Two of Denver’s Early Cannabis Players Take on New Challenges
Now that more places are considering legalizing cannabis, some of Colorado’s early pot players are moving on to new jobs.
Now that more places are considering legalizing cannabis, some of Colorado’s early pot players are moving on to new jobs.
So many potential jurors were challenged that the city’s case against the church ended in a mistrial on February 28.
Draw the blinds, lower the lights and clean out that bong, because we’re getting baked tonight.
Guaranteed to blow your mind — anytime.
After years of making little ground in Colorado, social cannabis consumption is finally starting to see some progression.
If passed, the proposal would create the first statewide licensing program for cannabis consumption.
Last year, then-eleven-year-old Colorado resident and medical marijuana patient Alexis Bortell joined other plaintiffs in a lawsuit against pot-hating Attorney General Jeff Sessions over federal scheduling of cannabis. Yesterday, February 26, a judge with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York dismissed the suit, but Bortell, now twelve, wasn’t distressed. Shortly after the news went public, a post appeared on her Facebook page reading, “We were ready. Smile. We know #SCOTUS [Supreme Court of the United States] is where we are probably going.”
If it’s pure hash oil and there’s no vaping liquid in there, then you can dab or eat that oil all you want. But don’t give up just yet.
In an interview with Westword, Borman talks about “puffragettes,” today’s challenges in the industry and much more.
The cannabis calendar is filling as February moves to March 2018.
After Denver Environmental Health prohibited sales of kratom for human consumption in the wake of a U.S. Food and Drug Administration alert late last year, advocates for the plant-based pain reliever spoke out, with many saying the product had helped them kick addictions to powerful opioids, including heroin. These testimonials are echoed by Roxanne Gullikson, facility director for Portland, Maine’s Greener Pastures Holisticare, a residential treatment center opening next month that will use kratom in combination with marijuana as part of a formal and comprehensive addiction treatment regimen. To her, Denver’s ban is both unjustified and potentially damaging.
The president and general counsel for Weedmaps predicts that 2018 will be a big year for the cannabis industry.
Two conservative organizations are joining forces to burst Colorado’s pot bubble while warning other states of what they believe has been a big mistake.
SB 88 zoomed through the Colorado General Assembly in barely over a month and was signed by Lieutenant Governor Donna Lynne on Thursday, February 22.
The dispensary chain’s Thornton location could be open within the next couple months, according to Thornton city officials.
Dwayne Benjamin will open Tetra 9 on February 22, 2018.
The chemical structure of THC and other cannabinoids found in cannabis begins to change when exposed to heat and starts to deteriorate the higher the temperature gets.
Run by a longtime reporter on Colorado politics, the website is funded by a dispensary chain and isn’t hiding its subjectivity.
Auctions have long been an avenue for car buyers looking for deals off the beaten path, but in Colorado, they’re also a cheap way to supply your cannabis cultivation.
Shortly after we published a post about Lakewood entrepreneur Faith Day facing down the Food and Drug Administration over a kratom investigation, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in conjunction with the FDA, released a health warning about a “multi-state outbreak of Salmonella infections” related to the popular but controversial herbal pain reliever, with one person from Colorado said to among those affected. And even though Day and the feds have very different views about kratom, some of the concerns voiced by the CDC echo ones she shared with us.
I’ve found that potent hybrids create the best shit-eating grins and munchies without causing anxiety, and Blue Dragon is a definite contender.
Grow-Off co-founder Jake Browne had kept the genetics for each contest unknown until the awards ceremony to ensure there were no advantages among the teams.