Cannabis IQ: Legalization leaves medical users stranded, and more

gb123

Well-Known Member
One unfortunate result of legalization: medical marijuana patients that are facing shortages, or the complete disappearance, of the medical product.

Tilray, a major producer which at one point this week ran out of medical cannabis, explains that medical buying ramped up before legalization, and then increased further when Tilray warned its customers there might be shortages.


I talked to John Campbell, at 72-year-old Tilray customer who uses cannabis oil to manage chronic pain. He can no longer buy the one that works for him because it’s sold out, and has been left scrambling for an alternative.

While Health Canada admitted it did not require licensed products to set aside a certain amount for medical users, the ministry said producers are “expected” to.

In the absence of a regulatory requirement to set aside pot for medical users, how can Ottawa help? By clearing the backlog of licence applications for companies that want to be producers, argues Ottawa lawyer Trina Fraser.

WATCH: Medical marijuana users worry cannabis tax will price medication out of reach


“What they can do is help people get through this supply crunch by actually issuing some licences.”

Campbell, for his part, wants the major LPs to remember their roots:

“Legalization has opened the door for these companies, and they left the medical users in a place that was not anticipated or wanted,” Campbell says.

“They wouldn’t be in the business if it wasn’t for medical marijuana.”

“While there is no regulatory requirement for licensed producers to prioritize sales to individuals who require cannabis for medical purposes over non-medical sales, it is expected that they will do so.” a Health Canada spokesperson said.

MORE: For the launch of our weekly newsletter Cannabis IQ, we’re giving away $100 Visa gift cards. Click here to find out more.

WATCH: Why is the medical community so hesitant to endorse the pharmaceutical properties of marijuana?


In brief:
  • It will take about two years for cannabis prices to settle down, an expert predicts.
  • Mail-order cannabis customers have been astonished by the quantities of packaging their pot has arrived in. One Nova Scotia woman calculated that she had been had been sent one gram of marijuana wrapped up in 38 grams of packaging.
  • Ontarians have arguably had the toughest time getting their hands on legal weed. The Ontario Cannabis Store — which had about 100,000 orders in the first 24 hours, 12,000 of them in the first hour — is dealing with piling complaints including long backlogs, mysteriously cancelled orders and an customer hotline that said it couldn’t accept calls “due to circumstances beyond our control.” Adding to the misery: rotating Canada Post strikes.
  • Cannabis NB fell afoul of federal restrictions on pot marketing, and this week had to remove promotional images of people who appeared to be in some way enjoying their products.
  • Legalization goes to some strange places. Take a Calgary business called Weed Man, a lawn care company that’s receiving a deluge of phone calls from folks looking for bud. “I’d be like, ‘It’s not that kind of weed, man,'” says VP Lori Heidt. “They’d be like, ‘Geez, that’d be a good name to have if you were.’“
  • Quebec’s pot stores don’t have enough to sell to make it worth opening full-time, it turns out. They’ll be closed Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays for now, the SQDC announced Friday.
  • South Korean citizens can’t smoke pot in their own country due to its fierce drug laws, which are so fierce that they’ve been forbidden to smoke pot in Canada, either.
WATCH: Medical marijuana users fear impaired driving laws once cannabis is legal


You asked:
  • Do the seeds I grow at home have to be registered?
Not as far as the federal government is concerned, no. (But if you’re in Quebec or Manitoba, you are still prohibited from growing your own.)

The more immediate problem is that under federal law your seeds have to be from a legal source, and just now there are very few.

To tell the truth, we haven’t found any at all — none of the provincial sites we looked at sell seeds yet. The OCS said at a news conference just before legalization that they were hoping to, but hadn’t been able to source them from licensed producers.

So if you started a home grow now, you might face awkward questions about where the seeds had come from.

Down the road, local governments may well want to set up a system of licencing home grows, so that’s something to keep an eye on.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
hate lawyers who use BS tactics to get LP's more power
TRINA .................................THAT'S YOU BITCH!:cuss:
use patient excuse as an excuse to gain LPs more powers!!
keep it up ...cunt. you'll come full turn soon :cool:
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Agreed, if you're a patient now your best bet is to grow, or get a designated grower. Even when they figure out the supply end, who wants that shit anyways.
Great idea and I enthusiastically agree but what do they do in the interim until their new crops start producing something that works for them? Even just the months long wait to get approved to grow their own meds is onerous enough. Then more months before the first crop.

Greed runs the world these days and our gov'ts are the greediest of the lot.

Stoners better get off their asses come election time or we're all going back to Reefer Madness mode and I don't trust that the majority of rec users will help out in the least. Bunch of high babies with no clue what's going on.

Sick people are always made to suffer more than they should have to because of greed. Been like that forever and no sign of change on the horizon.

:peace:
 

TrainingPineapples

Well-Known Member
Here's a thought ....

You have 4 rec plants ... 1 is for the mother, 1 is for a clone, 1 is for veg and 1 gets grown

You veg out a clone to fill a 4x4 footprint using a SCROG setup and then veg a bit more ... then you flip her into 12/12 and 2.5 months later you theoretically could have upwards of a pound

While the above is going on you set it up so that the next vegged plant has filled out its 4x4 area and you flip her ... basically set it up so you always have a mother, a clone of said mother (taken at harvest of the flowered plant), a plant in a 2 month veg to fill a 4x4 and a plant in flower that fills a 4x4 area using a SCROG

Basically this is what I do for my garden although I have a 25 plant count so don't fill out the flower space with 1 plant ... Doing this allows me to keep on a constant pheno hunt and dabble in some breeding (I currently have 8 strains going in various stages of growth)

After reading through this thread it occurred to me that this 'method' could be scaled down to cover a rec grow
 

Farmer.J

Well-Known Member
Here's a thought ....

You have 4 rec plants ... 1 is for the mother, 1 is for a clone, 1 is for veg and 1 gets grown

You veg out a clone to fill a 4x4 footprint using a SCROG setup and then veg a bit more ... then you flip her into 12/12 and 2.5 months later you theoretically could have upwards of a pound

While the above is going on you set it up so that the next vegged plant has filled out its 4x4 area and you flip her ... basically set it up so you always have a mother, a clone of said mother (taken at harvest of the flowered plant), a plant in a 2 month veg to fill a 4x4 and a plant in flower that fills a 4x4 area using a SCROG

Basically this is what I do for my garden although I have a 25 plant count so don't fill out the flower space with 1 plant ... Doing this allows me to keep on a constant pheno hunt and dabble in some breeding (I currently have 8 strains going in various stages of growth)

After reading through this thread it occurred to me that this 'method' could be scaled down to cover a rec grow
3 tents
 

TrainingPineapples

Well-Known Member
Exactly ... My setup, expansion in progress ... adding 2 tents in the open spaces

I think it totally could be done on a small scale as described above ... I'm going to use one of the new tents I build to test it and see what I can get off 1 plant scrogged
 

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The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Yeah I'm sure they are really happy to of ran out of medicine..... It takes time to grow. That's a long-term solution, not short-term.
As it doesn't sell well in the next few months and the BM gets back from holidays the sheeple will return to pasture and graze as they should......lol....sucks to be trudy
 
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