The price of weed isn’t falling this harvest.
The post US cannabis harvest price report 2020 appeared first on Leafly.
The price of weed isn’t falling this harvest.
The post US cannabis harvest price report 2020 appeared first on Leafly.
Let your customers know exactly what’s in their vape cart—from seed to sale.
The post Encrypted cartridges are here to help you build customer trust appeared first on Leafly.
The President used to say he supported medical legalization. Not anymore.
The post Trump orders activists to stop saying he supports medical marijuana appeared first on Leafly.
5 Medicinal Cannabis Essentials
There are thousands of medicinal cannabis products available for purchase online, but the internet can be a hard place to buy stuff if you don’t really know what you’re looking for.
The post 5 Medicinal Cannabis Essentials appeared first on The Fresh Toast.
A strong majority of New Mexico voters are in favor of legalizing marijuana with social equity provisions in place, and about half support decriminalizing drug possession more broadly, according to a new poll.
The survey asked: “Do you support or oppose a proposal to legalize, tax, and regulate cannabis, also known as marijuana, sales to adults 21 and over, with provisions in place to ensure the tax revenue is reinvested back into communities?”
Seventy-two percent of respondents said they favor the proposal, including 94% of Democrats, 46% of Republicans and 93% of independents.
Voters were also asked in the poll, which was sponsored by Drug Policy Action (DPA), about a variety of equity components, regardless of how they responded to the legalization question.
Majorities support scaling back licensing fees to bolster small businesses (80%), expunging prior cannabis convictions (67%), allowing those with previous marijuana convictions to participate in the legal industry (62%), stopping the denial of public benefits or health care based on cannabis use or positive cannabis drug tests (68%), banning police stops based only on the odor of marijuana (58%) and providing financial assistance to low-income medical marijuana patients (62%).
“New Mexicans are ready for cannabis legalization, and they want to see equity built into the legislative proposal to help right the many wrongs caused by the failed war on drugs,” Emily Kaltenbach, senior director of resident states and New Mexico at DPA, said in a press release.
“Repairing the damage done by cannabis prohibition is not negotiable,” she said. “It is time to stop criminalizing people for cannabis and instead realize the economic and social benefits of having cannabis possession and sales regulated in New Mexico.”
But beyond marijuana, there’s evidently an appetite for broadly drug policy reform among New Mexicans.
Asked if they “support or oppose making small-scale possession of all drugs for personal use a misdemeanor, instead of a felony which carries steeper penalties,” 62% said they are in favor of the proposal while 31% said they were opposed.
Those who said they support that policy were asked a follow up question: “Do you support or oppose making possession, not selling, of all drugs for personal use a civil offense with a fine instead of jail time?” And 79% of that group said they back decriminalization, compared to 16% who are against it.
That means that, according to the poll, 49% of New Mexicans support decriminalization.
Meanwhile, voters in Oregon have the chance next month to make their state the first in the nation to decriminalize drug possession by passing a ballot measure to enact the reform.
The New Mexico survey involved interviews with 1,193 voters from September 22-24. The margin of error is 3 percentage points.
It’s possible that the strong support for cannabis legalization could further increase if voters in neighboring Arizona approve the policy change through the ballot next month. And polling in that state also indicates that there’s a strong chance of passage, with two recent surveys showing growing majority support.
While legalization isn’t on the ballot in New Mexico, House Speaker Brian Egolf (D) recently said that the legislature will again attempt to advance the reform next session.
A bill to legalize cannabis for adult use passed one Senate committee in January only to be rejected in another before the end of the short 2020 session. But lawmakers seem intent on giving it another go, and they have strong support from Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D), who said last month that marijuana legalization represents a positive fiscal opportunity for the state, especially amid budget shortfalls caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
In May, Lujan Grisham signaled that she may actively campaign against lawmakers who blocked her legalization bill in this year’s regular session. She also said in February that she’s open to letting voters decide on the policy change via a ballot referendum.
The legalization effort in the state may also get a boost next year from the results of this year’s primary elections in which several Democratic lawmakers who had opposed the reform were ousted by progressive challengers.
Rep. Javier Martinez (D) who chairs a joint committee that held a hearing last month to discuss the economic impact of cannabis reform, said he’s hopeful that the policy change will be enacted this upcoming session and said he anticipates that “in this year’s version of the bill, we are very likely to get Republican support, particularly on the Senate side.”
This article has been republished from Marijuana Moment under a content-sharing agreement. Read the original article here.
Featured image by Gina Coleman/Weedmaps
The post New Mexico voters strongly favor marijuana legalization and half back drug decriminalization, poll shows appeared first on Weedmaps News.
The Many Ways Marijuana Prohibition Still Hurts American Farmers
American farmers are still being hurt by the continued restrictions on hemp that have no real scientific basis. And that hurts us all.
The post The Many Ways Marijuana Prohibition Still Hurts American Farmers appeared first on The Fresh Toast.
Infusing your own cannabis oil is a stoner rite of passage, though made obsolete by recreational legalization. Pre-internet, the tradition nearly always necessitated a trusted stoner guide or, at least, a dubious counterculture cookbook. Post internet, the process became marginally easier with technological sharing of techniques and recipes. After adult-use legalization, however, this heritage craft has been aggrandized to commodity levels, resulting in dispensary shelves packed with all kinds of medicated edible delights.
But the bottom line remains; for those who still pursue the heritage craft of extracting cannabinoids, terpenes, and essential oils from fresh weed, the process is time consuming, complex, and enormously stanky.
The LEVO II countertop oil extractor has compartmentalized the most challenging aspects of at-home extraction — most remarkably the processes of drying and decarboxylation — all in a countertop device as inconspicuous as a Kitchen Aid mixer or an oversized cookie jar. And while it doesn’t completely erase the persistent stank of slow-roasted weed, it is self-contained enough to significantly decrease overall cannabis vapors.
The LEVO II is a countertop oil infusion machine. Its compact design takes up about as much shelf real estate as a family-sized rice cooker, and it’s available in a range of contemporary colors. A LEVO II can hold about a quarter ounce of crushed herbs, and can produce up to 19 ounces, or just over 2 cups, of infused oil. While the LEVO II can be used with any kitchen herb your culinary heart desires, it’s enormous popularity with the cannabis community has given it quite the reputation as a cannabis oil extractor.
The LEVO II can dehydrate fresh botanicals, but perhaps the most remarkable feature of this kitchen appliance is how effectively it “activates” dried herbs — activation being shorthand for decarboxylation, the process in which the cannabinoids are heat-activated.
Original LEVOs were a bit smaller, did not feature activation cycles, and seemed more functional for culinary or skincare endeavors. The LEVO II however, is firmly geared toward cannabis extractors.
Once your LEVO II is removed from the box, you will notice a large sticker on its face prompting a download of the LEVO II smartphone app, which will then trigger the LEVO II’s Bluetooth, connecting the machine to your smart device. The machine can be controlled almost entirely by the app, but if you’re more the hands-on type, the machine’s interface is uncomplicated and easy to understand.
The LEVO II is sleek and modular, with a lid that pops open with a gentle push, revealing a ceramic reservoir, a stainless steel infusion pod with a silicone mat and lid, and a small silicone stirrer that looks a bit like a spiky miniature hockey puck. The components are all easily removable from the machine, and easily replaced after cleaning.
The operational interface is comprised of: a small LED screen that displays verbal prompts throughout the process, one button that triggers drying, activation, and infusion cycles, buttons for controlling temperature and time, a button that unlocks the lid mid-cycle, a start/stop button and, lastly, a button that dispenses the oil once it’s been infused. Turn it on, choose your cycle, adjust your temperature and time, and you’re ready to start the infusion process.
The app is not necessary to operate the LEVO II, but it does offer a nice bit of assistance, delivering value in its calculations of temperatures and cook times based on a database of usable oils and botanicals. Choose from a concise list of common herbs and oils and the app will provide the correct temp and cook time. Once your LEVO II is turned on and connected to your smartphone, users can then control the LEVO II from their device. When doing your first extraction, however, we suggest operating from the machine’s interface and using the app for reference. This may save you confusion later in the process.
The app also features blog posts explaining things like why activation is critical and how to make a vegan pesto pizza — in case you’re up for light reading while your herbs infuse.
Before using the LEVO II in any way, it is important to rinse all of the removable components.
Note: Had we used a more sticky-icky variety of cannabis, the 3-hour, 115 degrees F drying cycle would have been our critical step one, but as our weed was already dry and crumbly, we went straight to the second step: activation. For our testing purposes, we infused an eighth of cannabis. The activation cycle took 30 minutes at 240 degrees F. Only the faintest perfume of cannabis escaped the machine during the activation process, and a soft chime announced the completion of the cycle.
Tip: Olivia Harris, Chief Creative Officer of LEVO II suggests visiting jeffthe420chefcalculator.com to get an approximation of your doses based on the cannabinoid percentage, amount of weed used, and the amount of oil being infused.
The LEVO II’s components are all easily removable for cleaning. Each is also dishwasher safe.
Bonus: if any oil is spilled in the housing, it can be wiped up fairly easily. The exterior is also easily wiped clean with a cloth. The power cord even has its own compartment once the LEVO II is powered down. The general simplicity of the machine and its parts make cleaning relatively effortless, which is pretty remarkable considering how messy, stanky, and greasy the undertaking of herbal infusions has been historically.
Infusing one’s own cannabis oils gives a person complete control over dosing, strain specificity, carrier oils and intensity, and LEVO II goes a step further by enabling users to create uncommonly small batches. For example, a LEVO II can be used to transform an otherwise caustic pre-roll into butter for a half dozen medicated cookies, or to create a tailored infusion medley for a couple days worth of topical use, or to make a really, really good rosemary/OG Kush salad dressing.
At $249, LEVO II’s most practical value is in how greatly it has simplified the art of herbal infusions. And though the LEVO II is built to work with countless botanicals, a significant swath of its users are likely more interested in strain-specific, cannabis infusions with calibrated dosages than parsley-sage-chrysanthemum EVOO recipes — though, admittedly, the crossover is probably pretty broad.
Bottom line: whether you’re infusing your favorite cannabis strains or your best loved kitchen herbs, a tool that eliminates all the most disagreeably messy aspects of marrying herbs and oils is hard not to appreciate.
All photos courtesy of LEVO.
The post Everything you need to know about the LEVO II countertop oil infuser appeared first on Weedmaps News.
Don’t Hold Your Breath For Federal Cannabis Legalization
While states have been increasingly willing to legalize cannabis, the federal government has dropped the ball.
The post Don’t Hold Your Breath For Federal Cannabis Legalization appeared first on The Fresh Toast.
Is Marijuana Addictive? Let’s Discuss
There are so many ways to get THC into your system now, and researchers say that’s the problem.
The post Is Marijuana Addictive? Let’s Discuss appeared first on The Fresh Toast.
Democrats and Republicans might be divided on a number of major policy issues, but Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) said on Thursday that ending the drug war and legalizing marijuana are increasingly standing out as exceptions to hyper-partisanship in Congress.
The congresswoman made the point during a virtual town hall alongside cannabis reform ally Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR), stating that since she took office, it’s been encouraging to see members on both sides of the aisle come together on issues concerning “civil rights policy and civil liberties,” including ending “drug prohibition laws.”
“We’ve been able to propose solutions on a wide spectrum towards decriminalization, towards legalization, and that is increasingly becoming a position that more Republicans are amenable to,” she said.
For example, her spending bill amendment to divert $5 million in funding from the Drug Enforcement Administration to an opioid treatment program was approved without opposition in the House last year, Ocasio-Cortez said.
“That’s defund before defund became a widespread demand that we heard this year—and Republicans supported it,” she said, referencing progressive calls to defund law enforcement amid protests over police killings of black Americans. “So there are some areas where you can find common ground.”
Blumenauer also said at the event that “part of why we are fighting so hard to eliminate the failed prohibition on cannabis is because that’s been a tool that’s been used against people of color in particular that has horrific consequences and helps fuel that prison pipeline that has wreaked such havoc on our communities.”
To that end, Ocasio-Cortez said that, beyond federally legalizing cannabis, it’s important for lawmakers to ensure that any regulated markets that emerge are structured in a way that encourages participation by communities most hurt under prohibition.
“There are different ways that we can go about legalizing cannabis in the United States, and you can go about it in a way that concentrates power in a [Big Agriculture] way that concentrates power in big banks and that cuts out small mom and pops,” she said. “And then there’s another path towards legalization where everyday people and especially the black and brown communities that have been disproportionately impacted by the war on drugs can be at the front of the line of enjoying the economic benefits of legalization.”
“I think we’re just so past due to make sure that we’re legalizing cannabis in the United States and that we’re expunging people’s records from the absolutely unjust war on drugs,” the congresswoman said. “It is an incredible priority.”
This article has been republished from Marijuana Moment under a content-sharing agreement. Read the original article here.
Featured image by Gina Coleman/Weedmaps
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