Michigan Marijuana Farm Expands Into Southern Colorado
Grasshopper Farms has opened a 48-acre farm with 3,000 pants in Pueblo. According to the company, jobs will be staffed by local workers.
Grasshopper Farms has opened a 48-acre farm with 3,000 pants in Pueblo. According to the company, jobs will be staffed by local workers.
“These are things I can’t help but be. I’m short and I like to get stoned.”
The project turned into a “summer camp for artists” in Denver.
“Why is it so hard to find my usual flower or rosin makers in smaller towns?”
The group has its eyes on the 2024 election.
It will leave you flatter than the girl in that early 2000s anti-pot ad.
“When Oprah comes on and supports it, that makes it even easier.”
Ah, generational divide.
This is the eleventh recall in less than three months to hit Colorado, according to the Marijuana Enforcement Division.
Denver is Colorado’s cannabis capital, but nearly every ambitious grower and hash maker is trying to get inside a small dispensary in Boulder.
“It just changes the dynamic when you’re in a room with somebody [or] you’re in a huddle with somebody…”
“I’ve been killing it as a budtender, but only approached it as a job to pay bills during school. Now our VP wants me to become a manager, which looks like a stressful job.”
“The idea that he and I are together is bit of magic.”
Cake Crasher’s buttercream buds are equal parts rich and gassy.
Dante’s Inferno, Point Break and Rotten Rozay are just a few popular strains that are relatively new to Denver, but don’t sleep on the classics.
Thanks to a talented growing operation, Meraki, Sour Diesel is no longer confined to our memories.
It’s midway through a Pineapple Express screening, and 200 cross joints filled with Colorado cannabis are handed out to a crowd of Denver viewers. Welcome to a Stoner Cinema Pop-Up show.
Finding dispensaries around Denver with great house weed isn’t hard, but growing cannabis and retail sales are more separated than ever before.
Here’s what to expect from the “biggest psychedelics conference history by a landslide” that’s coming to town next week.
Both medical and recreational marijuana harvests were included in the recall, which stretches back to February.
This was made to cool users down on a hot summer day…if Denver ever gets one.
A Native Roots store won’t be opening in northwest Denver after opposition from residents and a council rep.