Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)
high hopes for your next holiday
Cannabis tourism is hot in the US where entrepreneurs are organising marijuana-infused experiences
SAM ROSENBAUM has Stephen Colbert to thank for his career switch from accountant to cannabis tour operator.
The newly minted MBA was watching an episode of The Colbert
Report in 2014 when the comedian spoke of a “cannabis green rush” coming to Colorado, which had recently become the first state to legalise recreational marijuana.
“The part about bus tours kind of jumped out at me,” Rosenbaum, 34, said. “I came up with High 5 Tours.”
A year later, when Rosenbaum’s home state of Oregon voted to legalise cannabis, High 5 Tours was the state’s first cannabis bus tour. Rosenbaum is not alone in his attempts in growing cannabis tourism.
Eleven US states voted to allow people 21 and older to buy regulated amounts of cannabis product for consumption on private property.
Sales systems are not yet in place in Michigan and Maine, and in Massachusetts licensing of dispensaries began in November. In Vermont, as in Washington, DC, possession, growing and sharing cannabis are legal, but not buying or selling. But in six other states (Alaska, California, Colorado, Nevada, Oregon and Washington), business is booming at cannabis dispensaries and related businesses.
As for cannabis tourism, it is hot in Colorado and California and emerging in others. Travel entrepreneurs like Rosenbaum are organising marijuana-infused experiences, including painting classes, bus tours and food classes.
In the Mile-High City
The pioneers of cannabis tourism, Colorado Cannabis Tours and My 420 Tours, are in Denver.
The Original Colorado
Cannabis Tour includes visits to two dispensaries, after which onboard consumption of purchases is encouraged. Visits to a growing facility and a glass-pipe blowing demonstration round out the
$89 (R1 250) bus tour, which lasts four hours and 20 minutes.
Colorado Cannabis Tours is also behind the Puff, Pass & Paint class.
Mike Eymer, the company’s chief executive, teamed up with artist Heidi Keyes to create the first class in 2015.
For $49, the tour includes teacher guidance and art supplies. Cannabis is BYOC. The concept has since spread to other states.
“There are really some amazing paintings that come out of it,” Keyes said. ”With smoking, you’re able to concentrate better. The colours are more vibrant and people are more willing to think outside the box.”
My 420 Tours offers the Blaze & Gaze Graffiti Walking Tour ($29), a post-consumption 4km walking tour of Denver’s RiNo Art District, and the Sushi & Joint Rolling Class ($79).
Heavy on the Regulations
California has also rolled out the green carpet for tourists.
West Coast Cannabis Tours, in
San Diego, offers various tours and classes, including an exclusive tour of a 9750m2 growing facility ($99).
Todd Green, who started the company when only medical marijuana was legal, said: “Now that it’s recreational, people are coming out of the woodwork.”
But regulations abound, especially for bus tours. In Colorado, Oregon and California, passengers are allowed to consume what they have bought at cannabis dispensaries, which is almost every tour’s first stop.
However, in Washington and Nevada, laws prohibiting smoking in moving vehicles limit operators to tours that are educational. Seattle Kush Tours, for example, offers a three-and-a-half hour tour for $99 that informs passengers about the new industry through stops at a dispensary, a growing site and a glasspipe blowing demonstration.
State law also prohibits the use of cannabis in a Seattle cannabis cooking class. Hemp is the substitute.
In Las Vegas, Matthew Miner, the chief executive of Herbology Tours, offers a daily three-hour Herbology 101 tour for $109. Guides share literature and knowledge during stops at a dispensary, a kitchen where cannabis edibles are made, and even a cannabis art museum, Cannabition.
West Hollywood, as well as some cities in the San Francisco Bay Area, have circumvented state restrictions by allowing cannabis social clubs or consumption lounges. Alaska will soon be the first state permitting consumption lounges attached to dispensaries. And in May, Colorado’s governor signed a bill allowing cannabis “hospitality spaces” at dispensaries and at BYOC clubs.
In Portland, Oregon, Rosenbaum’s bright yellow High Five Tours bus takes off every day at 6pm on a dispensary tour ($79) that includes stops at food carts and a brewery.
Every Friday, after the tour of the Columbia River Gorge ($89), he treats his passengers to ice cream sandwiches. It’s been more than two years since he worked as an accountant. He hasn’t looked back.
“Many a trip continues long after movement in time and space have ceased.” – JOHN STEINBECK