Grassachusetts7
Member
Sad but true in the business world! But just don't mess with the Maxi. If it's half the price and I can get it anywhere that is great for me as a consumer!!! Otherwise Jacks here I come.
Another behemoth purchase by Scott's Miracle Grow, just under a half billion for Sunlight Supply.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...buys-sunlight-to-double-cannabis-grower-sales
Correct me if I'm wrong. They sold to a company that is owned by..., that is owned by..., that is owned by Scott's, that is owned by Monsanto. -granger
No. This understanding is incorrect.
Scotts is not owned by Monsanto. Monsanto was recently acquired by Bayer. BayerAF has an exclusive agreement with Scotts for Scotts to sell consumer only brands of Round-up in North America. Agricultural products for Round-Up are still all handled through BayerAF.
Scotts Miracle-Gro is not Monsanto and it isn't Bayer AF. It's Scotts Miracle-Gro Company.
The over-the-top reaction (and frankly, ignorance) on this thread is a severe under-appreciation if what Scotts ALSO is. Scott's owns Hawthorne - and Hawthorne...
Hawthorne is everything to do with weed. The chances that you can successfully get involved in Hydroponic or other forms of Indoor growing without using Hawthorne's products and brands reflects just how little you have been paying attention to Scotts investment in cannabis growing, both indoor and outside.
The President of Hawthorne is the son of the CEO of Scotts Miracle-Gro.
Scotts, through Hawthorne now owns General Hydroponics, Bottanicare, Sunlight Supply, Can Filters, and much, much more:
View Image
The big names missing there in cannabis growing are Premier Technologies (Pro-Mix), FoxFarm and Advanced Nutrients. At least they are missing so far. I wouldn't count on that continuing. That's where this is all going. This is Big Business now.
You will also be interested to know that Hawthorne has a Research and Development deal with B.C. based Flowr, a sub of MedReleaf/Aurora in Canada to use one of Flowr's 50,000 sq foot indoor/outdoor greenhouses in B.C. to test their products on cannabis.
That's right. For the first time, ever, GH, Botanicare, Sunlight Supply -- and more are finally being lab tested and optimized for use in growing cannabis, both under the sun and artificial light. Real, evidence-based testing of their products to grow weed, not tomatoes, peppers or petunias. They are finally growing weed with their product lines and adjusting them where necessary. So that they grow cannabis better.
Link to the story on Bloomberg is here:
It's actually quite a big deal. All of this consolidation in the home growing market and gardening, generally, is a reflection of the legalization of cannabis on the West Coast and, especially in the Canadian marketplace (because the Toronto Stock Exchange is a legal input of global capital), with an eye on general legalization at the US Federal level in the short to medium term (which is all but certain).
And if you have been otherwise paying attention to the Canadian market, you will know that a 38% share in Canada's largest Licensed Producer, Canopy Growth, has been recently bought by Constellation Brands (Corona beer, Mondavi Wines among others).
Which means Corona and Arjan's Green House Seed Co are now equal partners in Agripharm.
MedReleaf (owner of Flowr's) was acquired by the 2nd largest major LP in Canada, Aurora Cannabis. And the markets are alive today with the news the DiaGeo Brands is looking to buy a major stake in Aurora. DiaGeo is the largest alcohol producer in the world. You are almost certain to have imbibed their products if you drink even occasionally: Guinness, Captain Morgan, Crown Royal, Smirnoff, Bailey's, Johnny Walker and J&B, among others:
View Image
So, end result, this is what Legalization in a G7 nation like Canada is bringing to the cannabis world. The Biggest of Big Money in consumer brands that there is.
If you think you are going to be able to avoid purchasing the products controlled, manufactured, distributed, and sold by these international conglomerates? You are naive or not up to date - or both. And to do so, you are going to have to be working pretty hard at it, too.
Bottom Line: you are not the rebel you used to be and neither is Weed™. This truth may hurt, but there it is.
So monsanto doesnt own the indoor garden industry. The assholes that brought us miracle grow do. Wow what a relief. I thought for a second some big evil corporation was taking over the industry. I just wish I could grow outdoors so I didnt have to buy products from greedy companies I hate. Scotts the company that brought you weed and feed so you can have a beautiful lawn with minimal work never mind the poision and unneeded fertilizer washing into our estuaries and groundwater. Here in fl they blame septic tanks for algae blooms in the indian river lagoon so they can make us hook to sewer but nobody says hey dumbass your fertilizing sugar sand and its just running into the water. Fuck SMG. I wish the Hawthorne guy would have broke off from SMG and denouced his families role in poisoning our planet. Then maybe I would have a tiny bit of respect for him. But the way it is he got rich off poisoning our land and took that money and bought our industry.
Yup people though are missing the point that Scotts are every bit as unethical and corrupt as Monsanto... For example...
What happened was that Scotts bought "Morning Song" wild bird seed in 2005. At the time is was bought, the company that had been operating Morning Song had been storing their seed in a manner where insects could get at it. They protected it from spoilage by using insecticides. This practice continued after the sale and it came to light in 2008.
They should not have done it, but they did. That's the company that Scotts bought. Management for the Morning Song division authorized it, and he was fired.
The Morning Song division was later sold by Scotts. They've been out of all of that for several years now.
Its clearly not a good thing and it was unlawful. But your attempt to portray that as some "corporate-wide" cultural practice particular to Scotts is bullshit though. All of this took place more than ten years ago, in another corporate division. The EPA found no systemic practices or comparable wide violations as part of Scotts general corporate practices. Clearly, Morning Song was a troubled brand -- with a troubled product and a troubled brand manager.
Look, if you have a twitch in your eye and a sneer on your face for anything that sounds like Big Business? I get it. But if you have such an outlook by default, there isn't anything I'm going to say that is going to change your mind about that. Most likely, anyways.
Conversely, if somebody comes across as the kind of guy who faults Big Business for being what it is -- and you dismiss them all as inherently corrupt and evil, I'm not inclined to be persuaded by points that you may otherwise have (and which may be very good ones, viewed in isolation). Because while I'm not always sympathetic to business, I'm not always dismissive of their interests, either. I try and be pragmatic and avoid ideological or idealistic blinders. This world is a complicated place sometimes.
Most businesses employ people, feed families, and deliver products to us that generally work, cheaply. That's usually not a bad thing. Trying to judge it all as Good vs Evil is a little simplistic and childish for me.
Scotts Miracle Gro is a big company which is now firmly entrenched in the cannabis home-growing hobby. You may like that; and you may not like that. Doesn't change anything. The points to take away is that:
1- their presence is not going to change anytime soon, and
2- it would be better if they have a longterm view of their interests (and ours), rather than an eye focused on quarterly results.
So far, their brand acquisitions and purchases have all been with a longterm view of the market. That's a good sign. If that should change, we can freak out then -- as opposed to now.
Yes fatigues, I see the blind response you were anticipating.
I'm sure fatigues was there, has all the details of everything and is simply denying us the pleasure so we can suffer.