The Mercury News

With this ring I thee weed

Marriage ceremonies and marijuana are going hand in hand, as more couples celebrate their mutual love of cannabis

- By Brooke Edwards Staggs Orange County Register

As Dani Geen walks down the aisle at her beach-side wedding in Carmel this August, she’ll be carrying a bouquet spiked with cannabis flowers.

When the Bay Area resident and her fiancé exchange vows around 4:20 p.m., they’ll swap the traditiona­l sand-pouring ceremony for a shared dab.

And when they’re ready to celebrate at the reception, friends and family will get to choose between a trip to the wine bar or a stop at the bud bar.

“I am going to be incorporat­ing it through all of my wedding, since cannabis is a big part of my life,” the 31year-old Oakland resident said.

Having guests sneak away from the reception to enjoy a joint is certainly not new. But Geen are her fiancé are among a growing number of couples looking to openly celebrate their love of weed as they celebrate their big day.

“It is possible,” Geen said. “It’s just about how to make it work.” That’s no small challenge. Even in California – where medical marijuana has been allowed for more than 20 years and recreation­al cannabis was legalized in November – it’s tough to find wedding venues that publicly advertise their willingnes­s to allow cannabis consumptio­n on site. And there’s still confusion swirling among both vendors and couples about how to legally pull off a weed wedding.

Entreprene­urial cannabis supporters are increasing­ly stepping up to fill that gap, with an entire website dedicated to planning marijuana-themed nuptials, a weed-themed wedding chapel that recently opened in Las Vegas and a cannabis wedding expo April 30 in San Francisco. Together, they’re helping pull off fully legal and ever-creative weed weddings for everyone from dreadlocks-wearing stoners to designer-clad business executives to long-married couples renewing their vows now that cannabis is becoming more socially acceptable.

“Legalizati­on has helped destigmati­ze it, and a lot of these venues are starting to

“Legalizati­on has helped destigmati­ze it, and a lot of these venues are starting to get questions themselves. So I think they’re just trying to gear up for cannabis weddings. They know it’s coming.” — Dani Geen

get questions themselves,” Geen said. “So I think they’re just trying to gear up for cannabis weddings. They know it’s coming.”

Three years ago, a light bulb went off for Bec Koop.

The Denver resident had flowers left over from an arrangemen­t she’d done for her florist shop. Then she trimmed her personal cannabis plant. On a whim, she decided to combine the two. When she saw how pretty the bouquet looked, she had one thought: weed weddings.

Her shop soon became known as Buds & Blossoms, catering to weddings and other special events that incorporat­e cannabis. Then she partnered with other profession­als to launch an event planning service, which hosted the first Cannabis Wedding Expo in Denver in 2015.

Today, Koop and her partners run Irie Weddings & Events. They’re booking out cannabis-themed weddings into 2020 – on 4/20/20, to be exact – and making plans to expand the Denver business to California. They’re also hosting the first Cannabis Wedding Expo in California on April 30 in the Bay Area.

“It’s a market that was ready for us,” Koop said, with lots of interest from both California couples and vendors. “We’re really excited to be bringing it there.”

Though Niki McDonald’s business is also based in Colorado, she said she’s always gotten more calls and emails from California couples looking for help planning their cannabis weddings.

McDonald is a full-time TV producer. In 2014, MSNBC hired her to make a series on the “pot barons” of Colorado. She moved to the Rocky Mountain State for six months and was impressed by how mature the cannabis industry had already become – and how much further it had to go.

“I felt like I was a part of something, and I wanted to stay,” she said. “I couldn’t turn my back on it.”

She saw a particular gap for people who wanted to plan upscale events involving cannabis, with no informatio­n readily available on where to go or who could help. And so the website Love and Marij was born.

The forum is like the wedding planning site The Knot but for cannabis lovers. It offers tips for wedding planning and showcases real weed weddings to inspire couples as they plan their own nuptials. And it helps couples find vendors who are not only OK with cannabis consumptio­n taking place at the wedding, but might also be enthusiast­s themselves – such as LA-based “Herbal Chef” Christophe­r Sayegh.

“It’s just a tribe. You sort of have the same secret, which allows you to open up and connect a little more,” McDonald said. “And you want to feel comfortabl­e on your wedding day. You want to feel like your vendors are a part of your party.”

LoveandMar­ij.com is run by volunteers at the moment. But McDonald said she’s hoping to get funding to take the site to the next level now that California and seven other states have legalized recreation­al marijuana.The wedding night is one thing. But no one wants their actual wedding to end in handcuffs.

Under both California and Colorado law, adults 21 and over can possess, transport and donate to another adult up to one ounce of cannabis.

So for Koop’s floral business, she sends couples to dispensari­es that offer them a discount on their “wedding weed.” They buy what they need, then give up to an ounce to Koop to incorporat­e into their bouquets, boutonnier­es and arrangemen­ts. In other words, it’s BYOC: bring your own cannabis.

For bud bars to be legal, they have to be open bars, meaning no one can pay for anything they consume. Couples buy products from the dispensari­es or edible companies up front, then give it away to guests 21 and older.

Same goes for party favors that include cannabis, bridal party gifts, ice-shoot bongs... The sky’s the limit, Koop said, so long as everything is free and everyone who partakes is at least 21.

Couples also have to consider how they’ll transport the cannabis to their wedding site. If they’re serving more than an ounce, they’ll need to make multiple trips or send some along with different vendors or guests.

No one is allowed to consume cannabis in public in any legalized state. But Koop said weddings are considered private events, which means adults can consume legally so long as the area isn’t visible to the public.

That has some implicatio­ns for venue owners, who may have to add privacy fences or cover windows if they want to accommodat­e cannabis weddings. They’re also on more solid footing if they don’t have a liquor license themselves, since most state laws ban cannabis consumptio­n where alcohol is sold.

The legalities can be a bit tricky to navigate, Koop said. And her company frequently gets advice from attorneys to make sure they’re doing everything on the up and up. But they haven’t had any issues so far, she thinks largely because they’re also smart about how everything is handled during the event itself.

If a couple has a bud bar, for example, they also have a knowledgea­ble budtender on hand to guide people through the experience and, if necessary, cut guests off. They offer small samples of low-dose edibles, and they carry a kit to help out in case someone does overindulg­e.

In general, McDonald said they have far fewer issues with cannabis at weddings than they do with alcohol.

“Alcohol makes you sloppy, it makes you say things you might regret and it can make you feel horrible the next day,” she said. Plus, there’s the risk of serious harm from alcohol poisoning.

“With cannabis,” she said, “you’re actually more able to take in the magnitude of what’s going on. You can stop and really appreciate all of the decoration­s and music and hard work that was put into the day.”

A poll by The Knot shows two-thirds of people would be fine with attending a cannabis-infused wedding. But Koop said reaction from loved ones is frequently a big concern for couples.

If a large percentage of guests might be uncomforta­ble with cannabis consumptio­n, she said, couples have to decide whether they care. And if they do, they might consider having the smoking lounge separated from the rest of the reception or finding subtler ways to incorporat­e the theme.

“There are many ways to do it without offending Grandma,” Koop said.

In the end, McDonald said oftentimes guests that couples are most worried about offending end up partaking and having a great time.

 ?? CREDIT: COURTESY OF DANI GEEN ?? Dani Geen and Zak Walton are planning a “weed wedding” in August in Carmel.
CREDIT: COURTESY OF DANI GEEN Dani Geen and Zak Walton are planning a “weed wedding” in August in Carmel.
 ?? IRIE WEDDINGS AND EVENTS ??
IRIE WEDDINGS AND EVENTS

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