Vancouver Sun

151st Cowichan Exhibition includes new category: best homegrown reefer

Competitio­n creating real buzz at fall fair with 18 growers ready to show their crops

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VICTORIA One of Canada’s oldest fall fairs is putting a new twist on its annual showcase of local livestock, produce and fruit by adding a category for best homegrown marijuana.

The Cowichan Exhibition in Duncan, which dates to 1868, has created a best cannabis category to embrace legalizati­on and celebrate local pot growers, said exhibition vice-president Bud James.

The fair starts Friday and the cannabis entries will be on display in the main hall at the Cowichan Exhibition Grounds along with the region’s top vegetables, fruits and baked goods. First prize is $5, second is $3 and third place gets a ribbon.

“We just decided this year, because it’s an agricultur­al product, and it’s been grown in the valley for years, and now that it’s finally legally grown, we would allow people to win a ribbon for the best,” said James.

He said fair officials believe the Cowichan cannabis category is the first of its kind in Canada.

An official at the Canadian Associatio­n of Fairs and Exhibition­s, a non-profit organizati­on representi­ng rural and urban fairs, said she had not heard of any other cannabis-judging contests before the Cowichan Exhibition, but couldn’t confirm it was the first.

A fall fair in Grand Forks is also judging local cannabis, but the event starts Saturday, one day after Cowichan’s fair. Those who enter the competitio­n in Grand Forks can compete for best indoor- and outdoor-grown cannabis.

James said fair organizers contacted the local council and RCMP before adding the cannabis category.

The mayor and council did not oppose the contest and the RCMP referred organizers to B.C.’s Liquor and Cannabis Regulation Branch, the agency monitoring retail sales of non-medical cannabis, he said.

Organizers decided to go ahead with the event after its plans were not rejected, James said.

“Our interpreta­tion of the rules are you can’t make it attractive to people under 19 years and we are not making it attractive,” he said.

James said the cannabis entries will be placed in a glass display case and the individual entries will be sealed in clear plastic bags.

“It’s being judged to the same standard of judging garden and field produce,” he said. “It’s done by uniformity. You want all three buds to be the same size, same shape, same colour. It’s also the dryness, texture and smell. It’s exactly the same way you would judge apples or carrots or hay bales.”

James said the contest doesn’t involve sampling the product.

Bree Tweet, the manager of a medical cannabis dispensary in nearby Ladysmith, will judge the marijuana entries, said James.

The exhibition received 18 cannabis entries and James said the contest created a buzz at the fair.

“The enthusiasm of the entrants, the people bringing their entry forms, they are so enthusiast­ic it’s unbelievab­le,” he said. “They are so thrilled that it’s happening, that we’re doing it because they’ve been waiting for years for legalizati­on and now, they finally got it and now they have a chance to show what they can do.”

James, who has entered his prized Dahlia flowers at past fairs, said the addition of the cannabis category has exceeded expectatio­ns with the 18 entries.

It’s being judged to the same standard of judging garden and field produce.

It’s done by uniformity.

 ?? JONATHAN HAywARD/FILES ?? The Cowichan Exhibition will offer something different this year. Alongside the usual locally grown fruits and vegetables, cannabis growers will show their finest.
JONATHAN HAywARD/FILES The Cowichan Exhibition will offer something different this year. Alongside the usual locally grown fruits and vegetables, cannabis growers will show their finest.

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