing these illustrious genetics, and much of the best hashish in Holland continues to be made from these strains as well. Plus the centuries-long Afghan tradition of separating the trichomes from Kush plants to press into bricks of tasty hash has persisted into the 21st century worldwide.

The Current State of Kush
Nowhere are Kush strains more prevalent than in Southern California. Many medical-marijuana dispensaries specialize in carrying as many varieties of Kush as they can get their hands on, and there are literally hundreds to chose from (OG, Larry, Tahoe, Russian Master and Lemon come to mind). These days, there are also sativa-dominant Kushes, Purple Kushes and “pretender” Kush strains with the name, but not the flavor or power of the true OG.

True Kush strains have also spread far and wide throughout Northern California and beyond. The OG is actually rumored to have come to Cali through the Lake Tahoe area from a Chemdog clone from the East Coast. True or not, the legends surrounding this famed variety continue to circulate, and the mysteries won’t all be solved anytime soon.

Thanks to these many changes, however, the word “Kush” seems to have lost some of its meaning – but those who know can immediately discern that particular lemon-fuel odor and telltale tiny nuggets as the real deal. Strains with “Kush” in their name boast such a reputation for potency that, just last year, Republican Congressman Mark Kirk of Illinois introduced a bill to increase penalties for the distribution of “Kush.”
 
VAPING CONCENTRATES: HOW THE GAME JUST CHANGED


By HT Sponsor July 06, 2017

Sponsored by Wax Liquidizer





Vaping concentrates such as wax, shatter, crumble and rosin has rapidly gained in popularity. It’s easy to see why when you look at just a few of the benefits:

  • Discreet Vaping—Little to No Odor
  • Health—Less Tars and Carcinogens
  • Convenience—Portable and Easy to Use
Of course, like any new technology or product there have been some drawbacks or problems that need to be addressed. Some of the problems pertain to:

  • Wax Pens—Not Efficient and Not as Discreet
  • Pre-Filled Cartridges—Quality and Cost
  • Vape Pens and Cartridges—Quality and Leaks
We will look at both the benefits and challenges to vaping concentrates in this article, but most importantly, we will introduce you to a game changer that keeps all the benefits and overcomes all the challenges!

Challenge 1: Turning Concentrate to Vapor

Challenge number one is the delivery of the concentrate. This challenge truly applies when you want to use your own concentrate. Having a top-shelf concentrate and using a wax pen can be very discouraging. When you try to vaporize a solid, you are fighting the principles of science. That is just a simple fact.

What takes less time to turn to vapor or evaporate… water or ice? A vape pen relies on a small battery and coils to create heat. A wax pen will never deliver vapor as efficiently as a standard vape pen delivers smooth hits from a liquid.

Heating the concentrate with high temperatures in a wax pen also delivers a hit that often carries the aroma of the concentrate with it. This system of vaping concentrates also requires investing in a wax pen that runs with higher wattage and usually dual coils.

The wax pen is challenged with the science of vaping, not providing the most discreet vaping and a high out-of-pocket expense for a quality pen.

Challenge 2: Quality of Cartridges

Most people who are vaping concentrates are using pre-filled cartridges from dispensaries designed to work with vape pens sold at those dispensaries. One of the biggest challenges associated with pre-filled vape cartridges is “What’s really in them?” This pertains to the concentrate and the liquid.

When you buy a cartridge, there is no real way of knowing what kind of concentrate it was made from. This includes the process that was used to make the concentrate and the quality of the concentrate. All you can see is a colored liquid and that is not a lot to go on.

The aspect that can be more problematic than the concentrate is what was used to thin or liquidize the concentrate to get it in the cartridge?

While vaping provides less tars and carcinogens, do you have any idea what was used to make the concentrate liquid? The list of ingredients can be very puzzling as to what is from the concentrate and what is from the liquid.

Another aspect is just how much lift will this cartridge provide. Is it a top-shelf concentrate that carries a lot of lift or a mild mannered BHO that will just keep you at an even keel?

Last, but not least, what will it taste like? If you don’t like the taste do you have an option?

A lot of unanswered questions come along with pre-filled cartridges. However, if you vape these often you know one undeniable fact. Vaping pre-filled concentrate cartridges can get expensive fast. Using the highest lab-grade ingredients to create your own e-juice is assured when you use Wax Liquidizer.

Challenge 3: Vape Pens and Cartridges

If you like to vape, you know you can get pretty attached to your pen. A nice pen configured with the tank and coils you like gives you the feel and draw that is perfect for you. Large glass tanks allow you to vape for days without having to replace the e-liquid. The style of your pen can very much reflect your personality, as much as how you configure your phone.

Vaping is a very personal experience for many of us.

The average dispensary will carry small plastic pre-filled cartridges designed for specific pens. These pens are pretty easy to spot in public (making them less discreet by the day). The quality of these pens and vape cartridges are geared more towards a disposable, on-the-fly solution for vaping concentrates.

The use of cheap plastic cartridges is also coming under scrutiny as far as health concerns. The fact that the liquidizing agent and concentrate may interact with the plastic after being stored for long periods of time can be concerning.

The Game Changer

But now, the game has changed! You can keep the main benefits of vaping concentrates and add a few:

  • Discreet Vaping—Little to No Odor
  • Health—Less Tars and Carcinogens
  • Convenience—Portable and Easy to Use
  • Use the Concentrate of Your Choice
  • Create Great Tasting Vape Juice
  • Use Your Own Vape Pen
Now, you can create tasty vape juice from your favorite concentrates.

The fact you have a liquid to vape keeps eliminates the need for a special pen and keeps your vaping super discreet. The freedom to make your own juice allows you to make e-liquid with a mild lift or high test. Combine this with the fact you can use your own pen and make great tasting flavors, and it’s easy to see the game has changed!

Vaping concentrates from your own RDA or vape rig of your choice allows you to use high quality glass tanks, be they large or standard size. The liquid you use to make this juice is beyond FDA approved. You will actually find the suspension agent in it is the same ingredient that is used for asthma inhalers.

Now, a high grade liquidizer that turns your favorite concentrates to vape juice in a matter of seconds is available to you. In as little as 10 seconds, you can turn top-shelf concentrates such as shatter, wax and distillates into great tasting vape juice.

Loading your own pen with your personal blend, dialed in for your taste and preference of lift ,is easy. When your ready to take control of the quality, strength and flavor of your own indiscreet vaping, you’re ready to visit waxliquidizer.com. Use coupon code “HighTimes” for 20% off your order.
 
AmeriCann has initiated preliminary site work on a nearly 1-million-square-foot cannabis greenhouse in Massachusetts. (Rendering courtesy of AmeriCann)
Massachusetts cannabis industry warns of “Colorado money” and “Pabst Blue Ribbon” weed
A Colorado corporation has raised $10 million in equity for a 52-acre facility in southeastern Massachusetts
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: OCT 6, 2017, 2:23 PM • UPDATED: ABOUT 13 HOURS AGOADD A COMMENT

By Gintautas Dumcius, Masslive.com

Every time he sees the cannabis cultivation and processing facility in southeastern Massachusetts, Peter Bernard says it makes his “New England blood boil.”

Bernard, president of the Massachusetts Grower Advocacy Council, told state regulators on Monday that’s because the 1 million square foot facility is being funded by “Colorado money,” and he fears local residents could be shut out of the nascent industry.

A corporation in Colorado has raised $10 million in equity for the facility. The 52-acre site, zoned for medical marijuana, was once owned by the Boston Beer Company, which makes Sam Adams beer.

Bernard appeared before the five-member Cannabis Control Commissionat the State House as the new state agency weighs creating the regulatory framework for the industry. Massachusetts voters endorsed broadly legalizing marijuana in 2016, while Colorado legalized marijuana in 2012.

Retail marijuana shops are set to open in July 2018. The new commission is also overseeing the state’s medical marijuana program.

More on commercial cultivation
Bernard said commissioners should seek to encourage “craft cooperatives” made up of Bay State residents through a limited liability company or limited liability partnership.

“A broad, commercialized cannabis industry in the Commonwealth would drive down retail prices dramatically, resulting in lost potential tax revenue and a monopolistic stranglehold on the market,” he said in his testimony. “Commercialization of cannabis cultivation will bring the Walmart of Weed to our Commonwealth, squeezing out opportunity for smaller and more skilled cultivators to take their rightful places in the industry.”

Regular marijuana users want higher quality cannabis, not the “Pabst Blue Ribbon” equivalent, he added.

“Craft cooperative grows will provide that top shelf product that commands a top shelf price, much like a fine bottle of wine commands a higher price than box wine. Only the tourists and occasional tokers will waste their money on Walmart Weed,” he said.

He suggested the commission create a tiered structure, ranging from a cooperative with three owners to one with seven owners. Anything beyond 15,000 square feet of grow space should be considered a commercial cultivation, he added.
 
Colorado drags down national marijuana prices in first half of 2017
Despite drop, new report tracking U.S. spot prices for wholesale cannabis finds "remarkable" stability given recent political uncertainty
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: OCT 2, 2017, 10:59 AM • By Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist Staff

The price of a pound of legal marijuana continues to plummet in 2017, according to a new report tracking the commodity’s U.S. spot price index.

Wholesale cannabis prices dropped 18.6 percent nationwide in the first half of 2017, with Colorado prices dropping by up to 40 percent compared to the first half of last year, according to Cannabis Benchmarks’ “2017 Mid-Year Wholesale Market Report.” Similar to commodities like gold and oil, the Denver-based independent price reporting agency tracks spot prices — the current value in the marketplace at which an asset can be bought or sold for immediate delivery.

Despite the overall decline, marijuana prices showed “remarkable” stability considering last year’s price volatility and recent political uncertainty, the analysts found. For the first six months of this year, there has only been a $150 difference between the low and high prices for legal cannabis nationally, compared to nearly $300 separating the lows and highs during the first half of 2016.

The U.S. Spot prices for wholesale cannabis opened the year at $1,532 a pound, up from the 2016 annual low of $1,386 per pound. However, based on 2015 and 2016 wholesale prices, the firm expects further price declines through November as seasonal fall harvest hits the market.

CB_SpotIndexHistory.png

(Courtesy Cannabis Benchmarks)
“We still do expect to see a seasonal price depression nationally that comes with the harvest,” report author Adam Koh told The Cannabist.

While drastic, the 40 percent decline in Colorado wholesale prices follows the national trend of lower prices in all five states with legal adult-use markets — despite the fact that demand remains strong in those states. Cannabis Benchmarks attributes the trend to a business boom that has increased competition for market share and customers, which in turn creates “more than adequate” production. Likewise, those businesses are, by necessity, becoming more efficient and cost-effective in their cultivation and manufacturing “in order to compete and stay afloat.”

Related stories
The patchwork quilt of state-based marijuana regulations causes prices to vary wildly across borders. The highest average wholesale prices in the U.S. for legal cannabis during the first half of 2017 were in Alaska, at $4,190 per pound; the lowest were in Colorado at $1,280 per pound.

In Colorado, the country’s most mature market with three-plus years of adult-use sales, the price per pound of wholesale cannabis has dropped from a 2016 high of $1,994 to a 2017 six-month low of $1,181. Cannabis Benchmarks attributes declines in part to the state’s “liberal approach to licensing and production,” which has led to dramatic increases in the volume of marijuana grown and produced.

On the other hand, wholesale prices in Washington, another maturing market, have turned around from last year’s “figurative bargain basement,” according to the report. The state’s monthly spot index prices for the first half of this year averaged $1,387 per pound, a rise of about eight percent compared to the fourth quarter of 2016.

California’s fast-approaching legalization is causing significant uncertainty in pricing for the fourth quarter, Koh said.

While California officials scramble to have regulations in place ahead of the state’s scheduled January 1 launch of legal adult-use sales, Cannabis Benchmarks believes only a “small fraction” of commercial cannabis transactions during 2018 will take place within the licensed marketplace. The report cites the state’s vast black market, which will continue to provide producers other venues in which their cannabis can fetch higher profit margins.

“There appears to be a significant portion of the state’s cannabis commerce that won’t (be licensed), Koh said, “and there will be stiff competition for those operators working to comply with state laws.”

Nevada remains another conundrum for the firm’s spot-price indexing efforts. Adult-use sales kicked off on July 1, however the state’s “unique regulatory circumstances” created supply chain struggles that prevented any wholesale price increases during the first half of 2017, according to Cannabis Benchmarks.

The cash-only nature of legal cannabis transactions presents a common drag on wholesale prices across the country, according to the report. Cannabis companies are prohibited from accessing the federal banking system, limiting businesses’ ability to transact larger deals, according to Cannabis Benchmarks’ analysis.

“In such a landscape,” the report says, “the significant amount of cash required to settle a deal greater than 20 pounds is often not at hand.”
 
A Target sign is shown on the front of a Target Store in Wilsonville, Ore. in May 17, 2011. (Rick Bowmer, The Associated Press)
Update: CBD oil hits national stage with Target.com — briefly
An abrupt change for CW Hemp, the Colorado company that makes Charlotte's Web products
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: SEP 28, 2017, 11:19 AM •

By Alicia Wallace, The Cannabist Staff

UPDATE 3:43 P.M. MDT 9/28/17: This story has been updated to include a statement from Target.

UPDATE 1:10 P.M. MDT 9/28/17: The story and headline have been updated to reflect that the CW Hemp products appear to be no longer available on Target.com.

CBD made it to the big leagues of retail — albeit briefly.

CW Hemp, the Denver-based company that bottled up “Charlotte’s Web” cannabidiol-rich oil, landed a selection of its hemp-derived extracts on Target.com, CW Hemp announced Thursday morning.

But by Thursday afternoon, the CW Hemp products were no longer to be found on the Minneapolis-based retail giant’s website.

The Cannabist had verified earlier Thursday that Target’s e-commerce site listed four CW Hemp products — hemp capsules and oils (see a screenshot below). The products, which could also be accessed with a search for “CBD oil,” were shown under the herbal supplements category.

However, by the early afternoon, the searches for “CW Hemp” returned with: “no results found.”

In a statement emailed to The Cannabist on Thursday afternoon, a Target spokeswoman said:

“We started carrying Charlotte’s Web hemp extract items last week on Target.com. After further review, we have decided to remove it from our assortment.”

The Cannabist made multiple attempts to contact officials at CW Hemp, but they have not commented directly about the products’ removal from Target’s website.

BEFORE
cw-hemp-products-cbd-oil-target-com.png

A screenshot Thursday morning of the Target.com website showed some of the CW Hemp supplements available for purchase online. (Screenshot)
AFTER
cw-hemp-search-target.png

A screenshot Thursday afternoon of the Target.com website showed “no results found” for CW Hemp. (Screenshot)
While nabbing a spot on Target.com would be considered a win for most fledgling consumer products companies, the move to sell products that the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration views as illegal is bold, if not practically brazen, industry and drug policy experts told The Cannabist before Target ceased sales of CW Hemp products.

“It’s hard to imagine a scenario in which this is legal,” said John Hudak, a Brookings Institution senior fellow who specializes in drug policy issues, when reached Thursday morning.

The DEA has made it clear that CBD and other cannabis-derived extracts are Schedule I substances, Hudak said. Sales of cannabis-derived products could be allowed under certain state-based marijuana programs; however, selling such products across state lines is illegal, he said.

“This may be an example of Target, a large corporation, standing up to the federal government and sort of challenging them to push back,” he said. “Target is not asking for permission here; they may be in a position to ask for forgiveness.”

In a statement issued early Thursday, CW Hemp officials touted Target’s pick-up of the extracts as hemp-derived CBD “going mainstream.”

The sale of non-psychoactive, hemp-derived extracts on the mass-market stage comes at a time when the legality of such products has been put into question. The DEA on Thursday issued a statement to The Cannabist reiterating its position that extracts derived from cannabis — be it industrial hemp or marijuana — are federally illegal, Schedule I substances.

The position has pitted the DEA against the hemp industry and, specifically, makers of cannabinoid-rich products derived from hemp. Hemp industry advocates have argued that CBD is not an illegal substance nor something strictly for pharmaceutical use, claiming that the compound should be classified as a food.

Target sells other hemp-derived food and beauty products, including hemp-seed hearts and hemp-based milk, soaps and shampoos.

The sale of CBD-rich oils is significant for the hemp industry, said Rod Kight, a North Carolina-based corporate and bankruptcy attorney who authors the Kight on Cannabis blog on legal marijuana topics. Kight does not represent either Target or CW Hemp.

“The market for hemp-based products is exploding and it was only a matter of time before one of the big national chains took the plunge to carry them,” Kight wrote in an email to The Cannabist on Thursday morning. “Frankly, I thought that the first chain would be a supplement or health food retailer, and am a little surprised that Target is the one.

“Both Target and CW will likely enjoy a quick first mover window of opportunity, but I think we’re likely to see a large number of national chains begin carrying hemp-based CBD products in the next three to six months.”

From a legal standpoint, this was a “bold” move by CW Hemp, Kight said, noting the company recently was named directly in a statement from the DEA about the legality of hemp, cannabis and CBD.

The DEA’s enforcement abilities likely are limited, Kight said, noting ongoing provisions in the current federal appropriations act as they apply to the 2014 Farm Bill, which allowed states to institute pilot programs for production of industrial hemp, defined as containing less than 0.3 percent THC, the intoxicating component of the cannabis plant.

“The larger issue is how individual states will respond given that state law is the big unknown in this sector. I’ll be keeping a close eye on developments and won’t be surprised if Target either quietly doesn’t stock products in certain states that have been notoriously difficult in this area (such as South Dakota) and/or if we see a legal challenge in one or more states,” Kight said. “I’m absolutely confident that Target and CW took this into consideration given that, unlike private companies, Target must report to shareholders and steer clear of legal gray areas.”
 
The future of buying weed: California eyed as epicenter for delivery, e-commerce
Tech company Eaze and others are banking on marijuana delivery expanding at an "explosive" rate in California as cities across state prepare for recreational cannabis sales
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: SEP 14, 2017, 3:09 PM •

By Alicia Wallace, The Cannabist Staff

Eaze’s e-commerce platform is meant to feel familiar.

Scrolling horizontally and vertically through product pictures is practically Netflixian. Refining results with tag-based filtering borders on the Amazonic. And when a click of a button turns results into ordered products hitching a ride to a front door, it’s a little Uberish.

Eaze’s software facilitates medical marijuana deliveries in California by connecting patients to dispensaries that sell and then deliver the products.

The burgeoning San Francisco-based startup — which hauled in $27 million in investment capital on Thursday — is among a growing class of tech companies and marijuana industry insiders who predict that dispensaries will go the way of Blockbuster Video as the Golden State begins legal recreational marijuana sales in 2018.

“It’s not unique to cannabis,” Sheena Shiravi, head of Eaze’s public relations, told The Cannabist. “I think that (e-commerce) is the wave of the future.”

California news
Eaze and its cohorts are banking on California serving as the epicenter for an e-commerce cannabis revolution. They’re buoyed by language in marijuana regulations passed last June that say dispensaries are not required to have a storefront.

Designed to unify the state’s existing medical marijuana regulations with those for forthcoming recreational sales, Senate Bill 94 blasts open the doors for more virtual operations, said Hezekiah Allen, executive director of the California Growers Association (CGA). A cannabis retailer can have a discreet licensed and regulated facility out of which to conduct deliveries.

Industry forecasts peg California’s legal cannabis sales at about $2.8 billion for 2017, climbing to $6.6 billion by 2025 as the recreational marijuana market matures, according to a recent report by New Frontier Data, a cannabis data analytics firm. New Frontier highlights California’s marijuana delivery services as an area with “significant potential for expansion.”

eaze-app-mobile.jpg

Laws in California for cannabis delivery give that sector the potential to expand as recreational marijuana sales begin in 2018. Software developed by tech company Eaze allows users in certain cities to order cannabis for delivery. (Provided by Eaze)
The growth of e-commerce should be “very, very explosive,” New Frontier’s executive vice president of industry analytics John Kagia said last week during a webinar presenting the report “Cannabis On-Demand: Evolving Trends in California’s Medical Market” to investors, business operators and researchers.

“California is going to be the most important and the largest single market in the world (for the cannabis industry),” he said.

Beyond California’s sizable population and economic power, the state’s prowess in areas such as technology, media and cannabis cultivation “will be accelerants to the modernization, the increased sophistication and the maturation of the industry,” Kagia said.

Hodgepodge of delivery rules
The state is the country’s oldest medical marijuana state, and its loose regulation of that market has led to a patchwork of legality for on-demand delivery.

Regions of California, notably the San Francisco Bay Area, have allowed for the delivery of medical cannabis. Los Angeles, on the other hand, has banned delivery services.

CGA estimates that there are more than 7,500 cannabis delivery companies statewide that conduct up to 55 percent of current medical marijuana transactions. Expanding delivery has been the group’s highest priority since July 2015, said Allen, and L.A. is their top target.

“L.A. is, in our opinion, the premier cannabis marketplace in the world,” he said.

California’s Bureau of Cannabis Control and Los Angeles’ Department of Cannabis Regulation are in the throes of drafting regulations, and officials were unable to comment specifically on potential delivery policies.

Low-key delivery businesses have appeal
AP_17145686765241.jpg

Andre Shavers, who runs a marijuana delivery business in Oakland, Calif., checks his inventory on May 11, 2017. Across California, there are an assortment of local rules on cannabis delivery. (Eric Risberg, The Associated Press)
Beyond the City of Angels, CGA is actively working with local government officials, community leaders and law enforcement officials to open local markets to on-demand delivery.

“A lot of the cities and counties really are sensitive to the perceived neighborhood impact of a storefront,” Allen said, noting dispensaries, like liquor stores, are associated with higher rates of crime.

Delivery, he said, allows for increased consumer access without the perceived negative neighborhood impacts.

Eaze has positioned the hub of its operations in the Bay Area, where delivery is legal, but it’s also stationed personnel in areas of the state that could be poised to consider or adopt delivery legislation.

Toking tech
To these communities and regulators, Eaze officials float delivery as a middle-of-the-road solution.

While Eaze is “laser-focused on California,” company officials are shooting some glances in the direction of Nevada, Oregon, Washington, medical-only states such as New York and Florida, and even beyond.

Oregon’s laws have permitted Portland to legalize delivery services and it’s also happening in Nevada, but other states that have legalized marijuana have been reluctant to venture down that road.

In Colorado earlier this year, lawmakers floated a proposal to allow for marijuana delivery. However, the provision stalled in the legislative process after Gov. John Hickenlooper expressed concerns that allowing delivery might raise the ire of federal enforcement agencies.

But with California, home to the largest cannabis consuming population in the country, on board, Eaze is optimistic for its future in the legal marijuana marketplace, said Shiravi.

“What we see in California is hopefully a pilot for federal regulation,” she said.
 
Cannabis grows — legal or not — are far from business as usual for electric co’s
A gathering of Colorado's rural energy providers centers around massive power draw of indoor cultivation and issues with illegal grows
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: SEP 12, 2017, 9:35 AM • UPDATED: 24 DAYS AGOCOMMENTS (38)

By Alicia Wallace, The Cannabist Staff

WESTMINSTER — Since marijuana was legalized in Colorado, the standard meter read and utility line check aren’t that simple anymore.

Utilities have had to adapt on the fly to a surge of customers that bring with them heavier energy loads and heftier revenues; but they also have had to account for the unexpected, said representatives of Colorado’s electric providers at a Monday conference.

“It’s not all wine and roses,” said Paul Erickson, chief executive officer of Sangre de Cristo Electric Association cooperative.

Illegal grows operate within some of the counties Sangre de Cristo Electric serves in central Colorado — creating unexpected safety hazards such as guns being drawn on employees of the utility, Erickson said. The all-cash transactions from the legitimate enterprises pose security risks as well, he added.

“It puts us in a tough place, and it’s no-win,” he said.

The good, the bad and the ugly of marijuana legalization’s effects on the state’s electric utilities were put into the spotlight at a day-long conference hosted by the Colorado Rural Electric Association. The organization’s “Pot & Power” conference delved into topics such as energy demands in cannabis cultivation; sustainability efforts; safety risks and concerns; legal and enforcement best practices; and potential legislative measures.

Following the recent economic recession, low or declining energy loads were seemingly the new normal for utilities in Colorado.

Then came the “bright, shiny exception to the rule,” said Dan Hodges, government affairs liaison at Colorado Springs Utilities.

“The marijuana industry is using a heck of a lot of power,” he said.

More on electricity use
Utilities have to walk a fine line, said Jeff Bauman, electrical engineer for the Cowlitz Public Utility District in Washington state, which voted to legalize recreational marijuana in 2012 — the same year as Colorado.

On one hand, utilities are obligated to provide the proper amount of power for the high-use customers who operate well within the bounds of the law, he said. On the other, they also have to account for the precarious nature of gray- and black-market operations — notably concerns of safety and logistics.

“When everything legalized, they started blowing up transformers,” Bauman said.

Cowlitz hoped to address the costly losses by being proactive, he said, contacting the heaviest energy users and offering a bit of a compromise: If they pay to upgrade the transformer, then Cowlitz would cover the cost of the old one. Otherwise, if the high-energy user were responsible for the blown device, they would have to pay for both.

“Most of the time they don’t understand that the little box out in their backyard is the limiting factor,” he said.

More on the black market
As to the other concerns enveloping the service to gray- and black-market operations as well as state-legal operations that are illegal in the eyes of federal law, regulatory attorney Tom Downey recommended that utilities follow their existing protocols and policies and shift the enforcement burden to other entities.

“Don’t put yourself in the place of law enforcement; don’t put yourself in the place of safety agencies,” said Downey, a director at Ireland Stapleton Pryor & Pascoe P.C. in Denver.

A couple of newly passed bills are meant to help address concerns around illegal growing operations, said Mark Bolton, senior deputy legal counsel and marijuana adviser to Gov. John Hickenlooper.

Under two new laws, the state ratcheted down the maximum allowable home-grow plant counts to 12 from 99; implemented stricter protocols for plant count exceptions; dedicated millions of dollars to rural law enforcement agencies to clamp down on gray- and black-market activity; and banned marijuana growing cooperatives.

“I think there’s more we can do in this space,” he said to conference attendees.
 
In its fourth harvest, Colorado industrial hemp industry still faces growing pains
This year, farms around the state are expected to harvest up to 9,000 acres of hemp, compared with just 200 acres in 2014.
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: SEP 11, 2017, 8:19 AM •

By Libby Rainey, The Denver Post

The first hint that Damian Farris isn’t your typical farmer is the nickname of his mud-splattered white pickup truck: “Smoked Tofu.”

Four years ago he was a hippie with no farming experience and a passion for weed. Now he’s the co-founder of Colorado Cultivars, the self-proclaimed country’s largest hemp farm, just east of Eaton. The marijuana dispensary owner turned industrial hemp grower navigates the farm’s sprawling fields like an old pro.

Since 2014, when the U.S. Farm Bill legalized the growth of industrial hemp in states that regulated the crop, Farris has been part of a rapidly growing industry in Colorado that is bringing farmers and cannabis enthusiasts into business together.

“The first year, people thought we were growing drugs,” Farris said from behind Smoked Tofu’s wheel. “Now farmers are approaching us and asking how they can use hemp in their crop rotation. It’s a big turnaround.”

Hemp doesn’t look like your typical cash crop — it’s less orderly than corn, and grows like skinny Christmas trees in various shades of green. In some places on the Colorado Cultivars farm, the hemp grows so dense it’s impossible to distinguish the rows it was planted in. Elsewhere, its light green stalks commingle with sunflowers.

Industrial hemp is a sturdy crop championed by growers as multifaceted and sustainable. Defined as Cannabis sativa L. plants with less than 0.3 percent tetrahydrocannabinols concentration, or THC, hemp requires less water than corn and can be used to produce cannabidiol (CBD) oil, a nonpsychoactive cannabis compound used for medicinal purposes, and grain for a wide range of commercial items, including food and health products. And its industrial potential is far more wide-ranging: hemp is so strong and lightweight that the auto industry is using it for car parts. It can also be used as construction material in homes, and researchers speculate that hemp biodiesel could one day be used as fuel.

Colorado-grown hemp makes up more than half of U.S. domestic hemp production, said Duane Sinning, assistant director of Colorado Department of Agriculture’s plant industry division, and interest in the crop has grown exponentially since it became legal. The market is worth millions of dollars, but it’s difficult to get a more specific idea of its value because the industry is changing so rapidly and prices fluctuate so quickly, Sinning said.

This year, farms around the state are expected to harvest up to 9,000 acres of hemp, compared with just 200 acres in 2014. The harvest yielded 5,900 acres last year and 2,200 acres in 2015, he said.

But growers looking to cash in on the benefits of growing hemp face a laundry-list of challenges when entering the market: murky federal legality, lack of infrastructure, and uncertainty about American demand for hemp and hemp products. Growers can’t even get crop insurance.

“If you’re a farmer, it’s already risky enough to grow any crop in an emerging industry,” Sinning said. “But if you’re not sure what the market is and you can’t get minimum return if you’re hailed out, that’s really hard for a farmer to swallow all those risks.”

Related stories
Not only that, hemp growers have been operating without a manual. Dave and Tyler Dyer traditionally grew tomatoes and feed for dairy cattle, but in 2015 they partnered with Colorado Cultivars to grow hemp. This year, the hemp company will harvest 1,250 acres.

“It’s been a challenge,” Tyler Dyer said. “There wasn’t a Hemp for Dummies.”

Hemp, like all forms of Cannabis sativa L., is classified as a Schedule I drug under the Controlled Substances Act, despite past legislative attempts to remove it. This past July, legislators introduced the Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2017, a bipartisan bill that seeks to remove hemp from the Controlled Substances Act. Without this federal stamp of approval, Colorado farmers growing hemp face barriers to entry that other crops don’t require.

It can be nearly impossible for hemp growers to get a bank account.

Hemp farmer Jim Strang has been unable to get a bank account for Green Acres Hemp Farm, a small operation in southern Colorado he owns with his wife. The Strangs have been cut off from money transfer companies Paypal, Square, and Stripe, and can only accept cash or check for their products — CBD-infused items such as lip balm and lotion.

“It’s been very challenging,” Strang said. “We’re the people who are going to take the brunt of it, since we’re the first in the industry trying to get it going.”

Those who want to export raw hemp material out of Colorado also face concerns about federal regulation, Sinning said. It’s even difficult for farmers growing hemp to secure federal water rights, because the Bureau of Reclamation prohibits such water from being used for federally controlled substances. A Colorado law introduced by state Sen. Don Coram, R-Montrose, and other lawmakers guarantees industrial hemp growers their right to federal water, but until the federal government concurs, Coram said farmers’ water rights are still at risk. U.S. Sens. Michael Bennet and Cory Gardner are cosponsors of a similar bill introduced in July.

“Basically I was encouraging the federal government to get involved,” Coram said, arguing that conflicting state and federal laws create “a lot of uncertainty.”

The Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2017 has created unlikely allies in lawmakers such as conservative Republican Kentucky congressman James Comer and Colorado’s marijuana-friendly Rep. Jared Polis, a Democrat, who told The Denver Post that he’s hopeful the bill will pass.

“For the first time since I started work on this issue years ago, I’m confident that the finish line is in sight to create new opportunities in industrial hemp for Colorado farmers, processors and consumer product companies,” Polis said via email.

In the meantime, the industry is moving steadily toward more consistency and lower risks for farmers.

When growing hemp became legal in 2014, there were only a few ways to get the seeds. Growers could take seed from feral hemp, left over from a bygone era when the crop was grown around the country for its fiber, to make rope and other items. They could also breed low-THC marijuana, or they could smuggle seeds in from other states. This presented a number of risks for farmers joining the industry, said John McKay, principal investigator at Colorado State University’s McKay Lab in the College of Agricultural Sciences. If a crop had too much THC, it had to be destroyed and it was difficult to know how feral hemp would do once planted, or whether it would grow at all.

Three years down the line, seeds have become more widely available, and more reliable. Around 16 different groups around the state are breeding hemp, responding to the boom in interest in the crop by farmers and investors, Duane Sinning said.

He expects Colorado Department of Agriculture-approved certified hemp seeds to be on the market by 2018.

As the industry continues to expand, the next big question is how much demand there is for the crop.

“Most farmers, whatever they’re growing, they’ve been growing for 40 years and there’s no mystery to it,” McKay said. “Where are they going to drive their truck to at the end of the season? Who’s going to buy it? They can plant soybeans under contract, and know who’s going to buy it. That’s not the case with hemp.”

a" data-cycle-timeout="0" data-cycle-prev="#gslideshow_prev" data-cycle-next="#gslideshow_next" data-cycle-pager="#gslideshow_pager" data-cycle-pager-template="


<
>
EATON, CO - SEPTEMBER 5: Damian Farris, co-owner of Colorado Cultivars Hemp Farm, looks at the crop before it is harvested on September 5, 2017 in Eaton, Colorado. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post)
 
Scotts Miracle-Gro sells off international operations to focus on core business and hydroponics
The lawn-and-garden giant also anounced pending acquisition of "marquee brand" in hydroponics, an ancillary sector of the cannabis industry
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: AUG 31, 2017, 4:24 PM • UPDATED: ABOUT A MONTH AGOCOMMENTS (2)

By Alicia Wallace, The Cannabist Staff

Scotts Miracle-Gro has shed its Australia and European businesses in a deal that frees up the company to direct its attention on lawn-and-garden products and an ambition to become “the world’s most successful hydroponic gardening business.”

The Marysville, Ohio-based Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. on Thursday completed the previously announced sale of its overseas operations to Exponent Private Equity LLP. The $250 million deal includes operations in Australia, Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Poland and the United Kingdom, leaving Scotts in a position where close to 100 percent of its sales and profits would come from North America, officials have said.

Related stories
The sale to Exponent and a previous divestiture of Scotts LawnService allows Scotts to dedicate its money and attention to its long-established core business and its high-flying venture into hydroponics. Scotts has spent hundreds of millions of dollars plucking up sector leaders and folding them into subsidiary Hawthorne Gardening Co. in a move to capitalize on the ancillary wings of the fledgling U.S. marijuana industry.

“The integration of acquisitions under the Hawthorne umbrella is proceeding as planned, and we are in the closing stages of completing the acquisition of a marquee brand in another category of hydroponics,” Jim Hagedorn, Scotts chief executive officer, said in a statement.

“Our goal remains the same: to create the world’s most successful hydroponic gardening business.”

Scotts’ jaunt into hydroponics started in Boulder, Colo., where it invested in AeroGrow International, a maker of indoor garden systems. Scotts now owns a majority stake of AeroGrow.

The international deal comes a year after Scotts shuttled its LawnService business into a joint venture with TruGreen. Scotts took a 30 percent stake in that venture and has received $290 million in cash as a result — including an $87 million dividend announced Thursday.
 
The devastating American opioid crisis… of 1908
A look back to when Americans were "the greatest drug fiends in the world"
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: OCT 3, 2017, 11:39 AM •

By Nick Miroff, The Washington Post

The president, a swaggering populist from New York, was worried that a national crisis of opiate addiction was weakening America and diminishing its greatness.

So in 1908, Teddy Roosevelt appointed a handsome Ohio doctor with a handlebar mustache, Hamilton Wright, to be the nation’s first Opium Commissioner.

Americans, Wright warned, “have become the greatest drug fiends in the world.”

hamilton-wright2-800x496.jpg

Hamilton Wright, appointed by Teddy Roosevelt 1908 to be the nation’s first Opium Commissioner. (Courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division)
The United States developed a pernicious narcotics habit in the decades after the Civil War. Anguished veterans were hooked on morphine. Genteel “society ladies” dosed up with Laudanum – a tincture of alcohol and opium. The wonder drug was widely used as a cough suppressant and it proved very effective at treating diarrhea in children.

Opiates were wickedly addictive, too, and as more and more Americans began abusing them, their control became a cause celebre for Progressive-era reformers like Wright.

“The habit has this nation in its grip to an astonishing extent,” he told the New York Times in 1911. “Our prisons and our hospitals are full of victims of it, it has robbed ten thousand businessmen of moral sense and made them beasts who prey upon their fellows . . . it has become one of the most fertile causes of unhappiness and sin in the United States.”

More than a century later, America has relapsed. The current opioid abuse crisis is more lethal, with record number of fatal overdoses, public health experts note. But it is not the first time in U.S. history that the lax commercialization of legal opioids led to a national epidemic.

The little-known history of America’s first experiment with the narcotic, and the federal government response to it, are today a source of optimism for those who argue that tougher regulation and enforcement can bring the current crisis under control. Faced with a late 19th-century dope scourge, doctors, pharmacists and federal law enforcement officials eventually managed to contain the country’s first addiction epidemic.

“Over the last 150 years of drug use in America, when a problem has emerged, the government has responded,” said DEA official Sean Fearns, the former director of the agency’s small museum on the ground floor of its headquarters near the Pentagon.”I wish we wouldn’t have to keep learning about the dangers of these drugs the hard way,” he said. “But ultimately the turning point comes only when people really begin to see the damage we are doing to our society.”

Lesser waves of opiate abuse, especially heroin, returned several times during the 20th century, especially in large cities, and most notably in the 1970s. But the late 19th century was the only other era in U.S. history that opiate addiction was truly a nationwide crisis, scholars say, afflicting urban and rural areas alike, up and down the country’s social and economic strata.

A brief history of opium
Then as now, it started with drug manufacturers, doctors and pharmacists, not pushers on the street.

The sticky sap of the opium poppy has been relieving pain and getting people high for at least five thousand years. Ancient Sumerians called it “The Joy Plant.” The Egyptians traded opium throughout the Mediterranean, and itinerant Arab merchants probably introduced it to China in the 7th century.

Opium became an engine of human commerce and conquest. English merchants, led by the British East Indian Company – arguably the world’s first modern drug cartel – set up extensive colonial-era opium supply chains to dominate sales in Europe and East Asia. When the Chinese emperors tried to stop them, the British waged the “Opium Wars” of the mid-19th century, occupying Hong Kong to make sure the drug markets remained open.

English poets romanticized the recreational use of the drug, and by the time Thomas De Quincey published “Confessions of an English Opium Eater” in 1821, the British were importing tens of thousands of pounds of it per year.

Related stories
Historians say it wasn’t until after the American Civil War that the use and abuse of opiates spread widely across the United States. Some of the first addicts were morphine-dependent veterans of the war suffering from all manner of physical and psychological pain, an affliction known as “Soldier’s disease.”

Morphine was invented in the 1820s, but it was the advent of the hypodermic needle that allowed the drug to be injected for the first time. The quick delivery to the bloodstream dramatically intensified the euphoric payload. Soon syringes were being sold through the Sears Roebuck & Co catalogue with DIY drugs vials, according to the DEA’s Fearns.

Around the same time, “you begin to see admonitory literature appear in medical journals saying ‘you need to be careful with this, don’t leave the syringe with the patient,’ ” according to David Courtwright, a leading historian on American drug abuse at the University of North Florida.

For decades, opium, morphine and other narcotics had been the active ingredients in an array of unregulated tinctures and cure-alls sold by neighborhood apothecaries, itinerant peddlers or doctors making house calls.

Just as the contemporary opiate crisis appears to have a gender imbalance – with increasing proportion of women getting hooked – the 19th century addict was typically female and middle-class, according to Courtwright, author of “Dark Paradise: The History of Opiate Addiction in America.” Women were prescribed opiates after childbirth, or to treat “female problems” (menstrual cramps).

Many immigrant workers from China, who were hired to build the railroads, became addicts in labor camps and the tenements of Western cities. The first drug control ordinances in U.S. history were issued in San Francisco in an attempt to stop the spread of “opium dens.”

Then in 1895, German pharmaceuticals giant Bayer came out with a new wonder drug, more powerful than aspirin, that worked phenomenally well as a cough suppressant. Its name was heroisch, meaning strong, or heroic, but in the United States it was marketed under a different brand name: Heroin.

Along with cocaine, it was recommended as a safe alternative to morphine for addicts trying to shake their dependency, and flooded the market in many forms: tinctures, pills, even heroin throat lozenges.

“It possesses many advantages over morphine,” the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal wrote in 1900, advancing claims with a chilling similarity to early advertisements for OxyContin. “It’s not hypnotic, and there’s no danger of acquiring a habit.”

temperance-800x496.jpg

December 1942: A line of actors hold up cards which spell out the word ‘temperance’ in a scene from the play ‘The Drunkard’ at the Arts Theatre Club. (Tunbridge-Sedgwick Pictorial Press/Getty Images)
Around that time the specter of the “junkie” and “dope fiend” began to appear as a stigmatized character in lurid newspaper accounts. The early 20th century was also a period of racial anxiety and growing hostility toward immigrants. In their push for a narcotics crackdown, crusaders like Wright, the Opium Commissioner, played to fears that opium-smoking white women would end up trading drugs for sex with Asian men.

“The Temperance Movement wasn’t just alcohol, it was also drugs that were ruining the moral temperament of Americans,” said Lloyd Sederer, the chief medical officer of the New York Office of Mental Health, and the author of a forthcoming book about the current opioid crisis.

The role of the federal government
The U.S. government began taxing opium in 1890, and the passage of the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 forced manufacturers to disclose the contents of their products, so consumers wary of the drug would know if it was lurking in their kids’ cough syrup or not. Three years later Congress passed the Opium Exclusion Act, banning its import for the purpose of smoking.

Roosevelt sent Wright to lead an American delegation to the First International Opium Commission in Shanghai in 1909 and another gathering at The Hague in 1912 that produced the first global attempt to regulate narcotics.

Wright continued to push for U.S. legislation over the objections of drug manufacturers, an effort that culminated in the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act of 1914. It taxed and tightly regulated the sale and distribution of opium and cocaine-based products, the first broad crackdown in a century of American narcotics prohibition.

opium-bust-800x496.jpg

1932: New York customs officials find opium smoking paraphernalia valued at 105,000 dollars inside bales marked ‘Lichee Nuts’. (Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
Opiates remained available for short-term medical use, but not to maintain addiction, and thousands of doctors and pharmacists were arrested under the Harrison laws, according to Sederer.

A younger generation of physicians viewed opiates far more warily, issuing fewer prescriptions, said Courtwright, and made a crucial difference in the prevention of new addicts.

Prohibition-era gangsters like Arnold Rothstein who trafficked in illegal heroin would become the country’s first drug kingpins in the 1920s, but the number of opiate-addicted Americans would never be as large again.

Until now.

Today
At the peak of the 19th century addiction crisis, roughly 300,000 Americans were probably hooked, according to Courtwright, despite higher estimates by Wright and other activists that were probably inflated. Today, the United States has four times as many people but perhaps 10 times as many addicts.

Moreover, 21st-century dope – especially heroin spiked with synthetic opioids like fentanyl – is more addictive than anything before, according to narcotics experts. The highs are higher, as are the risks of lethal overdose. U.S. law enforcement agents have never had to confront criminal networks as sophisticated and well-financed as the traffickers who dominate narcotics distribution today.

And the flow of America opioids continues today over and under the counter. While new prescriptions for opioid-based drugs peaked in 2011 and have declined slightly, prescribing levels in 2015 were still three times that of 1999, the latest figures show. Dependent Americans who can no longer get the drugs from pharmacies are turning to illegal markets in greater numbers than ever before.

That is the biggest difference between the 19th century crisis and the contemporary one, said Robert Dupont, the former White House drug czar who helped develop the first methadone maintenance programs in 1970s to treat heroin addiction.

Both epidemics began with the over-prescription of pain medication, but today illegal traffickers are far more able to step in as the government cracks down.

“The sea change is the illegal market,” DuPont said. “The move toward synthetic opioids like fentanyl will make everything much harder. The dogs can’t sniff it. You can send it through the mail. It’s very scary.”
 
Here’s what it looks like when a town uses a lottery system for marijuana biz licenses
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: OCT 2, 2017, 2:44 PM • UPDATED: 5 DAYS AGOADD A COMMENT

By Courtney Tompkins, Long Beach Press-Telegram

Officials often boast about doing things the Long Beach way, and Thursday’s lottery drawing for medical marijuana licenses was no different.

Shortly after 9 a.m., officials kicked off a process inside City Hall that would allow a limited number of applicants to move toward opening a dispensary in town. It began with City Clerk Monique DeLaGarza opening sealed bags of lottery balls that had been stored inside a safe until Thursday. Each ball was assigned a number that matched an address where an applicant sought to open a medical marijuana dispensary.

Related: A “canna-biz lottery” happened in this Colorado county too

She placed the balls, one by one, on top of a brand new lottery machine before dropping them into a clear basin with a steady stream of air shuffled them around. The first 10 numbers drawn that did not violate buffer zones (more than 1,000 feet from an already approved dispensary) were allowed to move forward.

28 Sep
Courtney Tompkins

✔@CTompkinsTweets

Replying to @CTompkinsTweets
City clerk is opening bag of sealed lottery balls. They've been stored in a safe at city hall since their arrival. pic.twitter.com/zhVmaBORMp


Follow
Courtney Tompkins

✔@CTompkinsTweets

It has begun.. pic.twitter.com/lgG4TPtG76

11:24 AM - Sep 28, 2017





“I think it was a very smooth process,” the clerk said after the first round of addresses were chosen.

However, several addresses received as many as a dozen applications each, so officials had to hold a second round drawing that narrowed it down to one applicant per address. All that were not selected to move forward immediately in the first or second rounds were placed on separate wait lists in the event one of the applicants did not make it through the extensive approval process. There were a total of 77 applications for 21 addresses.

Being selected Thursday did not guarantee each applicant a business license, rather, it gave them the green light to advance to the next stage in the process, according to Ajay Kolluri, assistant to the city manager, who organized the drawing.

Dozens of applicants competed in the lottery for the remaining 10 slots out of a total of 32 medical marijuana dispensaries that will be allowed in town under Measure MM, a ballot measure approved by Long Beach voters in November that repealed a local ban on such businesses.

Related stories
Medical marijuana advocates and members of the Long Beach Collective Association drafted Measure MM last year, following a lengthy city process that involved efforts to create a local ordinance to legalize medicinal cannabis. That effort ultimately failed in 2016 when elected officials could not reach consensus on the law’s parameters.

The measure gave priority access to applicants who had won a slot in a 2010 medical marijuana lottery that allowed businesses to open for a short time before the city reinstated a cannabis ban. Twenty-two priority applicants are moving through the approval process, with prospective locations spread in nearly every district across the city.

Here are the 10 addresses picked on Thursday:

  • 1365 W. Pacific Coast Highway
  • 2115 E. 10th St.
  • 1319 W. 14th St.
  • 2800 E. 4th St.
  • 3730 E. Broadway
  • 5630 E. Pacific Coast Highway
  • 1621 E. Spring St.
  • 6150 Cherry Ave.
  • 5900 E. Spring St.
  • 1940 E. Del Amo Blvd.

After marijuana advocates turned to the ballot initiative process, city officials asked voters to approve a referendum, Measure MA, allowing Long Beach to set marijuana tax rates different from those proposed in Measure MM. City finance officials estimate Measure MA will generate more than $5 million in new tax dollars next year, money earmarked for increased public safety resources and enforcement.

California voters in November also legalized recreational marijuana under Proposition 64, although the business license process will not begin until early 2018. Long Beach has not yet determined whether it will permit recreational marijuana businesses once the statewide regulations are rolled out. It is illegal to operate any marijuana business in the City of Long Beach without having the proper state and/or local licenses.

Long Beach’s first fully licensed medical marijuana dispensary under Measure MM, the LB Green Room, is slated to open in the coming days.

The city is currently accepting applications for the other four medical marijuana business types: cultivation, laboratory testing, manufacturing, and distribution. The application period will remain open indefinitely because, unlike with dispensaries, Measure MM did not set a cap on these types of businesses.
 
Trending: Why more and more experienced workers want a new career in cannabis
Job seekers looking for a way into the cannabis industry share details about their backgrounds, aspirations and how they’re working to stand out from the crowd
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: JUL 26, 2017, 11:03 AM •

By Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist Staff

A quick look at almost any news article on America’s cannabis industry will confirm its growth has been historic. In fact, a report earlier this year by New Frontier Data predicts the legal marijuana industry will create nearly 255,000 jobs by 2020 – with total market sales reaching more than $24 billion nationally by 2025.

And testimony to that surging interest in the industry was on display at the recent Vangst Cannabis Career Summit in downtown Denver – where scores of job seekers shook hands and dropped off résumés with representatives from about 35 companies. Some of those firms were looking to fill up to 20 open positions.

But one thing that did distinguish this fifth job fair for Vangst Talent Network, according to founder and president Karson Humiston, was the rising level of professionalism to be found among those looking for employment.

Weed jobs and more
“In 2015, working in the cannabis industry wasn’t exactly normal,” she said during an interview with The Cannabist. “And a lot of people with long-term professional careers, families (and) obligations weren’t willing to take the risk in joining an industry with a lot of uncertainty around it.”

But now, Humiston noted, more people with established careers outside of cannabis are considering the leap into legal marijuana.

“A lot of candidates with 20-plus years experience in another industry are looking to break in and apply their skills, knowledge, experiences to the cannabis industry,” she added.

The Cannabist spoke with several dozen job-hunters making the rounds at the career fair. Here are some edited highlights from those conversations:

Candice-Tillery-2-e1501087113201.jpg

Candice Tillery (Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist)
Candice Tillery
Age 31. Originally from Omaha, Nebraska. Has lived in Denver 5 ½ years.

Previous work experience: Currently in the cannabis industry, working in software on regulatory compliance and inventory management.

Looking for: New work within the industry, either in compliance or something requiring new skills.

Ambition: “I am open to a lot of avenues right now.”

Quote: “I’m here to switch up my career and I’d like to broaden my horizons. I got into the cannabis industry about four years ago. I was here (in Denver) for a while, did documentation and titling at an automotive dealership. And I was literally sitting at my desk one day. And it was like, ‘Is this the end? Do I want something more?’ When I realized the cannabis industry was almost like a whole new avenue for this generation that can’t find jobs, I decided to jump into it.”

Any pushback from friends and family about working in marijuana?

“I’m from Omaha, Nebraska, and there’s really not a lot of pushback. I was actually surprised. They probably don’t tell all their friends and family members what I do, but from the people I know I actually had very positive reactions to it.”

What misconceptions do you think people have about the legal cannabis industry?

“I think they just think it’s a whole bunch of stoners being lazy, and there’s money laundering and all this craziness going on. But there really isn’t. Everything is very strict; everything is very regimented. They track everything. So there’s no way for things to get out of control. So it’s a very enclosed and safe system.”

Jody-Kemp-2-e1501078063132.jpg

Jody Kemp (Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist)
Jody Kemp
Age 46. From New Jersey, has lived in Denver 25 years.

Previous work experience: Professional cook, chef training, wheelchair sales.

Looking for: Work with edible production, budtending and management.

Ambition: Head chef in cannabis edible production.

Quote: “I’ve been in a wheelchair 34 years. I was injured when I was 13 in a bicycling accident. I use medical cannabis. I worked in professional kitchens for about ten years, between Denver, Fort Collins and Telluride — and Aspen as well. These past four years have been at home with my daughter; I’ve started to reenter the work field. (Cannabis) seems like a burgeoning industry and I have a lot of cooking experience.”

Any pushback from friends and family about working in marijuana?

No. They’ve encouraged me to pursue this field.

What misconceptions do you think people have about the legal cannabis industry?

“I think they think it’s a big party. I don’t think that they get our regulations and our professionalism with regard to it. I don’t think they truly understand the respect that is required with use and how to properly behave and remain professional. It can be a part of people’s lives in so many ways.”

Shermirah-Brachah-2-e1501079180383.jpg

Shermirah Brachah (Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist)
Shemirah Brachah
Age 69. Moved to Denver from New York State three years ago.

Previous work experience: Office management, project management, research, government management liaison with local governments in upstate New York, recruiting and training.

Looking for: Office management, administrative assistant positions.

Ambition: Leaning towards edibles industry.

Quote: “I’m in the job market and this seems like an interesting avenue to pursue. I didn’t know what to expect as far as the competition, but I did think that it’s not as steep as maybe the general job market, because it’s specialized. I’m fascinated; personally interested in (cannabis) for the past 42 years. And coming from a state where it’s been illegal into a state where it’s legal and you can use it, I’ve found it most helpful. I have a car accident injury from 20 years ago; I don’t like meds that zonk me out. But with CBD tinctures and topicals I’m just so thankful that there’s an alternative.”

Any pushback from friends and family about working in marijuana?

“We’re very supportive of the industry and hopeful for its continued success.”

What misconceptions do you think people have about the legal cannabis industry?

“The stigmas that have been applied to it are really based on fear and ignorance. Because we have a track record of its use now, we know that in states where it’s legal, Medicaid and Medicare costs have gone down, older people using it are less reliant on traditional medicines. And it doesn’t make people crazy, the way the “Reefer Madness” movie portrayed, which was more like a zombie apocalypse story.”

Tasha-Benally-1-e1501079314275.jpg

Tasha Benally (Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist)
Tasha Benally
Age 37. Moved to Colorado from New Mexico 2-plus years ago, to work in legal cannabis.

Previous work experience: Hospitality and hotel industry.

Looking for: Budtending work and more involvement in the “retail part of the industry.”

Colorado marijuana news
Ambition: To produce her own cannabis edible.

Quote: “I look at it more for medicinal purposes than recreational. That’s what a lot of people have moved here for, the medicinal part of it. Getting in the industry was a little bit easy because I went through a temporary agency, which provided cannabis classes for me: budtending classes, the METRC system (Colorado’s seed-to-sale tracking program), harvesting and trimming. They also gave you experience in a grow house as well.”

Any pushback from friends and family about working in marijuana?

“As far as my immediate family, no.”

What misconceptions do you think people have about the legal cannabis industry?

“I think it’s more of the government side as far as just charging people, the criminal part of it. … A lot of the states are looking at it as a bad drug, and it really is not.”

Paul-Evans-2-e1501078671877.jpg

Paul Evans (Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist)
Paul Evans
Age 52. From Colorado Springs, lives in Denver.

Previous work experience: Retired U.S. Air Force, medical marijuana patient.

Looking for: A position in the retail or business side of the industry.

Ambition: Working with PTSD vets, to let them know there’s a way to feel better without opiates.

Quote: “I’ve had several back surgeries. I was prescribed tons of opiates, and I credit cannabis with being able to get me off of opiates, so I’m a believer. I’ve been a stay-at-home dad for some years now. My youngest is getting close to pre-K age, so it’s time for me to rejoin the workforce again.”

Any pushback from friends and family about working in marijuana:

“No, I’m very open with my family and friends about my use and they’re very supportive.”

What misconceptions do you think people have about the legal cannabis industry?

“I think it’s still a young enough industry that they don’t see the adult in the room yet. And I think that when so much has been coming out positive about cannabis, I almost think that there’s a whole bunch of people outside of Colorado who say, ‘Well they’re calling it a miracle drug and that’s obviously not true.’ I think Colorado has established that it’s workable, the sky doesn’t fall and now other states are really – based on Colorado’s performance – gearing up for it.”

Erica-Haferkamp-1-e1501076863963.jpg

Erica Haferkamp (Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist)
Erica Haferkamp
Age 41. Lives in Cleburne, Texas.

Previous work experience: U.S. Marine Corps veteran. Director of marketing for a digital agency.

Looking for: A director of marketing or marketing manager position in a tech startup or a cannabis wholesale company.

Ambition: High and happy in Colorado!

Quote: “Cannabis is something I love and so is marketing, and I would like to marry the two together. I’ll have to do my homework a lot on the actual plant even though I imbibe. I need to further my education but I don’t think it’s going to be hard, because I’m going to love every minute of it. And I think it’s great that I can be here in my suit and look as professional as I do and be standing next to someone with blue hair, and that we’re both equally accepted and can communicate our professional abilities.”

Any pushback from friends and family about working in marijuana?

“My family already knows that I take it because I’m a disabled veteran. I was on narcotics through the VA and I really didn’t like it or how it made me feel. And when my mom was going through brain cancer we decided to switch (to cannabis). It eased her pain and it really helps me on a daily basis.”

What misconceptions do you think people have about the legal cannabis industry?

“I think they’re having to deal with bad propaganda that started in the early 1900s. Our forefathers grew the plant.”

Jonathan-Parker-1-e1501078413395.jpg

Jonathan Parker (Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist)
Jonathan Parker
Age 37. Moved to Denver from Texas three years ago to join the cannabis industry.

Previous work experience: Marketing and advertising, retail management, fashion design.

Looking for: A management position in a dispensary.

Ambition: Ownership of a cannabis business.

Quote: “I’ve been in (marketing and advertising) for about 15 years: account management, project management. But (the cannabis industry) is something that hits with me on all cylinders. I’ve budtended. When I first got here, nobody cared about 15 years in advertising and marketing and that I was a C-suite executive. No one cared at all when you’re changing industries. It’s like I was speaking Greek. But I wanted to be here, I just wanted to be in this industry. So they started me at a front desk position and so I learned everything from there. Recently I was a store manager at a dispensary. I’m just trying to find a right niche. I like educating people about the product.”

Any pushback from friends and family about working in marijuana?

“Oh, yeah. Friends and family. They say, ‘You’re stupid. it’s not the right industry for you to be in, they’ll never be able to pay you what you’re worth.’ I remember when Leafly had their first ad in the New York Times. I put that up in my office and that was not good.”

What misconceptions do you think people have about the legal cannabis industry?

“This is a legit business. There are real business people in it, thinking on real business terms. It’s not some back-alley operation. If you ask anybody on the illegal side if they could be on the legal side, they’d say yes, hands-down, every day.”

Lyndsay-Rogers-1-e1501079550678.jpg

Lyndsay Rogers (Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist)
Lyndsay Rogers
Age 39. Moved to metro Denver from San Francisco three months ago.

Previous work experience: Customer service, retail, call centers.

Looking for: Entry-level work in the cannabis industry.

Ambition: Cannabis dispensary manager

Quote: “It’s a good opportunity to see a lot of places that are hiring, a lot of places that have a lot of different positions in the industry and just start getting in, which is what I’m looking for. I got my MED (Colorado marijuana certification) badge two weeks ago, which means I can start working now. I’m getting my start here and then, if I end up going back to California, I’ll have the industry experience. Customer service is a big deal. You want to get people to come back, in a dispensary or wherever.”

Any pushback from friends and family about working in marijuana?

“There’s been a little incredulity about it, some criticism, but for the most part people are getting used to it.”

What misconceptions do you think people have about the legal cannabis industry?

“I think recreational kinds of skews it, because the medical is very specific. Recreational (cannabis) isn’t giving it a bad name, but I don’t think most people know what that difference is. It something that should be acceptable and should be used. And to have that shut down just for stigmas or misunderstanding would be unfortunate.”

Doug-Grego-2-e1501077461299.jpg

Doug Grego (Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist)
Doug Grego
Age 25. Moved to Denver from Pittsburgh two months ago.

Previous work experience: Chemical engineer at a manufacturing company.

Looking for: Work in the cannabis extraction/concentrates industry.

Ambition: To bring professionalism and accountability to the legal cannabis industry.

Quote: “I’m ready to follow my passion, ready to build a career doing what I love, every single day. As chemical engineers we’re trained to look at a process as a whole. So I look at it from start to end, how do we improve things here. Especially 10 years down the line, when you you’re going to have multi-million square foot facilities pumping out concentrates. As a chemical engineer what we’re trained to do is design those massive plants, run those massive plants, understand how to scale things up and down.”

Any pushback from friends and family about working in marijuana?

“No. Actually my family has been extremely supportive of it. They were kind of naysayers back in the day, but this is the first time they’ve seen me passionate about something. They’re happy that I’m happy.”

What misconceptions do you think people have about the legal cannabis industry?

“A lot more young, technical professionals should be entering this industry. They’re going to need trained professionals to do this.”

Debbie-Brock-2-e1501077306146.jpg

Debbie Brock (Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist)
Debbie Brock
Age 42. Moved to Denver from Dallas, 10 years ago.

Previous work experience: Accountant for property management and cannabis companies.

Looking for: Accounting positions in the cannabis industry

Ambition: To be a controller for a cannabis company.

Quote: “I moved out here for camping. I wasn’t happy at the place (where I was working) and found the (cannabis) job on Craigslist – I said this was something I could really get into. I was the accounting department; I loved it. I’ve been doing accounting for 25 years and there’s only so much automation that can be done with that. They need to have trustworthy people in those positions.”

Any pushback from friends and family about working in marijuana?

“I did when I first moved to Colorado, but not anymore.”

What misconceptions do you think people have about the legal cannabis industry?

A lot more people are doing it than what they realize; I mean grandmothers and stuff like that.”
 
Hemp is the new kale, say two N.Y. farmers who are gurus in finance, cybersecurity
JD Farms in upstate New York is the state's first legal hemp farm in decades, and the two men behind it are betting big on their crop and the many ways to eat it
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: JUL 13, 2017, 12:25 PM • UPDATED: 3 MONTHS AGOADD A COMMENT

By Kate Krader, Bloomberg

Meet your local hemp farmers.

Before he started JD Farms, Mark Justh was a managing director for JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Asia. His co-founder, Dan Dolgin, worked in counterterrorism for various agencies in Washington.

Now these two men are partners in the hemp business. JD Farms specializes in top-quality food products — including baby greens salad mix, pasta, and cold-pressed oil — and it’s becoming a culinary sensation across the country.

Located in Eaton, New York, about 30 miles southeast of Syracuse, JD Farms is the first legal hemp farm in New York in more than 80 years. It’s set on 1,500 acres of certified organic land, which Justh purchased in 2008 when he developed an interest in sustainable farming. “There was a tremendous agricultural infrastructure,” Justh says of the potential he saw. “The region had been a major dairy area, but the farms were neglected. Commodity milk prices had challenged the local economy.”

He’d originally planned to grow organic produce; hemp would simply be the cover crop, as protection against weeds. However, “hemp began to look very interesting,” he says. “Then Dan got involved, and we saw the possibility of hemp as a food product.”

Dolgin was a veteran of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and the National Counterterrorism Center, both in D.C., before he got burned out on government jobs. He’d been working on cybersecurity projects in New York when he met Justh. “I grew up as a Jewish kid on Long Island,” Dolgin says. “I like the idea of making an impact in a depressed New York community, and of looking at agriculture in a new way. We began to consider hemp. Because of my regulatory background, I knew how government works — and doesn’t work.”

Related stories
Justh, meanwhile, saw the financial possibilities. “I’d been approached about growing medical marijuana. But I thought, What can I produce that has a competitive advantage? How do I compete with the Midwest, with Ukraine? I realized it was a question of government regulation. And I have a partner who is very intelligent about regulatory issues.”

Although it’s constantly mistaken for cannabis, and it comes from the same plant, hemp is not the same product. While marijuana is bred to include potent amounts of THC, hemp has only trace amounts — it contains less than 0.3 percent of the hallucinogen. “You could smoke a football field of hemp and you wouldn’t get high, you’d get a headache,” is how Dolgin describes it. Still, when it planted its first seeds, JD Farms had to install an armed guard. (Until they’re planted in the ground, hemp seeds are considered a Schedule I narcotic, according to Dolgin.)

hemp-processing-colorado.jpg

Hemp grows in Colorado’s Boulder County in 2014. (Elana Ashanti Jefferson, Cannabist file)
Hemp, the plant, is traditionally known for its use in textiles and ropes. That’s because of its strength: After about three weeks of growth, a hemp stalk will be so sturdy it’s almost impossible to break, because the fibers are so long and strong. But for culinary products, it’s the seeds that are all-important. After they’re pressed to produce oil, the resulting byproduct can be processed into a flour from which products like pasta can be created. JD Farms has also started cultivating young hemp leaves into salad mixes.

A new old industry
For those unfamiliar with the status of hemp these days, Dolgin supplies the 30-second download: “In the ’70s it got caught up with marijuana in the anti-drug laws. It stayed that way for several decades, until the tobacco industry hit rock bottom and states like Virginia realized they need a new crop for farmers. In 2014 the passage of the U.S. Farm Bill allowed states to conduct hemp pilot programs. You could grow hemp if you were certified and licensed.”

Because of the government work Dolgin had done, he was able to work closely with state senators and Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office to pass a series of bills that allowed JD Farms to grow hemp. The industry is currently a $688 million business in the United States.

In March 2016, JD Farms became the first private farm certified to grow hemp under a New York state pilot program; it planted 100 acres’ worth. That, however, did not legally give JD Farms the right to sell its product.

“There was a chance we were going to have to burn the hemp if the law didn’t pass,” Justh says with a worried laugh.

In August, Governor Cuomo signed the bill that made it legal for JD Farms to sell its harvest. In his State of the State address in January, the governor noted that hemp had the potential to become a billion-dollar industry in New York. JD Farms’ bet had paid off.

p23.jpg

Colorado farmer Ryan Loflin handles a batch of a particular hemp seed that produces vast amounts of oil for use in cooking and other applications. (AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post)
Says Dolgin, who worked with state legislatures to help get the bill passed: “What we brought to the table is that we treated hemp as a big agriculture business, not as a few plants in a greenhouse like marijuana.”

Justh adds, “For hemp to take its greater place in the agricultural landscape, it needs to be seen as a commodity.”

Dolgin sums it up: “We’re very bullish about the food aspect of hemp. It’s right for an American farm to dominate that market, especially in the organic space.”

Hemp as food
There was another reason hemp appealed to the pair: its potential to be the next runaway hit food product, the next kale. “Mark and I both live pretty healthy, active lifestyles,” remarks Dolgin. “We both knew that hemp was on its way to becoming a superfood, in that category of flax and chia seeds. We saw a sustainable long-term play in that market.”

Hemp flour products are high in protein (only soybeans have more), and hemp contains 20 amino acids, including nine that the body doesn’t produce. Among its reputed health benefits: immune-system booster, weight suppressant (because it’s high in fiber), and an ability to lower blood pressure and cholesterol. It’s popular with vegetarians because it’s high in the fatty acids omega-3 — found in good-for-you fish like salmon — and omega-6.

And then there’s the quality. JD Farms’ oil tastes fresher than other hemp oils because it’s produced in the U.S. The majority of hemp oil and seeds sold in America comes from plants grown in Canada. (According to the Toronto Star, in the first quarter of 2015, Canada exported $34 million worth of hemp seeds and oil.)

Before hemp enters the U.S. it must be sterilized. If it’s not, it counts as a Schedule I drug, along with substances such as heroin and ecstasy. When it’s heated, hemp loses its pungent freshness and nuttiness. “It’s such an oily seed, heat speeds up the rancidity,” Justh says. “Plus, it’s just sitting around in vats. It’s got nothing in common with a product that is fresh from the field.”

At JD Farms, harvested seeds are cold-pressed. “We look at it like fine wine — you can taste the terroir, can taste the fields, which gives it earthy flavor. The product is so good, it can be used as a dipping oil; it doesn’t have to hide behind other ingredients.”

Restaurants are already using it
Among the fans of JD Farms products is the dynamic chef Ignacio Mattos, of Estela and Flora Bar at the Met Breuer in Manhattan. “We are always pursuing new ingredients and flavors,” Mattos said in an email. “The leaves have quite a unique flavor profile, they’re grassy and sweet. The seeds are a bit nutty and sweet when they’re raw. The texture is quite fun when it’s toasted and a bit more savory when cooked.”

He’s working on using the seeds in desserts and adding the oil to a tomato and mozzarella salad.
At the hit New York restaurant Sunday in Brooklyn, chef Jaime Young is using JD Farms hemp seeds in a togarashi-style spice blend he sprinkles on his fried chicken. “The seeds are great,” Young says. “They have a slightly floral character and wonderful texture, almost like cracked coriander.”

One company that’s paying attention to JD Farms is Whole Foods Market Inc. According to one of its senior global grocery buyers, David Lafferty, “shoppers are seeking out hemp products more than ever, thanks to both product innovation and the increased promotion of hemp’s nutritional benefits by food brands.”

JD Farms has teamed with Satur Farms — the Long Island-based supplier of gourmet greens and vegetables — on a baby greens mix of kale and hemp that will be available at Whole Foods throughout the Northeast by the end of July. The salad’s sharp leaves are vaguely reminiscent of pot and have a similar sharp, almost minty flavor. Co-owner Paulette Satur describes the flavor as “lemony,” and is optimistic about the project.

Related stories
“We decided it fits in well with kale in terms of texture and its being chockablock with health benefits. And we’re the first to offer baby hemp leaves in the U.S., which is exciting.”

Of the slight, physical resemblance hemp shares with pot leaves, Satur jokes, “Maybe this is a good way to get older kids to eat their vegetables.”

Another partnership, with Brooklyn-based Sfoglini, has resulted in charcoal-colored, nutty-tasting dried pasta in shapes like tubular Hemp Zucca and Hemp Radiators, which are available at sfoglini.com.

“As we researched hemp food products, the majority of it was as a base ingredient for shakes and smoothies,” says Dolgin. “We believe the next iteration of the hemp market is to go into snack foods, to give it wider penetration into households,” he says. “We’re looking at products like ice cream and beer. We already have a pretty broad product portfolio, and we want to get even more innovative.”
 
You can build your own tiny hemp home, he’ll show you how
Use of hemp as a construction material is part of the revival of the crop in America, thanks to entrepreneurs who are thinking big — and small, including a Colorado firm that hosts workshops on hempcrete and builds tiny hemp houses
ShareTweetRedditMailPrint


PUBLISHED: MAY 10, 2017, 10:52 AM • UPDATED: 5 MONTHS AGOCOMMENTS (3)

By Bruce Kennedy, The Cannabist Staff

Pity poor, politicized hemp: guilty by association due to its cousin, marijuana.

Both hemp and marijuana are varieties of the species Cannabis sativa L. But unlike marijuana, hemp contains only trace amounts of the intoxicating chemical compound tetrahydrocannabinol (THC).

Hemp has been an agricultural crop for centuries, was grown in colonial America and had a U.S. revival during World War II.

But domestic production of hemp came to a standstill in the 1970s after marijuana was classified under Schedule I in the federal Controlled Substances Act and a federal permit was required to grow hemp.

Related stories
But that’s been changing in recent years after the 2014 Farm Billallowed states to approve limited production of industrial hemp. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, as of August 2016 at least 16 states have legalized industrial hemp production for commercial purposes and 20 states have passed laws allowing hemp research and pilot programs.

Use of hemp as a construction material is also part of the revival, thanks to hemp entrepreneurs who are thinking big — and small.

“The reason I was attracted to industrial hemp to begin with was because … it does have the longer-range potential,” says John Patterson, founder of northern Colorado-based Tiny Hemp Houses, a firm that offers consulting services and workshops for prospective hemp home-builders.

Patterson, 54, has spent most of his professional career as a carpenter, craftsman, woodworker and teacher. He’s also an advocate of sustainable building practices. Five years ago he immersed himself in the particulars of hemp-based construction after meeting with Ireland native Steve Allin of the International Hemp Building Association and learning his system for making and using hempcrete.

John-on-Site-1-X2.jpg

Tiny Hemp Houses founder John Patterson is shown at the site of a workshop with bales of imported hemp material to the right of the structure. (Ron Sweetin Photography)
As the name implies, hempcrete is a concrete-like construction material that uses the woody, inner core of the hemp plant mixed with water and lime, or powdered limestone or chalk. Hempcrete can either be molded into building blocks or, as Patterson prefers, it can be mixed on-site into a slurry and poured into frames in order to create hempcrete walls.

According to the National Hemp Association, hempcrete is not only a durable construction material but is both fire and pest resistant. Patterson also notes that it has a measure of flexibility (unlike concrete), doesn’t emit toxic fumes (like some mainstream construction materials) and is vapor permeable.

“One of its number-one qualities is its ability to breathe,” Patterson notes during a phone interview with The Cannabist.

One of the big problems with conventional home construction, he says, is that “we seal up homes so tightly nowadays, and then we create moisture from our breath and our cooking and things like that. That water sits on the surface of the wall and that’s where the molds and mildews grow. With a hemp-lime system, the house absorbs some of that moisture so it’s less likely you’ll have mold and mildew with the proper (hempcrete) recipe.”

Hempcrete is also a great insulator, according to Patterson. He says his walls tend to be a bit thicker than in standard construction but that he ends up with an R-22 insulation rating, or the equivalent of a slightly thinner wall insulated with fiberglass.

Having-a-Ball-X2-333x500.jpg

A closeup of balls of hempcrete. (Ron Sweetin Photography)
Currently all the hemp used by Patterson for his tiny home projects comes from abroad. Hemp industry officials say more than $500 million worth of hemp is currently imported into the U.S. annually due to the federal prohibition on cannabis.

Patterson says he imports the hemp as loose particles, in 30- to 33-pound bags from Europe. One of his tiny homes is usually about 120 to 400 square feet in size (For some perspective, the size of an average hotel room is 325-350 square feet). It takes about two tons, or approximately 125 bags, of hemp to build a tiny hemp house, but you can go full-sized too. A 1,500 square-foot house, or about the size of an average three-bedroom home, requires around 1,000 33-pound bags of hemp.

Patterson says he believes in building small, and works with municipalities and do-it-yourselfers to create these smaller living spaces.

“It’s not for everybody, but some people are looking for smaller,” he says. “It’s less expensive. The younger crowd, they don’t want to be tied to a mortgage and they realize they can live with less space. And if you organize that space better it’s amazing how much you can accomplish in a smaller home.”

Coming up May 12-14, Patterson is hosting one of his tiny hemp house/hempcrete workshops, his sixth so far.

As for the people who take part in his workshops John says it’s an eclectic mix. “We get some young people looking for opportunities in the hemp industry,” he says. “Then there’s people from green building or from traditional building, looking for something a little different. Or just people interested in building a hemp house.”

Patterson says the hemp house movement and interest in using hempcrete has taken on a lot of momentum over the past three years.

“We kind of started the whole trend here in Colorado, but we’re (now) working with states that have nothing to do with marijuana: North Carolina, Kansas, Nebraska,” he says. “So we do have a national momentum going.”

And that national momentum toward hemp farming and hemp construction could end up having major economic benefits for agricultural parts of the U.S. – as well as the nation’s construction sector.

“Farmers across the nation are looking for alternatives,” says Patterson. “The tobacco industry in the South is going away. They really need the economic development to bring a valid crop back to their farmlands.”

As a crop, hemp is drought resistant, grows rapidly and requires relatively little pesticide or herbicide treatment. Industrial hemp, meanwhile, has an astonishing number of uses: from food to fuel to construction materials and clothing.

Doin-the-Roof-8-X2.jpg

Workshop attendees pour hempcrete as part of the construction of the hemp house. (Ron Sweetin Photography)
 
Colorado Hits Billion Dollar Sales Mark in Nine Months
GAGE PEAKE
October 13, 2017
colorado-dipensary-money-data-dive-1280x800.jpg

In this Friday, Dec. 9, 2014, file photograph, Matt Hart holds up a bud of Lemon Skunk, the most potent strain of marijuana available at the 3D Dispensary in Denver. (David Zalubowski/AP)
According to data from the Colorado Department of Revenue, the Rocky Mountain state sold over $1 billion dollars in cannabis through the first nine months of 2017.


RELATED STORY
Data Dive: Cannabis Sales Keep Climbing in Washington and Colorado

It took the state 10 months to reach the billion dollar mark in 2016. Sales totals through the first nine months of this year have reached a total of about $1.1 billion—the highest amount of total sales to date in the country.

When comparing the data to last year, through 9 months of sales Leafly found that Colorado totaled $942 million, with the totals in 2017 so far showing there was over a $100 million dollar increase in sales from the same time period, totaling $1,118,207,832.87 in sales.


RELATED STORY
Data Dive: Cannabis Extract Sales Skyrocketing

Through the first nine months of 2017, Colorado has seen a fairly steady increase from the year prior, with the state routinely breaking its total sales record in the past 6 months–first in March, and then in July, when the state totaled more than $136 million in total cannabis sales, when combining adult-use sales and medicinal marijuana sales.


RELATED STORY
Cannabis Legalization Boosts Property Values, Study Says

The state initiated a different taxing structure in July 2017, with the special sales tax rate for recreational marijuana sales increasing from 10% to 15%. The new law exempted adult-use cannabis sales from the 2.9% standard state sales tax rate.

Medical marijuana and accessories are still subject to that 2.9% special sales tax rate, however.
 
Im going to give this thread 2 more wks..

I dont think most of the kats on here are about this cannabis/hemp industry!!

 
Im going to give this thread 2 more wks..

I dont think most of the kats on here are about this cannabis/hemp industry!!

yea so many ways to make money of off it, but it helps to be on the west coast, where there is much less red tape to go through...

growing hemp is going to be big, its so fuckin versatile...

everything from oils to clothing....

if I were to get into the business I would look at investing in things they are going to need to grow their shit, like organic fertilizers..

I also think organic bud with the seeds and all is gonna be big again, too much hybrid gmo type weed out there...

I think its a great thread just too much information at once...

it was nice to see the brother and sister making moves but we are so under repped its sad..

do many fam got jail time or records following them around making it hard for them to make moves..

and you got muthafuckas hitting the multimillion dollar range and more... with their own jets and shit..

doing the same thing fam got locked up for...

I know california is tryin to rectify that shit, but it needs to be rectified all over...

especially in places like louisiana they are just fuckin retarded the way they go about dealing with the holy herb...
 
yea so many ways to make money of off it, but it helps to be on the west coast, where there is much less red tape to go through...

growing hemp is going to be big, its so fuckin versatile...

everything from oils to clothing....

if I were to get into the business I would look at investing in things they are going to need to grow their shit, like organic fertilizers..

I also think organic bud with the seeds and all is gonna be big again, too much hybrid gmo type weed out there...

I think its a great thread just too much information at once...

it was nice to see the brother and sister making moves but we are so under repped its sad..

do many fam got jail time or records following them around making it hard for them to make moves..

and you got muthafuckas hitting the multimillion dollar range and more... with their own jets and shit..

doing the same thing fam got locked up for...

I know california is tryin to rectify that shit, but it needs to be rectified all over...

especially in places like louisiana they are just fuckin retarded the way they go about dealing with the holy herb...

Thanks for the feedback!! I might be throwing too much information all at once!! Ill try to slow it down a bit and spread it out weekly. Maybe toss in sum up and comin strains!!
 
yea so many ways to make money of off it, but it helps to be on the west coast, where there is much less red tape to go through...

growing hemp is going to be big, its so fuckin versatile...

everything from oils to clothing....

if I were to get into the business I would look at investing in things they are going to need to grow their shit, like organic fertilizers..

I also think organic bud with the seeds and all is gonna be big again, too much hybrid gmo type weed out there...

I think its a great thread just too much information at once...

it was nice to see the brother and sister making moves but we are so under repped its sad..

do many fam got jail time or records following them around making it hard for them to make moves..

and you got muthafuckas hitting the multimillion dollar range and more... with their own jets and shit..

doing the same thing fam got locked up for...

I know california is tryin to rectify that shit, but it needs to be rectified all over...

especially in places like louisiana they are just fuckin retarded the way they go about dealing with the holy herb...




I just signed me and the Mrs. up for the Oaksterdam University classes this coming February in Jersey (Newark). When Christie Kreme fat ass get outta the governor's mansion, the next governor will definitely legalize cannabis. Meanwhile, me and my peoples trying to come up with ideas to capitalize off the new markets. What's dope is it don't hafta be actual weed - you can cake up off something just RELATED to the new industry. Not tryna sit on the sidelines on this one.
 
Thanks for the feedback!! I might be throwing too much information all at once!! Ill try to slow it down a bit and spread it out weekly. Maybe toss in sum up and comin strains!!

No doubt and yea the strains would get some replies most folks can relate to that....
 
I just signed me and the Mrs. up for the Oaksterdam University classes this coming February in Jersey (Newark). When Christie Kreme fat ass get outta the governor's mansion, the next governor will definitely legalize cannabis. Meanwhile, me and my peoples trying to come up with ideas to capitalize off the new markets. What's dope is it don't hafta be actual weed - you can cake up off something just RELATED to the new industry. Not tryna sit on the sidelines on this one.

exactly you dont have to grow weed, you can just learn the strains, how they effect the body and brain, understand edibles and all the new forms of weed they are coming out with like wax...

get familiar with terminology, and you could be a manager to a weed spot, them muthafuckas be damn near makin close to a hundred geez a year, I think the average pay is around sixty geez and thats just starting..

you can open up your security business, security plays a large part, with dispenseries only dealin in cash, they gonna need someone to move that money...

so many avenues in this game.. even though in the future most people will be growing their own for personal use, but we talkin a few generations from now....
 
I just signed me and the Mrs. up for the Oaksterdam University classes this coming February in Jersey (Newark). When Christie Kreme fat ass get outta the governor's mansion, the next governor will definitely legalize cannabis. Meanwhile, me and my peoples trying to come up with ideas to capitalize off the new markets. What's dope is it don't hafta be actual weed - you can cake up off something just RELATED to the new industry. Not tryna sit on the sidelines on this one.

Right on, my man!! We cant afford to miss this train!! The options are out their!! I wish you nothing but the best!! Green days ahead!!! I will say this, from what ive seen and I havent seen it all,,, the grow and edibles are where its at!! Just gotta get people to understand, theres more ways than smoking cannabis to get that good medicine!!
 
INDUSTRY
From Dry Sift To Pure Rosin in One Squash

SPONSORED BY SASQUASH ROSIN PRESS

TOR-kief-3-1280x800.jpg

In this four-part series, The Original Resinator and four partners discuss the equipment, support, and methods they use to produce pure and potent cannabis concentrates and extracts. Part 1 is sponsored by The Original Resinator, the largest capacity multi-use botanical extraction unit on the market, and Support the Roots, makers of the Sasquash Rosin Press.

For many cannabis users, concentrates like budder and shatter are a delicacy—something to be enjoyed on special occasions, and savored like a good meal. And just as with any good meal, ingredients matter, and you won’t find ingredients much finer than live resin, extracted directly from freshly harvested cannabis.

TOR-kief-6-1024x640.jpg

A batch of dry sift kief from a Resinator. (Courtesy of The Original Resinator)
The Original Resinator’s innovative freeze, fracture, and extraction process uses high-quality micron screens, powerful custom motors, and liquid CO2 to lower temperatures well below freezing, allowing users to harvest trichome-rich live resin quickly, efficiently, and without the use of solvents that many consumers aim to avoid. Sub-zero temperatures are great for any extraction, but especially helpful for extracting from live or uncured cannabis, where CBD and THC-A are at their highest levels. Frozen trichomesinstantly fracture and then fall through the micron screen, so that you get the good stuff and leave the rest behind.

With The Original Resinator, pulling a big batch of dry sift kief from some killer flower is satisfying in the extreme—but it’s not the end of the road by a long shot. You can send that material for a second spin, this time with the addition of water and ice for a “bubble while you tumble” experience. Filter the resulting water through a series of micron-sifting bags and you’ll separate the liquid and plant material from the resin, coming away with potent, resinous bubble hash or live ice resin.


The Original Resinator can extract both of these concentrates from up to 15 pounds of flower or sugarleaf in as little as 20 minutes from setup to teardown, without using any harsh chemical solvents—just the power of physics.

Those beautiful batches of pure, clean kief and bubble hash are sights to behold; but they’re also ingredients in their own right. Like turning coal into diamonds, the right amount of heat and pressure applied with a rosin press can bring out the best in these concentrates—literally.

“Hash rosin and sift rosin is the most exciting way to make rosin. When you press hash and sift rosin properly, a river of oil comes pouring out that smells and tastes just amazing,” says Matt Ilich, president of Support the Roots, which manufactures the Sasquash Rosin Press.

from-dry-sift-to-pure-rosin-2-768x1024.jpg

Under pressure, live resin gets transformed into concentrate. (Courtesy of Support the Roots)
While a big batch of sift is impressive to behold, you’re going to need some serious machinery to unlock its full potential by crushing out the oils as delicious, dabbable concentrates. That’s where the Sasquash comes in. Fabricated in California, these presses use precision-machined steel plates to apply heat and pressure—up to 20,000 pounds of it—to material, squeezing the good stuff out of flower, kief, and hash alike. They also come in a variety of sizes suitable to a wide variety of applications.

“Our plate sizing is designed around commercial and manufacturing use,” says Ilich. “That means you can process a lot of product at once, while also carefully controlling the pressure, temperature, and plate speed—all essential factors in getting a good squish from dry sift or hash.”

What kind of extract you end up with depends on how you treat your hash or sift during a press. Low temperature presses will take longer to melt the trichomes, resulting in an extract like budder or crumble. Higher temperature operations melt material more quickly, producing more stable extracts like shatter. And keep in mind—temperatures are all relative, and materials like sift and hash should be pressed at lower temperatures than flower, between 150 and 210 degrees Fahrenheit.

from-dry-sift-to-pure-rosin-1-1024x768.jpg

Post-press extract from a Sasquash Rosin Press. (Courtesy of Support the Roots)
Whatever temperature you’re pressing at, though, you’ll want to apply pressure nice and slowly to avoid blowing out the bags that enclose hash and sift during a press extraction. Nothing can spoil a batch of budder or shatter faster than exploding a bag into it.

If you’re looking to get those stunning streams of amber oil running strong from the Sasquash, though, you need to start with the cleanest sift or hash available.

“The yield you get from sift or hash all depends on the purity of what you’re putting in. The less plant material, the more of a yield you’re going to get,” says Ilich. “The Resinator is a great product to make really pure sift from, so it goes hand in hand with a rosin press like the Sasquash.”
 
The cannabis market is bound to be huge – outpacing the NFL and organic foods according to some projections.

Say what?!?!?

I really wanna see all these good things about hemp and cannabis bring justice to the black and brown people who were treated unjustly by the justice system.
 
Back
Top