CA: This Marijuana Farmers' Market Proves That Weed Is The New Wine

Katelyn Baker

Well-Known Member
Wine has long flowed through the heart of our state. Whether you're a connoisseur or a casual sipper, tasting California's world-renowned wines offers the chance to practice mindfulness, exhibit your adept preferences, and appreciate the artful idiosyncrasies that spring from each vineyard. Wine tasting isn't (usually) about getting hammered. And at the inaugural Emerald Exchange farmers market, a group of Mendocino farmers descended upon Malibu's bluffs to prove that cannabis consumption is no longer about dirty bongs and debilitating highs.

In some ways, the Emerald Exchange is like other farmer's markets one might find in L.A.'s more upscale and bohemian neighborhoods. It's set up on a tucked away pebbly patch of land. The ocean is visible from each of the vendors' canvas booths. There were wealthy women in floppy hats, cute dogs, and even a well-dressed toddler. One could sip organic whole-lemonade, sniff fragrant body lotions, or sample fresh gazpacho.

Unlike a typical farmer's markets, though, all of these wares could be infused with THC.

The market was a way for Mendocino growers to showcase the bounty of the agriculture that grows on their historically fertile land. Since the late 1960s, Mendocino's ideal climate and remote location have made it a hotbed for marijuana agriculture. In light of the plant's growing popularity and likely pending multi-statewide legality, growers in the area are, in increasing numbers, moving their business to a less stigmatized market. "I've been farming my whole life," says Megan Champion, founder of a company called Deviant Dabs. " I was ready to move off of the black market."

In an attempt to move toward legitimacy, Champion and many farmers in her area, have joined forces with Mendocino magnate Justin Calvino to divide the county into several "Cannabis Appelations," or regions defined by their specific location and geological properties. Just as California wines are profiled based on a Central Coast or Napa Valley appelation, Calvino hopes soon, California cannabis will be defined in terms of its origin in places like the Ukiah Valley or North Mendocino Coast. Formally breaking up the area into regions, say proponents, will foster business for local growers, who will then be able to uniquely brand their product and establish consistent standards.

Champion, who has been on the legitimate market for only a handful of months, has already begun to carve out a specific identity for her hash concentrates, which are grown on an all-female farm. "I heard what people were saying about concentrates - that it's the crack of marijuana, and I wanted to change that," says Champion, who is infectiously bubbly. Indeed, Deviant concentrates look like something you'd buy in Sephora than smoke in an alley. They come in sleek silver compacts with an elegant logo that's reminiscent of Christian Dior. "I also wanted to target women because I am a woman," says Champion, as she bounces in her cowboy boots to music from the nearby DJ booth.

"We're above the fog line, which is really great, because the fog is what causes mold on plants," says Janae Doutel Ebert. She and her boyfriend Leo Mitri Hartz are the young sun-tanned proprietors of Shine On Farms, which is perched at 1800 feet of elevation above Mendocino's Anderson Valley. Ebert herself comes from a wine family, and she has brought the principles of harvesting grapes to Shine On Farms, where she and Hartz harvest a wide plethora of organic produce, honey, livestock, and cannabis flowers - all without using any electricity. The farm is entirely powered by two solar panels and a propane tank that the couple uses for their personal fridge. They brought with them a number of sun grown buds, including one strain, called The Doutel & Mitri – named after their respective grandparents - because the seeds are proprietary and "come from (their) own genetics."

The easy-going pair brought a bounty of farm fresh foodstuffs to the Malibu market. Vegetables like their tomatoes and eggplants were used to cook the evening's communal diner, as were the two roosters they recently harvested. As I spoke with Ebert and Hartz, a happy-go-lucky person named Travis, who was barefoot and in a sundress, walked up with a paper bag of fresh picked apples. "Thank you so much!" exclaimed Ebert, as she begged him to let her trade her for a Shine On Farms veggie.

Dinner was served on the lot at the base of the property, and on the walk down to the dining area, Foria, which manufactures cannabis-based lubricants, has set up shop next to a VW van. Men and women in loose fitting women loitered casually around the vehicle's exterior. Propped in front of them is a sign that reads "Legalize love."

In food truck that read "The Galaxy's Easiest Meal," chef Joshua Fisher prepared our farm-to I-5-to table meal all evening. As we waited for dinner to be served, a DJ spun at a station that was wrapped in living tree roots. There were white bulbous Christmas lights hanging above the dance floor, and multi-colored silks were draped on the couches in the smoking area, where a few people had cigarettes, and several of us vape flower from Fireflys - the handheld vaporizers that were used to sample product all day, as the dry Malibu lot does not allow for open flames.

Mark Williams, a stylish and smiling man, who is one of the founders of Firefly, presented several of his sleek devices, and offered them to the handful of people that mill around him.

"Ten years ago," says Williams, as he took a long drag of flower vape, "Could you have ever seen this coming?"

When the sun set, and the mood became relaxed. There were almost no vendor booths down here, save one, Evoxe Laboratories, which was lit with multi-colored psychedelic lighting. Here, founder Michael Katz showed off his essential oil vape pens, which are made in America and come in red, white, blue, and black. Each color coded device is filled with organically grown oils and strains designed to give the user exactly the targeted effect desired: the white pen is non-psychoactive CBD blended with frankincense and tangerine for focus. The red pen will perk you up with sativa and peppermint. The blue one will put you to sleep with indica and lavender. The snozberries taste like snozberries.

Dinner was served in near-darkness. There was baba ganoush and grilled veggies and fresh olives, slick and course with salt. The venison and chicken that was brought down for the day was served family style, alongside brimming plates of flat bread that was grilled just behind us. After the food was set, servers walked from table to table, dishing out small spoonfuls of THC extract for anyone who want to "infuse" their meal.

One woman at my table was from Mendocino County. This was her first time in Malibu, and she had to admit, she was a little disappointed by how dry and desert-like it is here. It's greener where she's from. "But maybe," she says, "I'm just partial to home. California is the best place in the world," she adds. All of us, though silently absorbed in our thoughts and food, tacitly agreed.

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News Moderator: Katelyn Baker 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: This Marijuana Farmers' Market Proves That Weed Is The New Wine
Author: Tess Barker
Contact: LA Weekly
Photo Credit: Star Foreman
Website: LA Weekly
 
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