Daily Dispatch

High society puffs up a storm

Drift into the 420 Café in Randburg – the first ‘official’ joint to sell weed in SA – for a coffee and cannabis break

- IAVAN PIJOOS

Now get a marijuana menu along with a coffee menu at ‘head cafe’ in Joburg

On one of the busiest roads in Randburg‚ Johannesbu­rg‚ people openly “puff and pass” marijuana while listening to banging soulfood music.

Although the venue has changed, the 420 Café has been operating for a year now. We visited the restaurant at Randview Shopping Centre on the busy Jan Smuts Avenue. It was previously situated in the country’s financial hub‚ Sandton. Its name‚ 420‚ is slang for marijuana. The phrase is said to originate from users in the US getting high on April 20 at 4.20pm as part of a campaign for drug laws to be eased.

As you make your way up the stairs‚ you are greeted by a board stating: “Sandton View Coffee House and Var. Home of Phaze Karaoke.” A restaurant of that name closed down a year ago.

When entering‚ a bouncer searches bags to ensure no one brings in their own weed. His chair is next to an old jukebox.

On condition the marijuana is bought there, joints are smoked freely in the café. Clouds of smoke fill the venue‚ accompanie­d by loud 90s‚ RnB and hip-hop tunes.

In any other restaurant‚ you take a seat and wait for a waiter to come to your table. Not at 420 Café.

“Are you first-time visitors? We have house rules. You order a drink and go sit at a table. I will then bring you a menu‚” a waiter tells us while we peruse the drinks on the shelves.

We ordered two Coca-Colas and took a seat at a table close to the bar. There are interestin­g designs on the tables. Ours is decorated with colourful marijuana plants.

The waiter approaches us and takes a small menu out of his back pocket. The weed menu.

Prices on this menu range from R100 to R1‚000. The cheapest beer is R50. Yes‚ you have to go there with extra cash.

My cousin‚ a passionate weed smoker‚ orders the Buddha cheese for R160.

Cheese is a strain of cannabis grown in the UK. There is‚ however‚ a trick to ordering weed.

When you pay cash‚ you pay the price stated on the menu‚ but when paying by card‚ the café charges a 10% fee.

“It is better to pay cash‚” the waiter tells us‚ before leaving to fetch our order.

He returns a few minutes later and hands us a gram of weed. While my cousin uses a crusher to “chop the zol”‚ two patrons sit next to us with a bong.

A popcorn machine stands next to the bar. It answers my question: “What do they eat for the munchies?”

The venues does‚ however‚ have a menu for munchies – toasties‚ burgers and breakfast.

The munchies menu offers things like John Dough (fried pizza base and dip)‚ fried or grilled halloumi‚ and cheesy chips.

The café is busy‚ with a few people milling about upstairs on the balcony lounge.

The hours are convenient‚ catering for those wanting a mid-morning coffee and cannabis break or those wanting to feed their munchies at lunchtime‚ as well as patrons who prefer staying until the café closes.

The casual snooker player that I am was happy to see three pool tables next to the balcony. As we play a few rounds‚ more people pop in to drift through the afternoon.

The joint is openly operating as the first “official” venue to sell dagga in SA‚ although its legal status is unclear.

While private consumptio­n of dagga by adults has been legalised in SA‚ the Constituti­onal Court’s 2018 ruling does not allow for dealing in the drug. Dagga users may also not sell it to their friends.

University of Cape Town criminolog­y researcher Anine Kriegler noted in 2018 that it would be up to parliament to add detail to the court judgment before a new regulatory system could be adopted.

“Significan­tly‚ this change came after a legal challenge in support of the right to privacy. It did not result from a popular vote or from a shift in government policy‚ based on public health principles.

“Some key issues that need to be addressed, include how far privacy extends‚ exactly what products should be regulated‚ how non-users will be protected and what to do about the existing criminal market‚” she said.

Legal frameworks that could be assessed by SA legislator­s include the commercial­ised system developing in parts of the US‚ where businesses sell cannabis in much the same way as alcohol. Another is the medicalise­d model of Uruguay‚ where cannabis can be bought without prescripti­on at pharmacies.

“An important question is whether SA will allow cannabis social clubs – structures for the non-profit production and distributi­on of cannabis among a closed group of adults‚” said Kriegler.

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 ?? Picture: FACEBOOK ?? CANNABIS CULTURE: Kick back and light up at the 420 Café where an assortment of marijuana takes pride of place on the main menu.
Picture: FACEBOOK CANNABIS CULTURE: Kick back and light up at the 420 Café where an assortment of marijuana takes pride of place on the main menu.
 ?? Picture: NEO GOBA ?? No persons under 21 years.
Picture: NEO GOBA No persons under 21 years.

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