lwien
Well-Known Member
I'm not yet ready to judge the quality.
When ya are ready, please post up, k?
I'm not yet ready to judge the quality.
Yeah. And so much depends on exactly when the plants are harvested. Same strain can yield very lemony green sativa-ish stuff picked a little earlier or very purple grapey more indica feeling stuff later on. If the temps go very far over 80F some terpenes get lost. It is very difficult to make strains breed true because you need a few generations to achieve it and plant limits make it stupid difficult to pursue that.One major problem is that before we get to drying and curing and handling of the material, a strain is not a meaningful distinguisher of phenotype (the physical expression of the plants genetics) nor chemotype (the chemical profile that the plant produces). Some varieties have many different phenotypes and some phenotypes from within the same variety can be very different to others.
The same phenotype should give you much more repeatable results (but environmental/epigenetic factors can still lead to variation and even development of new phenos over time). A 'strain name' (more accurately 'variety'), if applied accurately (ie: isn't just some grower making up a word to name their bud grown from unknown bagseed or such), all you have there is an idea of which possible phenotypes you might have.
Until dispensaries (and the culture for that matter!) stop thinking that strain names are a meaningful descriptor of the effects/smell/appearance you can expect from the material - this problem where we buy a 'familiar' strain only to find out that it is not the same in flavor/smell/effect/all of the above will persevere.
Y... It is very difficult to make strains breed true because you need a few generations to achieve it and plant limits make it stupid difficult to pursue that.
On the medical side in CO, I get my meds from a clean green organic caregiver. It's more than most caregivers/dispensaries say. I take them at their word for it as well, and ironically their meds are cheaper than most others. They have a rec division that is sky high, upwards of $400/ounce. Perhaps that's their bread and butter, and there's more compassionate prices for medical.
You are trying to make this about me. It's not. I'm old and retired and live in a weed oasis, one of the most liberal jurisdictions for cannabis in the country. My brother lives in CO and he was surprised and envious to discover that we are all allowed to possess two pounds here. And if you happen to have 3 or 4 pounds, well that is still mandated as the lowest priority for police! They'll get somebody for littering first. None of what I do is threatened by the measure. So your attempts to chalk my argument up to self-interest are just plain wrong.So are you having trouble pursuing your hobby or your hoped way of making a living because of plant limits coming up for recreational users if 64 passes? Or with the limits for individual patients of 100 sq ft in the MCRSA regulations? Are you "legal" relative to any regulations or licensing requirements in the locale or area you currently grow and breed? Or do you already grow and breed for any existing collective(s)? Inquiring minds....
I guess you have never been in this biz. The going wholesale rate is 1500-2200 per pound in the bay area for indoor. I know everyone thinks marihuaneros are all filthy rich from the easy profits, but with all the restrictions (99 plant absolute federal ceiling, local limits on plants, area, amounts, etc) it has to be kind of decentralized and small - this is about the size of growing. These are people who supplement their meager country income with 5-15 from their patch. I talked to a lady from the north a while back who was very pleased with herself for bringing in a profit of 7k in a year. Suppose you produce a pound a month. In most places that is getting close to the limits. 12 lbs a year wholesale does not a jet-setter make. Of course there are some big guys now, but they are unusual large collectives or illegal. Most of these people are using this alongside some other gig to reach lower middle class status. A lot of these places, like Humboldt county, are depressed areas that still haven't recovered from the recession. That's who you are throwing under a bus.-snip- Small part-time businesses will have to figure out how, if possible, they can scale up to be competitive. I'd consider 5-10k profit as part-time. You can make that much gross selling 2-5 pounds, or profit off 5-10 pounds. AND under MCRSA, without reference to Prop 64, you have to be legally selling to a collective or dispensary anyway. But if they are already selling in the black market they may have no intention of going legal anyway.
I take it you didn't read Swami's explanation for why he's voting for 64 here? http://www.swamiselect.com/
I hope she knows that you are a person that is willing to rat people out to the cops for only disagreeing with you politically. You are not to be trusted. Ever.I talked to a lady from the north a while back who was very pleased with herself for bringing in a profit of 7k in a year.
I am trying to be nice here. You should not ask people personal questions about their location. You should not ask people if they sell or sold. I believe that is against the rules. You keep trying to make this about me. Stop.@Gunky No, I'm not on the business side at all, at least not since I was buying Panama Red and Acapulco Gold by the kilo brick for $200 and selling it in $10 lids back in the 60's in my youth. I thought the numbers I presented were consistent with the wholesale price you suggested. It's been going down for the past 10-15 years. Gone are the days when they could get 5k per pound. Are you in the industry or were you?
The whole question is are they in the market legally now? Or do they intend to get legal per MCRSA? If not then 64 won't affect them and they'll keep on doing what they do. But if they are like Swami, who grows about 50 or 60 plants, they should want to escape the constant paranoia and come into the light. But I guess you must be talking about small indoor growers who do it as an avocation. When you figure out a way to get rid of the Costco and Walmart stores maybe you can create a world where only small growers live and prosper. Good luck with that pipe dream.
I'm not throwing anyone under the bus, stop with the personal accusations. But change is coming, there is too much money involved to keep out "big cannabis" forever, whoever that is. Steve de Angelo has purchased a large greenhouse in the Central Valley and is just waiting to unlock the door. Is that who you mean?
And where do you live and under what circumstances are you alllowed to posses 2-3-4 pounds in public?
So who did I rat out? And I don't know why saying a nameless somebody made 7k legally in a year is ratting them out. Even if I could remember her name and went to a police station and mentioned this matter they would undoubtedly respond with "And your point is?" And who says I disagree with her politically? Possibly you are really drunk? Your post violates FC rules.I hope she knows that you are a person that is willing to rat people out to the cops for only disagreeing with you politically. You are not to be trusted. Ever.
One major problem is that before we get to drying and curing and handling of the material, a strain is not a meaningful distinguisher of phenotype (the physical expression of the plants genetics) nor chemotype (the chemical profile that the plant produces). Some varieties have many different phenotypes and some phenotypes from within the same variety can be very different to others.
The same phenotype should give you much more repeatable results (but environmental/epigenetic factors can still lead to variation and even development of new phenos over time). A 'strain name' (more accurately 'variety'), if applied accurately (ie: isn't just some grower making up a word to name their bud grown from unknown bagseed or such), all you have there is an idea of which possible phenotypes you might have.
Until dispensaries (and the culture for that matter!) stop thinking that strain names are a meaningful descriptor of the effects/smell/appearance you can expect from the material - this problem where we buy a 'familiar' strain only to find out that it is not the same in flavor/smell/effect/all of the above will persevere.
Not trying to make this about you at all. I'm just trying to understand what you say. You said you can carry 2-3-4 pounds. I asked where in Calif is that legal??? I'm not asking for your address.I am trying to be nice here. You should not ask people personal questions about their location. You should not ask people if they sell or sold. I believe that is against the rules. You keep trying to make this about me. Stop.
a completely absurd, unprovoked, not to mention false, personal attack against me and your response is to blame both of us? You have banned me from a thread and thrown me off the board for a few days for far less than this. Now you can't even figure out who is in the wrong here? Cheezit.I hope she knows that you are a person that is willing to rat people out to the cops for only disagreeing with you politically. You are not to be trusted. Ever.
Possibly you are really drunk?
What? Somebody comes out of nowhere and suddenly says a completely absurd, not to mention false, personal attack against me and your response is to blame both of us? You have banned me from a thread and thrown me off the board for a few days for far less than this. Now you can't even figure out who is in the wrong here? Cheezit.
Having read many statutes over time and have seen the courts' interpretations of them, I say again, NO ONE knows what is going to happen. The author's assurance there is no change in rights is...convenient...to his goals. That is not to say he is wrong. As I wrote when @KimDracula posted the link in this thread earlier:Just for the doubters, and the believers in Dragonfly de la Luz's total misunderstanding about Prop 64, you need to read what the lawyer who wrote Prop 215 has to say:
Prop 215 rights are not changed by Prop 64
By: William G. Panzer, Attorney at Law.August 31, 2016
http://theleafonline.com/c/politics/2016/08/prop-215-rights-not-affected-prop-64/
Having read many statutes over time and have seen the courts' interpretations of them, I say again, NO ONE knows what is going to happen. The author's assurance there is no change in rights is...convenient...to his goals. That is not to say he is wrong. As I wrote when @KimDracula posted the link in this thread earlier:
Even the co-author of the proposition (the author of the article) cannot say with certainty the results of its passing. Many aspects are going to be in the courts for years. Making the claim no rights are changed is simply that, a claim. Everything in the proposition is going to be interpreted by those who put it into effect in a way they want. How it plays out depends on the money of those who want to profit from it, the feelings of the administrators in enforcing it and the judges who interpret it. Most of them have far different goals from us.
The fact he cannot predict where the law will go does not mean he collaborated on something nefarious. And, I say again, everyone IS just guessing about what will happen. Just like for each proposition. Even in the article claiming to know, you didn't find a LOT of legal argument and qualifiers there? It seems to want to focus solely on the 215 "rights" and the the overall scheme. We know he believes (Which seems to discount any "paranoia" claim.) "It will certainly have significant impact on the commercial cannabis industry in California."This is, of course, true, but it doesn't mean there is an equivalency between the sources. De la Luz isn't very credible while William Panzer was one of the architects of the MMJ law here in CA that some people claim to be so worried about and so makes it unlikely that he would collaborate on something nefarious that is intended to subvert his previous work. It's not like everyone is just guessing about what is going to happen. There are educated predictions and then there is baseless paranoia on the "No on 64" side.
@OldNewbie : I'm not arguing with you, really. I was only adding my perspective to your points.
I agree that people are offering guesses of a sort but wanted to differentiate between a source like de la Luz and one like Panzer. There is a similar difference between your realistic concerns and what I consider to be paranoia from others 'round here with whom I have had arguments.
My goal was to point out that lack of equivalency between the two sides; not to advocate just as blindly as they are opposing. I think we're on the same page.
EDIT: My reference to Panzer and the fact that he was an architect of 215 was to this point: many pushing what I consider to be paranoid arguments contend that Prop 64, although ostensibly a legalization proposal, is actually a nefarious plot to undermine MMJ in CA.
Anyone who saw the video(s) knew this was going to be a loser for the city with the measure of damages being the main litigation. The clever thing the attorney did was to include accusations against the mayor that would be investigated in discovery. I guarantee that was worth tens of thousands in the settlement from a council who would rather just let their very expensive sleeping dogs lie.Remember this one, with the cops eating pot-laced edibles on a hidden camera?
Santa Ana to pay marijuana dispensary $100,000 after video appears to back police harassment claims
The city of Santa Ana will pay $100,000 to settle a lawsuit alleging police harassment during a raid on a marijuana dispensary. The city will also drop misdemeanor charges against a dozen people accused of unlawfully operating Sky High Holistic, the Orange County Register reported Wednesday.
Somehow I missed KimDracula's post. Didn't mean to double-post the link...Having read many statutes over time and have seen the courts' interpretations of them, I say again, NO ONE knows what is going to happen. The author's assurance there is no change in rights is...convenient...to his goals. That is not to say he is wrong. As I wrote when @KimDracula posted the link in this thread earlier:
Even the co-author of the proposition (the author of the article) cannot say with certainty the results of its passing. Many aspects are going to be in the courts for years. Making the claim no rights are changed is simply that, a claim. Everything in the proposition is going to be interpreted by those who put it into effect in a way they want. How it plays out depends on the money of those who want to profit from it, the feelings of the administrators in enforcing it and the judges who interpret it. Most of them have far different goals from us.