Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Budtender handling cannabis at a dispensary in Colorado in 2018. A budtender is a title of a staff member who works within a dispensary or store where medical or recreational cannabis is sold. [1] Their job is to offer suggestions to customers, answer questions, handle products and showcase products being sold. [2]
The Thurmanator. Thurman's is often associated with its famous burger known as the Thurmanator. [12] [13] It consists of a bun, lettuce, tomato, mayo, American cheese, provolone cheese, ham, sauteed onions, mushrooms, a 12-ounce burger, bacon, cheddar cheese, hot peppers, and another 12 ounce burger.
Prior to renovation, in 2014. The building was built in 1916, opening around January 1917. [2] It had an estimated cost of $75,000. [5] [better source needed] It operated as a milk processing and distribution center for the Budd Dairy Company, founded as the S.T. Budd Dairy Co. by Simon T. Budd in 1894.
Cannabis Station, a medical cannabis dispensary in Denver, Colorado Cannabis flower stored in jars at a dispensary in Colorado. Cannabis dispensaries in the United States or marijuana dispensaries are a type of cannabis retail outlet, local government-regulated physical location, typically inside a retail storefront or office building, in which a person can purchase cannabis and cannabis ...
A medical cannabis dispensary in Denver, Colorado.. A cannabis retail outlet (also known as cannabis shop, cannabis dispensary, cannabis store, cannabis cooperative) is a location at which cannabis is sold or otherwise dispensed, either for recreational or for medical use.
Jack Herer and Dana Beal at the 1989 festival The event in 2006. The Great Midwest Marijuana Harvest Festival is the longest running cannabis rights festival in the United States, held annually in Madison, Wisconsin since 1971.
Although practiced over the world, the spots method of cannabis smoking is most common in New Zealand. [5] Possession of knives that have been previously used for spotting (easily distinguished by their blackened and discoloured appearance [3] [6]) is considered "possession of paraphernalia" and is thus illegal under New Zealand law.
Cultural figureheads such as Bob Marley popularized Rastafari and ganja through reggae music. In 1976, Peter Tosh defended the use of ganja in the song "Legalize It". [14] The hip hop group Cypress Hill revived the term in the United States in 2004 in a song titled "Ganja Bus", followed by other artists, including rapper Eminem, in the 2009 song "Must Be the Ganja".