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How One of the Reddest States Became the Nation’s Hottest Weed Market

Tudo

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How One of the Reddest States Became the Nation’s Hottest Weed Market
Oklahoma entered the world of legal cannabis late, but its hands-off approach launched a boom and a new nickname: ‘Toke-lahoma.’

WELLSTON, Oklahoma—One day in the early fall of 2018, while scrutinizing the finances of his thriving Colorado garden supply business, Chip Baker noticed a curious development: transportation costs had spiked fivefold. The surge, he quickly determined, was due to huge shipments of cultivation supplies—potting soil, grow lights, dehumidifiers, fertilizer, water filters—to Oklahoma.
Baker, who has been growing weed since he was 13 in Georgia, has cultivated crops in some of the world’s most notorious marijuana hotspots, from the forests of Northern California’s Emerald Triangle to the lake region ofSwitzerland to the mountains of Colorado. Oklahoma was not exactly on his radar. So one weekend in October, Baker and his wife Jessica decided to take a drive to see where all their products were ending up.
Voters in the staunchly conservative state had just four months earlier authorized a medical marijuana program and sales were just beginning. The Bakers immediately saw the potential for the fledgling market. With no limits on marijuana business licenses, scant restrictions on who can obtain a medical card, and cheap land, energy and building materials, they believed Oklahoma could become a free-market weed utopia and they wanted in.
Within two weeks, they found a house to rent in Broken Bow and by February had secured a lease on an empty Oklahoma City strip mall. Eventually they purchased a 110-acre plot of land down a red dirt road about 40 miles northeast of Oklahoma City that had previously been a breeding ground for fighting cocks and started growing high-grade strains of cannabis with names like Purple Punch, Cookies and Cream and Miracle Alien.
“This is exactly like Humboldt County was in the late 90s,” Baker says, as a trio of workers chop down marijuana plants that survived a recent ice storm. “The effect this is going to have on the cannabis nation is going to be incredible.”
Oklahoma is now the biggest medical marijuana market in the country on a per capita basis. More than 360,000 Oklahomans—nearly 10 percent of the state’s population—have acquired medical marijuana cards over the last two years. By comparison, New Mexico has the country’s second most popular program, with about 5 percent of state residents obtaining medical cards. Last month, sales since 2018 surpassed $1 billion.
To meet that demand, Oklahoma has more than 9,000 licensed marijuana businesses, including nearly 2,000 dispensaries and almost 6,000 grow operations. In comparison, Colorado—the country’s oldest recreational marijuana market, with a population almost 50 percent larger than Oklahoma—has barely half as many licensed dispensaries and less than 20 percent as many grow operations. In Ardmore, a town of 25,000 in the oil patch near the Texas border, there are 36 licensed dispensaries—roughly one for every 700 residents. In neighboring Wilson (pop. 1,695), state officials have issued 32 cultivation licenses, meaning about one out of 50 residents can legally grow weed.
What is happening in Oklahoma is almost unprecedented among the 35 states that have legalized marijuana in some form since California voters backed medical marijuana in 1996. Not only has the growth of its market outstripped other more established state programs but it is happening in a state that has long stood out for its opposition to drug use. Oklahoma imprisons more people on a per-capita basis than just about any other state in the country, many of them non-violent drug offenders sentenced to lengthy terms behind bars. But that state-sanctioned punitive streak has been overwhelmed by two other strands of American culture—a live-and-let-live attitude about drug use and an equally powerful preference for laissez-faire capitalism.
“Turns out rednecks love to smoke weed,” Baker laughs. “That’s the thing about cannabis: It really bridges socio-economic gaps. The only other thing that does it is handguns. All types of people are into firearms. All types of people are into cannabis.”
Indeed, Oklahoma has established arguably the only free-market marijuana industry in the country. Unlike almost every other state, there are no limits on how many business licenses can be issued and cities can’t ban marijuana businesses from operating within their borders. In addition, the cost of entry is far lower than in most states: a license costs just $2,500. In other words, anyone with a credit card and a dream can take a crack at becoming a marijuana millionaire.
“They’ve literally done what no other state has done: free-enterprise system, open market, wild wild west,” says Tom Spanier, who opened Tegridy Market (a dispensary that takes its name from South Park) with his wife in Oklahoma City last year. “It’s survival of the fittest.”
MORE: https://www.politico.com/news/magaz...t-oklahoma-red-state-weed-legalization-437782
 

flylowgethigh

Non-growing Lurker
ICMag Donor
“Turns out rednecks love to smoke weed,” Baker laughs. “That’s the thing about cannabis: It really bridges socio-economic gaps. The only other thing that does it is handguns. All types of people are into firearms. All types of people are into cannabis.”

Parts of OK are pretty. Parts stay windy, and parts get real windy sometimes.
 

Gypsy Nirvana

Recalcitrant Reprobate -
Administrator
Veteran
- makes me feel like hitching up a wagon - and heading out to Oklahoma -

* oh - I'll need a boat to - to cross the Atlantic Ocean -

picture.php
 

Tudo

Troublemaker
Moderator
ICMag Donor
Veteran
CosmicGiggle, I ran many thousands of lb's originating on go fast boats up I-95 to NJ and Bay Ridge Brooklyn back in the late 70's. The good old days of running.
Now it would appear that with it being legal some weed is going to be traveling in the opposite direction! How long will the states of Fla and the rest put up with this lack of freedom as well as what is really important to those folks...taxes and revenues

Ha Ha Ha Overgrow the planet:dance:
 

Sunshineinabag

Active member
CosmicGiggle, I ran many thousands of lb's originating on go fast boats up I-95 to NJ and Bay Ridge Brooklyn back in the late 70's. The good old days of running.
Now it would appear that with it being legal some weed is going to be traveling in the opposite direction! How long will the states of Fla and the rest put up with this lack of freedom as well as what is really important to those folks...taxes and revenues

Ha Ha Ha Overgrow the planet:dance:

I'd of loved to have seen your choice in vehicles lol we used a 300 straight 6 ford......omfg that thing was so reliable....think clint eastwood in the mule but with maple syrup .........long time ago cough
 

Cannavore

Well-known member
Veteran
yeah i've seen a lot of big grows on IG out there covered in spider mites and shit. one of the Loompa Farms growers is out there in OK and takes pictures of these shit shows lol. i think they're a consultant so they probably see it frequently.
 
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