SacAlt 420 Issue April 2014

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Our first annual 420 issue! Top Ten Cannabis Leaders in Sacramento, guide to 420 events, Patient Profile, bands, and more!

Transcript of SacAlt 420 Issue April 2014

Page 1: SacAlt 420 Issue April 2014
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Free Gram Or Ediblefor all new patients with 1st purchase!

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Large Selection! Over 35 Strains!Plus a Great Variety of Clones AND $40 CAP on Concentrates!

Kick Off 420 Early!Special Deals Start on Friday

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PRICES INCLUDE ALL TAXES!

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Purple Kush Cherry Pie Cookie Dough Forum Cookie Candy Land

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SacAlternative | April 20144

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Contents06 AltNotes

08 Top10

12 Patient Profile

14 Budtender of the Month

17 Cannabis

Community

Corner

21 AltBrews

22 AltAndAbout

28 AltPolitics

30 420 in SAC

32 AltOpinion

33 AltMusic

35 AltFood

41 Dance Gavin Dance

44 AltShop

46 Directory

LettersEditorWe appreciate your feedback. Letters to the editor may be edited for length and clarity. Email us at [email protected]

Mission Statement SacAlternative is a monthly news and arts magazine with a mission to inform, report and provide quality content to all individuals living in the Sacramento area. Our writers, editors and staff aim to present a variety of social and political topics, balanced with interest to the alternative arts, grassroots movements and green lifestyle representing the region.

Advertising Information All advertising is subject to final approval from the advertiser. The advertiser provides SacAlternative with digital files when available. The advertiser, and not SacAlternative, accepts all responsibility for the content of the advertising. The advertiser accepts responsibility for concept, design, photography layout and content of the advertisement, not SacAlternative.

Disclaimer You may not use, copy, reproduce, republish, upload, post, transmit, distribute, or modify the Marks in any way, including in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of materials in this Magazine or on accompanying Website, without SacAlternative prior written consent. The views expressed by the authors and writers in this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of SacAlternative. Comments on this publication are the sole responsibility of their writers and the writer will take full responsibility, liability, and blame for any libel or litigation those results from something written in or as a direct result of something written in SacAlternative. The accuracy, completeness, veracity, honesty, exactitude, factuality and politeness of comments are not guaranteed.

Publisher Josh Burke [email protected]

Publication Editor Lovelle Harris

For Advertising, contact [email protected]

Contributors & Photographers Ron Mullins, Megan Lee, Joey Cline, Joe Sinclair, Andy Conn, Ty Rivers, Steph Rodriguez, Sarah Sinclair

Design & Layout Kory & Steph for whiskey&sour [email protected]

SacAlternative 916.800.5884 www.SacAlt.com [email protected]

Staff

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Editor’sNote by Lovelle Harris

Several years ago my aunt gave me an internal organ

cleansing kit for Christmas. I opened the package, adorned

in all of the usual holiday regalia, to find what looked like

a laboratory set for a budding chemist. The box was a

menagerie of jars and vials filled with an assortment of

capsules and liquids, respectively—the combination of which

promised complete organ detoxification in a mere 21 days.

I know what you’re thinking, what a lame gift, right? But it

wasn’t. My aunt is an alternative healthcare practitioner with

over 18 years of experience as a certified colon therapist and

organ detoxification specialist. As they say, she knows her

shit. More importantly, I trust her completely. The process

of ridding my body of the all of the toxins it had absorbed

over the decades was not an easy task—it demanded

planning and early mornings, neither of which I’m especially

accustomed to.

While the program also involved giving up meat and dairy

products, a main component of it included juicing fresh

fruits and vegetables—organic ones, preferably. After the

process was completed I felt rejuvenated, both in body and

mind. I was hooked, and although I strayed from the rigid

diet soon after because, as we know, all bad habits die hard,

I faithfully re-engaged in the program year after year. But

after news broke of Monsanto’s questionable relationship

with food, I began to wonder if the produce I once thought

healthy was possibly tainted by the chemical and agricultural

biotechnology corporation’s questionable practices. Had I

unknowingly reintroduced toxins back into my system while

thinking I was ridding my body of those same toxic elements?

I realized that the only way to be certain of what I was putting

into my body was to develop a relationship with the many

local farmers’ markets in and around Sacramento. And while

it’s difficult to force myself out of bed Sunday mornings to

forage about the weekly market under the freeway, I can rest

easy at night knowing that the food I’ve fueled my body with

for the next day’s challenges doesn’t require a disclaimer.

AltNotes

Do you actually know what you’re putting in your body?

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10If you asked the other 9 most influential people

on our list for the names of those who had most

influenced them, the odds are they would all

mention Joy Cole, local activist and founder

of SacPatients, a Sacramento-based patient

advocacy group that hosted many of the rallies

and educational events held in the early days of

the local cannabis movement.

Cole passed away on April 29, 2012. She was

a cancer survivor living in Del Paso Heights;

she spent her time visiting dispensaries in

Sacramento City and County on a daily basis

despite being disabled. Her goal was to keep

people informed of the latest developments in

cannabis news, no easy task in a time when

not many were blogging or Facebooking about

medical marijuana and how the cannabis

community’s rights were constantly being

violated by local governments. Dispensaries

were not allowed to exist simply because

they were ineligible to apply for a business

license. Government officials freely and

shamelessly expressed bigoted cannaphobic

views in public.

In October 2009, the city of Sacramento

decided to write its cannabis ordinance and

Cole organized the first of many informational

rallies at Cesar Chavez Park, which is where I

met her and began my journey as an activist.

When the Sacramento ordinance was finalized

last year, Steve Hansen, Sacramento city

council member, and others gave credit to

Cole and her lobbying efforts for helping

them understand that patients’ rights must

be considered by lawmakers when drafting

legislation that impacts people with medical

conditions. In the end, Sacramento acquired

one of the more functional and workable

ordinances in the state because Cole

successfully opposed the harsh limitations

initially under consideration by the City Council.

Working together with local cannabis groups,

Crusaders For Patients’ Rights, Americans

for Safe Access, and others, Cole devoted

her energies to activating the community’s

voice and inspiring many people to join the

movement. Her passing just after 4/20 was a

sad day for all of us, and we will sorely miss her

voice in times to come. (RM)

Shelby Lucero has been working to educate

women’s communities about the benefits of

cannabis as medicine while fighting for her

own freedom.

On July 4, 2012 Lucero’s home and business,

The Farmer’s Daughter on El Camino, were

raided by the Sacramento County Sheriff’s

Department. Law enforcement didn’t find a

huge dispensing operation, but only enough

medicine for two patients. According to Lucero,

while the reports that 80 pounds of marijuana

was recovered from her home and business

were completely false, she and her husband

Gus both served jail time. Lucero has refused

to back down or go into hiding. She has denied

multiple plea-bargaining deals and is fighting

the case all the way to trial.

Lucero became the vice president of Safe

Access Sacramento in 2012 and in 2013

organized the Sacramento NORML Women’s

Alliance, working to bring a contemporary

approach to the public policy conversation, and

is proudly representing the interests of modern,

mainstream like-minded women everywhere.

In November 2013, SNWA hosted a women’s

conference fundraiser hosting Ellen Komp of

Cal NORML and Cheri Cicard aka “Cannabis

Cheri” author of multiple cannabis related

books and an advocate for education and

patients rights.

Moving forward Lucero plans to continue

educating politicians and the community on

safe alternative medicinal use through cannabis

topicals and vaporizers to dispel old views

of patients being merely “pot heads.” Her

case goes to trial on April 23, 2014 and she is

fighting for full exoneration. (RM)

Photo courtesy of Jasmine Ontario

While Richard Miller works with medicinal

cannabis patients at A Therapeutic Alternative,

it’s his three decades of volunteerism and

activism for medicinal cannabis patients that

earn him a spot in our Top 10.

Miller’s involvement in the cannabis industry

dates back to his childhood. Part of his

family’s lifestyle centered on marijuana. He

remembers his Great Uncle lecturing about the

uses of medicinal cannabis and talking about

cultivating strains for better medicinal use. In

1992 Miller served the Bay Area community as

a volunteer and employee, working with AIDS

patients at the original San Francisco Buyers

by Ron Mullins, Ty Rivers contributing writer and photographer, Jasmine Ontario

Joy Cole

Shelby Lucero

Richard Miller

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the Top10 cannabis community Leaders in Sac

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Club. Realizing that education was needed

to explore the healing aspects of medicinal

marijuana, he spent decades collecting data,

talking to patients and finding out firsthand

how to advise patients on what may work for

them. This knowledge makes him a sought

after spokesperson and expert on the uses and

benefits of medicinal marijuana.

After starting a collective and seeing it

disappear; through no part of his own and

under questionable county regulations, Miller

found that his advocacy is better served

helping others understand the importance

of the plant and the quality of life it offers

those that suffer from a variety of ailments.

Miller himself was affected with a series of

medical issues and was prescribed hundreds

of pharmaceutical painkillers that kept

him lethargic and bedridden. His firsthand

knowledge of the plant helps him function with

his conditions effortlessly and stay active, and

his boundless energy and positive outlook

keep him constantly motivated and always

moving forward.

Today he’s more active than ever. Miller

spends the majority of his week working at A

Therapeutic Alternative and volunteering with

local non-profits. Most of what Miller makes

from his “day job” is allocated to nonprofit

groups that are in need of time and funds. He is

a volunteer and past president of SAFE Access

Sacramento, also the advocacy director for

Crusaders for Patients’ Rights, Sacramento. He

is a also member of SacNORML and regularly

attends meetings of different organizations to

lend a hand to the growing medicinal marijuana

movement. Miller also advocates for Health

Education and Legal Patients’ Rights, a group

he founded in the foothills. (TR)

Don Duncan, co-founder of Americans for Safe Access in 2002 and a member of the Board of Directors who also serves as its California Director, is highly skilled at organizing grassroots campaigns in the struggle for the full implementation of California’s medical cannabis laws. He and his staff at ASA respond to

attacks upon the cannabis community from the federal government and work to build robust and effective coalitions for medical cannabis at

the state level.

As co-founder of one of the oldest medical

cannabis dispensing collectives in California,

Duncan has also helped open legal facilities in

cities all over the state, including Los Angeles

and the San Francisco Bay Area. Considered

a leading consultant in the field of medical

cannabis, he has been featured on “60 Minutes,

Dan Rather Reports,” “Retirement Living TV,”

and in the Los Angeles Times.

Through education and ASA’s extensive

communications network, Duncan has been

and continues to be an important figure in

encouraging local protests against raids by

the federal government, at the same time

promoting local self-regulation of medical

cannabis dispensaries throughout the state.

Working closely with local politicians, police and

sheriffs’ organizations, the operators and staffs

of dispensaries, and the cannabis community,

Duncan has been instrumental in the writing

and implementation of local laws in cities

throughout California.

Duncan works so regularly in the capital

city that he recently took up residence in

Sacramento with his wife and son. He is

currently lobbying state Senators and Assembly

Members to write legislation that would expand

rights for medical cannabis patients. He also is

battling against legislation that would take away

patients’ rights, such as SB1262, introduced

by Sen. Correa in March, which severely limits

patients’ access to cannabis.

A true believer in medical cannabis, Duncan

has made it his life’s work to assist patients in

gaining access to cannabis in a safe and sane

environment befitting a medical process. His

efforts have been instrumental in the community

success in shaping state marijuana policies. (RM)

If you’ve been active in the local cannabis community this century or have been to any fests or fundraisers, you have probably been in the presence of Ngaio Bealum. The King of

California Cannabis Comedy, Bealum presents his special brand of stoner humor wherever weed is welcomed.

“The King” is not just a funny man. His comedy is intended to educate and consequently often blends information seamlessly with hilarity, as in this bit he did a few years ago: “You guys know weed used to be legal, right? Until 1937, the founding fathers, Jefferson, Washington, and all those guys, used to roll it and smoke it. The Declaration of Independence was originally written on hemp paper, which is marijuana. It makes better paper than trees, better fabric than cotton, and you can smoke it and at the same time talk about shit like life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” Bealum then pantomimes a founding father hitting a joint and says, “Oooh, write that down.”

A multi-dimensional figure who’s not satisfied just to talk about cannabis, Bealum fought hard for legalization in 2010. He used all his resources on behalf of Proposition 19, including his act and a magazine he ran at the time called West Coast Cannabis. A budding marijuana magazine, WCC spoke truth to power during a time when the federal government was directly threatening companies that advertised marijuana businesses.

The only one of our Top Ten that also merits his own IMDB page, Bealum has some prestigious credits to his name: appearances on Comedy Central’s “The Sarah Silverman Program,” “Comic Justice,” “MTV’s Half-Hour Comedy Hour,” BET’s “Comic View,” A&E’s “Evening at The Improv,” and more.

Now, Bealum writes about cannabis issues for the Sacramento News & Review in a “Dear Abby”-style advice column to which enthusiasts can write in for answers to their questions about cannabis issues. He also continues to travel the world, telling jokes and educating minds with his fundraising comedy shows at hemp/cannabis/marijuana fests in the United States

and abroad. (RM)

Friends describe Kimberly Cargile as educated,

sincere, professional, compassionate, and

giving. They also describe her as busy,

someone accustomed to juggling a full

schedule. As a cannabis activist, she fills her

Kimberly Cargile

Don Duncan

Ngaio Bealum

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day with meetings and telephone calls, often

working into the night to satisfy other peoples’

needs. While advocating for medicinal cannabis

and the legalization of marijuana, Cargile

manages the busy collective, A Therapeutic

Alternative. Most days she meets with political

opponents and advocates, attends meetings

and functions for several activist groups

including ASA and NORML, and speaks

often with leaders of both local and state

administrations. She is often found talking and

strategizing with administrators of the California

Cannabis Industry Association. The list goes on.

Her rise as a voice in the industry came about

in the early days of her advocacy. A pre-med

student studying cellular and molecular biology

at Humboldt State University, she also taught

yoga. Through her classes, she discovered

that yoga is a useful tool for patients seeking

healthy alternatives to conventional ways

of bettering their minds and bodies. Cargile

found out firsthand how natural medicine and

naturopathic medicine was either downplayed

or discarded by the medical establishment and

generally not covered by insurance. Motivated

to make a difference, she changed her major to

liberal studies with a minor in psychology and a

focus on social justice.

A move to Sacramento allowed her to work at

Capitol Wellness, one of the first dispensaries

in the city. Soon afterward, she found herself

volunteering at ASA as a peer counselor. She

stayed busy organizing patients for meetings,

making calls, getting people to and from city

council and Board of Supervisor meetings,

and sending testimonials from patients to city

council members to get the word out about the

medicinal properties of cannabis.

Cargile openly opposed politicians whose

purpose was to shut down collectives. Often on

the other side of medicinal cannabis collectives

were Sacramento County 4th District Supervisor

Roberta MacGlashan and Sacramento County

CEO Brad Hudson, both of whom continually

sought for and eventually brought about the

closing of dozens of collectives in Sacramento

County. Cargile pointed out that, “If you can

point to two people that singlehandedly

helped shut down most of the collectives in

Sacramento County, it was MacGlashan and

Hudson.” Undaunted, she regrouped and

gathered signatures and letters that paved the

way for more sensible dispensary regulations.

Many collectives managed to stay open or even

re-open thanks to her efforts. (TR)

Ron Mullins is a friend of mine, a smart, funny,

and interesting guy. We have worked together

at SacAlt Magazine for over a year now and

his contributions to making this magazine

relevant are immeasurable. He was one of the

first people we sought counsel from when the

idea of publishing a magazine initially came up.

He steered us in the right directions, gave us

contacts to help us navigate the choppy waters

of magazine publishing, and, even more than

guidance and suggestions, he gifted us with

his friendship.

When we asked him to write a column

dedicated to the cannabis industry, he came

through for each and every issue of SacAlt that

hit the newsstands. Looking back, I can see

why so many people told us to contact him. He

simply has the answers you are looking for or

advice on how to find them. No wonder Mullins

Ron Mullins

4

Number three on our list is Nate Bradley, the

executive director of the California Cannabis

Industry Association. He is also a father,

husband and activist. Passionately advocating

for full adult marijuana legalization, his

popularity resonates from a strong personality

and a willingness to listen to all sides of an

issue. He is widely regarded in the cannabis

community and with the mainstream masses.

His strong law enforcement background makes

him a uniquely qualified representative for the

cannabis industry. Recently SacAlt set down

with Bradley and asked him a few questions.

How did you get your start in advocacy for the cannabis industry? I became a patient

after getting laid off from law enforcement

and it opened my eyes to the entire world of

the marijuana policy reform movement. All of

a sudden I saw it all for the first time. After

three years of advocacy work, I realized that,

although I could open up a lot of doors as a

former law enforcement officer, I couldn’t

really affect a lot of change; actually change

votes and things like that. I looked around

the capital and I realized that what I saw was

an industry without a voice. I spent the last

year organizing the CCIA (California Cannabis

Industry Association).

How does the CCIA get funding? It’s funded

by association dues from members. We are just

formed our PAC (political action committee);

The Cannabis Action PAC.

How will legalization affect the industry? Will it be positive? It will be a positive thing. The

people I work with now from the none cannabis

related organizations are coming to the table

right now to talk about regulation, not just about

medical [cannabis] but because they see full

adult use in the future. They are concerned that

we lay the groundwork properly for that right

now. We are now talking about creating policy

from a position of “when it is legalized” not “if it

will be legalized.”

So some of these people are really talking about how they will divvy up the funds?

That’s exactly right. They want to make sure

that everyone gets there cut. We are talking

about rules and regulations and distribution of

funds once it’s legal.

Is the Sacramento area a leader in the cannabis industry and if so, why?

Yes. Actually, Sacramento is known as a

conservative town. So the fact that we are listed

in a few magazines as one of the most cannabis

friendly cities in the country only helps. A

somewhat conservative town has a liberal

ordinance towards cannabis. (TR)

3Nate Bradley

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nette

Dav

ieswas the expert answering questions on behalf

of the Sacramento cannabis industry when a

Sacramento television news station recently ran

a story about a cannabis-related issue.

Mullins is a strong presence throughout

Sacramento. When he became a medical

cannabis patient in 1996 and found the

medicine life-changing, he decided to get

involved and raised his voice on behalf of

the industry, petitioning the state Assembly

and fighting tirelessly to overturn antiquated

cannabis regulations. He also became an

influential cannabis provider, working in or

consulting for many local collectives.

In addition, he has committed himself to

the LGBT equality movement. He marches,

photographs rallies, writes for LGBT

newspapers, and hosts “Being Gay Today” on

public access television. He fights tirelessly for

the rights of LGBT people, including their rights

to serve in the military and to enjoy the same

marriage status as everyone else.

In 2009 he opened J Street Wellness, a

dispensary specializing in the unique needs of

LGBT patients while providing compassionate

access to all. He served as the vice president of

Safe Access Sacramento from 2011 to 2012, was

voted Best Dispensary Manager on a Mission

by the Sacramento News & Review in 2011,

and is currently general manager and director

of SacNorml, the Sacramento chapter of the

National Organization for the reform of Marijuana

Law. In addition to his monthly contribution to

SacAlt Magazine, he is a frequent contributor to

SacPress and other local, statewide, and industry

publications. (TR, JO)

Ryan Landers, the California State Director for

American Alliance for Medical Cannabis and a

very active lobbyist in Sacramento, has fought

for patients’ rights most of his adult life. He

has educated city officials to consider patients’

needs when creating local laws that regulate

medical cannabis and in 2009 was famously

dubbed “Mr. Compassion” by the Sacramento

News & Review, upon whose cover he appeared

smoking a joint.

Landers was present the day Proposition 215

was filed in 1996 and was subsequently named

Sacramento County Director for Californians for

Compassionate Use. He soon became a leader

in the movement by gathering the signatures

necessary to make Proposition 215 the law

in the state capital region. Before passage,

Landers was the local poster boy for medicinal

marijuana and afterward became a media

spokesperson for the cannabis community.

Landers has been a cannabis pioneer in several

ways. Hoping to show why present laws

needed to be changed, he was the first to allow

a news crew to film an illegal cannabis growing

operation in the United States. Arrested and

taken into custody in August 1997, Landers

was charged with smoking cannabis in

public in downtown Sacramento, the first

medical marijuana patient charged for public

consumption. The case was subsequently

dropped by Sacramento officials.

Landers also attempted to open his own

dispensary, the Capital City Cannabis Buyers

Club, but encountered political obstacles and

financial hardships that doomed the project.

Although he never did open his own dispensary,

he has fought his way through the licensing

process in order to monitor the application of

our local ordinance.

Landers continues to serve the community as

an expert witness, giving advice and testimony

all over northern California in spite of suffering

from several debilitating illnesses, including

complications from AIDS that require several

injections in his neck every week.

Without the influence of Ryan Landers and

other cannabis pioneers, Proposition 215 would

have remained just another obscure law, and

law enforcement agents and local government

officials would still be locking up patients and

banning dispensaries. (RM)

Lanette Davies was a typical mother and wife,

an employee of the Sacramento Bee until

2005, when she left her job to get involved

in medical cannabis upon discovering her

daughter had a serious illness that benefitted

from the use of THC. Rather than shy away

from a controversial treatment and continue

using ineffective pharmaceuticals as so

many parents do, she kept an open mind,

researched the plant, and subsequently fought

to make it available to her daughter and other

patients. She did all this while continuing to

live a staunch Christian lifestyle. When Davis

researched marijuana, she even found that the

Bible doesn’t reject marijuana at all; on

the contrary, it arguably has passages that

favor cannabis.

Davies has been active in the cannabis

movement ever since, serving as treasurer and

public relations director of the Compassionate

Coalition from 2006 until 2008. She became

the Americans for Safe Access Sacramento

representative for 2006 and is still very active

with ASA. Davis has held seminars on how to

be in compliance with state law when opening

a dispensing collective and testified in both the

State of California Assembly and Senate on

bills that affect patient rights. As a byproduct

of all her research and work, in 2006 Davies

founded Crusaders for Patients Rights, a

Christian-based patients’ rights organization

for medical marijuana. CPR is still fighting for

patients today, working on local, statewide, and

federal education as well as politics. Davies

also founded Cannacare, the oldest dispensary

in Sacramento, and now the first to complete

the city’s lengthy licensing process.

CPR has worked with others like Joy Cole and

Ryan Landers to successfully lobby the city

of Sacramento to write a far less restrictive

ordinance regulating the dispensing of medical

cannabis in the city than the version that was

originally drafted. Without her efforts, and

those of the community she helped to lead,

Sacramento would probably have fewer than

three dispensaries today.

Recently, Davies tackled the Internal Revenue

Service. When attacked with a little known law,

technically known as 280e, created to prevent

drug dealers from writing off guns from their tax

returns, she chose to tackle the IRS head on

in federal court. If her case prevails, it has the

potential to overturn one of the most vicious

weapons that the federal government uses

against medical marijuana.

The contributions of Davies, her family, and

the people she has organized have been

immeasurable; the education she has helped

provide to state and community lawmakers has

made all the difference in patients’ access to

their medicine. (RM)

21Ryan Landers

Lanette Davies

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SacAlternative | April 201412

PatientProfile

by Ron Mullins

Meet Marcia Blount. If you were to hear her speak at a Democratic fundraiser, or get a facial from her you would never guess cannabis is her medicine of choice. She is a stylish gal, just over 60 years old, but you couldn’t tell. She’s also a mother and wife, who operates her own esthetics business—Marcia is a true renaissance woman.

I caught up with Marcia at a political event and had a chance to hear about her relationship with medical cannabis. Like many of us, in her late teens Marcia used marijuana when she socialized, it was fun for her. Eventually Marcia became a mother, and embarked upon a career with the state and federal government. This made the use of medicinal cannabis impractical, and she stopped.

Years later, a diagnosis of fibromyalgia left Marcia in excruciating pain and in need of treatment. In the early ’90s, after years of suffering, she began taking a cocktail of prescription medications and supplements to treat the muscle pain and insomnia—the debilitating symptoms of fibromyalgia. For insomnia alone, she was prescribed three different antidepressant tablets typically used to help fibromyalgia patients sleep, in addition there were three herbal sleeping tablets. If she still couldn’t fall asleep, she would take up to three types of muscle relaxers. Some nights, she even had to add prescription sleeping pills that produced harsh hangover-like side effects. For twenty years or so, she continued using these medications—even though they caused her to sleep 10 to 12 hours a night, waking up groggy, without feeling rested and with muscle pain that limited her mobility for hours every morning.

In 2011 a wheelchair-bound paraplegic friend of Marcia’s, who grows her own medical marijuana in a collective, suggested that she try cannabis for her sleep and pain issues. Marcia took a few medicated cookies home to try. She found it significantly helped her symptoms, like nothing before. Marcia spoke to her doctor and got the necessary recommendation for legal medical use, she then continued getting cannabis from her friend’s collective as a licensed patient.

“I love that cannabis treats many of my medical needs,” she says. “So I don’t have to take so many pharmaceuticals. But I really became an activist because of the terribly unjust prohibition laws. Some people go to jail for life, and people are having their children taken from them; all over an herb that has never killed anyone. And if you are dark-skinned or poor, your chances of going to jail are even greater.”

Later, Marcia decided to visit a medical marijuana dispensary, which is where she met some of the amazing folks in Sacramento’s cannabis community. She began using cannabis daily, and has stopped many of her prescription medications completely. She vaporizes a heavy Indica strain of cannabis just before bedtime to be able to get to sleep, and she also takes Indica hash oil capsules to stay asleep throughout the night; it works. She also found that using cannabis keeps her muscles more relaxed, alleviating the need for prescription muscle relaxers.

Due to her new routine, which includes medical marijuana as a major component, she has also been able to seriously cut back on her pain prescriptions of both Vicodin and Motrin.

Waking up easily after a good night’s sleep, with her muscles relaxed, has been life changing,

allowing her to finally, after years of suffering, function more normally during the day with much less pain.

In April 2013, she heard a radio ad for the Sacramento chapter of The National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws. The call to action lead her to begin her path as a proponent for social and political cannabis policy change. She attended the Sacramento NORML meeting and was pleasantly surprised to find so many like-minded people, who also believe in cannabis as a safe medicine. After that, she joined Sacramento NORML and the activist community in trying to fully legalize marijuana, helping the cause with her skills as a speaker, writer, and organizer.

In September 2013, Marcia founded the Brownie Mary Democratic Club of Sacramento County, filling a void in the political landscape. As a long-time activist in local Democratic politics, she felt it was time to get the Democrats on board with marijuana legalization.

“People who choose cannabis for their medical needs, or for their recreational enjoyment, should not go to jail just because they don’t want to use pharmaceutical medications or they don’t like to drink alcohol,” she says. “Marijuana is a safer alternative than either of these.”

In 2014, Brownie Mary Democrats of Sacramento County, and other Brownie Mary Clubs in California, submitted a Plank to the California Democratic Party platform. It was voted on by the delegates, and was passed at the recent March 2014 California Democratic Convention. As a result of the clubs’ efforts, the California Democratic Plank addition reads, “Support the legalization, regulation and taxation of Marijuana, in a manner similar to that of tobacco or alcohol.”

Marcia also participated in the combined Brownie Mary Club booth at the California Democratic Convention, helping to educate the delegates and guests about the positive attributes of Marijuana. The booth was quite successful, many folks stopping by to learn about, discuss, and support the cause.

The Sacramento County Brownie Mary Democratic Club meets the first Thursday of every other month. To contact them you can email [email protected], or look them up on Facebook or on the web at http://www.bmdcofsaccounty.org/.

If you need a good Facial or Chemical Peel from someone who won’t judge you for the roach burns on your nails, Marcia’s business, located in Rancho Cordova, is called Marcia’s Esthetics and can be contacted by calling 916-534-0121.

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CannabisCommunityCorner

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This Month’s Alternative BudTenderby Ty Rivers

Who: Ian Boas // Over/Under 25: Under Dispensary: Safe Capitol Compassion Cooperative Vitals: Single, but attached. Favorite Strain? San Fernando Valley OG Kush

How long have you worked at Safe Capitol Compassion? Three years.

How long have you been in the cannabis industry? Three years.

Is Safe Capitol Compassion the first place you worked? Yes.

How did you get the job? I actually was a patient, a frequent patient, and got to know the management and some of the people who would later be my co-workers. One of the budtenders that doesn’t work here any more was also a tattoo artist, and one day while finishing a couple of tattoos on me he mentioned how much he liked working at Safe and that I should try it. So I talked to the boss and he hired me.

You enjoy the work environment at Safe? Yes. I mean, three years, you’ve got to like a place. You can’t stay somewhere three years and not like it.

So what do you like most about Safe Capitol Compassion? Mostly, I just like dealing with patients, the interaction. I don’t like being stuck in a cubicle or having the day-to-day grind. I like talking and I feel I’m very good at communicating with the patients.

How is that important to your patients? They come back. For example, first-time patients, I try to get to know them on a personal basis to really understand what their symptoms are and what they need. Usually when they come in I’ll ask them what they have used previously. If they know or have a preference for indicas or setiva hybrids we can talk about it and I can assist them in finding the right medicine. But if they don’t know, if they’re not knowledgeable, because we do have patients that come in that don’t smoke, that are just trying cannabis for the first time, I guide them through the process and make them feel at ease, at the same time finding what works for them. It’s very personalized.

(Crystal Schmidt, Manager of Safe Capitol Compassion, walks in and asks Ian a question about a product that he answers instantly.)

I think that’s cool that Crystal came in during the interview and asked you what that was. Yeah.

What was the product you were looking at? It was actually a form of wax.

I think it’s interesting that your staff really looks to you for answers on products and have a lot of faith in you. Yeah, I feel I’m pretty knowledgeable.

What sets your business apart from other businesses? I was a patient for three years before I was a budtender or ever worked at a collective. What I’ve noticed about Safe is that we take more time with our patients.

We talk to them and figure out what is wrong with them instead of just trying to push them “in and out.” We really try to get to know our patients on a first name basis.

And do you think you do know most of them? Yeah. We’ve had patients that say, “I’m going to come back for sure.” I’ve had patients call me when I’m at home and say, “Hey, what you said about it [the strain] is right on.” They’ve called on my days off and it’s been like, “Hey, is Ian working today?”

So obviously you’re a medical patient. Can I ask what you use it for? I was actually diagnosed with PTSD.

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder? A little bit. My mom passed away about four years ago and I actually ended up finding her. That’s one of those things that people don’t understand about our particular industry, that this incredible plant can help on so many levels and that’s one of them, right? The doctors wanted to hook me up with a variety of pills, but to help me move forward I used cannabis. It helped me function and deal with the pain and stress of the situation.

Do people follow budtenders? Oh yeah. We were at a different location and my patients went out of their way to find out where we moved. But more than that, I have a lot of patients that keep coming back to me because we listen and respond. I think we’re definitely more professional. I’ve been in other shops where it’s very laid back. We try to stay professional and always remember why we’re here, and that’s for the patients.

What do you like most about your job? What I like most is the interaction with the patients. Being able to talk with them and understand what they need. I learn a lot, too. I learn what the plant can actually do for people. You know what I’m saying?

What do you mean by that? Well, for me it was the emotions I was dealing with because of the loss of someone very important to me. It helped me get through the day. I felt like I wasn’t alone in that situation, in my situation at least. I know other people are finding the same results.

If you weren’t a budtender, what would you be doing? I’d probably go back to school and study culinary arts.

What do you do in your free time? Work around the house. Spend time with my girlfriend, snowboard, [and] relax.

BudTender of the Month, Ian Boas Photo: Ty Rivers

BudTender

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CannabisCommunityCorner

Democratic Party’s shift on Marijuana LegalizationGovernor Brown Behind the Learning Curve by Ron Mullins

Gov. Jerry Brown appeared on Meet the Press, March 3rd, where he was questioned about cannabis legalization. His response mirrored simple and antiquated “Reefer Madness” rhetoric.

“Well, we have medical marijuana, which gets very close to what they have in Colorado and Washington; I’d really like those two states to show us how it’s going to work. The problem with anything, a certain amount is OK. But there is a tendency to go to extremes, and all of a sudden, if there’s advertising and legitimacy, how many people can get stoned and still have a great state or a great nation? The world’s pretty dangerous, very competitive. I think we need to stay alert, if not 24 hours a day, more than some of the potheads might be able to put together.” Like many who would be included in the broad term “pothead,” I was offended.

To the governor and others who still believe we’re all a bunch of slacker stereotypes, I say this: In spite of federal attacks, local bans, frightened landlords, the sheriff, code enforcement, Child Protective Services, thieves, Mother Nature, and the like; the people in the cannabis community continue to plant, nurture, protect, hide, harvest, manicure, and market millions of pounds of cannabis every year in your state. Cannabis is the largest cash crop in California; this is the miracle of the “potheads” in the cannabis community.

Think about this: the people you are writing off as low-functioning, unintelligent “potheads” accomplish what many Fortune 500 corporations cannot replicate without the addition of harmful chemicals, preservatives, pesticides, or some other type of industrial complex. They meet a huge demand and deliver a quality product throughout the state, year after year. I don’t know another conglomerate able crank out a perfectly manicured flower that tastes like a blueberry muffin, and is 22.5 percent THC, do you?

The cannabis community is a productive, vibrant, compassionate community. And I believe, given the opportunity, like Colorado and Washington, we could produce millions in tax revenues for our state’s failing economy. Toke on that, Gov. Brown!

It would seem California’s governor is not only out of step with the national and local polling, but with his own party, that only a week after his misguided statement, added legalization of cannabis for adult recreational use to their list of causes. A vote to add the legalization of cannabis to the California state party’s official platform won an almost unanimous verbal vote at the California Democratic Convention in Los Angeles on March 9. The platform stated: “Support the legalization, regulation and taxation of marijuana, in a manner similar to that of tobacco or alcohol.”

Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom addressed the conference with a speech that sounded much like something you would hear given by a member of the cannabis community. He denounced the failed drug war and listed the exploding prison numbers that have accumulated since its inception.

“1977, when we did away with indeterminate sentencing our prison population in California was roughly 20,000 people, by 2007 our prison population exploded to 173,000”. According to Newsom, “Our nation with just 5 percent of the world’s population incarcerates roughly 2.4 million people, 25 percent of the world’s prisoners.” Newsom points out that “It was 1971, when Richard Nixon, a Californian, declared the war on drugs as a backlash to massive shifts in cultural values.”

Newsom explained that Att. Gen. Eric Holder, “Was Right” when he recognized the adverse fiscal, moral and social impact that the war on drugs, and minimum mandatory sentences are having on our society.

“Since the 1970s, our learning curve on the war on drugs has cost the tax payers an excess of one trillion dollars and counting.” During that same time period “The USA has spent over 120 billion dollars to arrest some 37 million people for non violent drug offenses, nearly the equivalent of the entire population of our great state; 1.5 million people were arrested in this country in 2012 alone for non violent drug offences, over half for marijuana.”

Newsom described the learning curve as “Too slow and too costly.”

“It’s time to legalize, it’s time to tax, and it’s time to regulate marijuana for adults in California.”

“We have to start with a serious dialogue, this issue cannot get caught up in the ‘Nixonian trap’ of calling people names with values we do not share” He said. “This is a serious debate for serious people; this is not a debate about hippies. This is not a debate about stoners. We can’t diminish this issue, or the people involved in this debate by belittling them and trivializing them.” This is very new language and will hopefully set the new tone for the debate on marijuana legalization moving forward.

There are few things that have been causing this shift in the California Democrat’s political landscape. Not the least of which

[contiuned on page 40]

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AltBrews

by Megan Lee

Our little cow town, Sacramento, is getting into craft beer in a big way.

While we’re not on par with Portland (yet), in the past 10 years the number

of breweries and brew pubs has exploded. Beers that you once had

to travel far and wide to try are now just around the corner at your local

tavern or bottle shop. Even the more divey establishments are carrying

great selections of kind brew. It seems no matter where I go now I can

satisfy my craving for something more substantial than your typical North

American lager. Let me take you on a tour of the beers that I have tasted

in the past week and let you know where you can acquire these fine,

frothy fermented beverages, the alcohol by volume (ABV), the hops and

malts in each recipe as well as my take on the drinkability of each—but

take all of my opinions with a grain of salt because, honestly, I can find

something to love about almost any beer.

Strand Brewing, 24th Street Pale Ale—Torrence, CA

6.1 percent ABV / Beer Advocate score 86/100 (very good)

HOPS: Summit / Cascade / Amarillo

MALTS: Pale / Crystal / German Munich

Locations: Pangaea Two Brew Cafe, Total Wine & More, Harlow’s

Restaurant & Nightclub

This was my first introduction to Strand Brewing and I was not

disappointed. Their flagship beer is a gorgeous unfiltered copper color

and the nose is mild. There is a nice floral taste to this Pale and a slight

bitterness at the end. This is a great example of a well-balanced American

Pale that falls on the higher end of the ABV scale for this type of beer. I felt

it was a very simple Pale Ale that didn’t have too much of a hoppy flavor,

so it might not scare those who don’t prefer the taste of hops away.

Ale Industries, East Bayliner Weisse—Concord, CA and Oakland, CA

4.5 percent ABV / Beer Advocate score 78/100 (okay)

Hops: Saaz

Malts: Wheat / Pilsen

Location: Pangaea, Total Wine & More

A bit odd for a Berliner Weiss beer, but I loved it. I’ve been trying to like

more sour beers and this is good for someone who might not like sours

that much (read: me). According to the brewery they use Wheat and Pilsen

malts and “sour mashed” them for 16 hours then paired with a touch of

aged saaz in the kettle. It’s barrel aged for six months, which imparts a

Brettanomyces—a yeast associated with and named after, the Senne

valley near Brussels, Belgium—sour flavor to the wheat beer. This was not

rated well by most tasters on various beer rating sites, but I really enjoyed

it. It’s a great spring beer and the ABV makes it a perfect session beer.

Deschutes Brewery, Chain Breaker White IPA—Bend, OR

5.6 percent ABV / Beer Advocate score 82/100 (good)

Hops / Bravo / Citra / Centennial / Cascade

Malts: Wheat / Pilsner / Unmalted Wheat

Locations: Buffalo Wild Wings Grill & Bar, Elixir Bar & Grill, Total Wine &

More, Der Biergarten, KBAR, Tokyo Fro’s Rockin’ Sushi

An odd IPA that uses a Belgium yeast which makes it a Belgium IPA (duh).

Completely different from your normal IPA, this beer is much less hoppy

and way more yeasty. It’s very light in color and has a sweeter nose. It’s

avery light tasting for a 5.6 percent beer. There is a very slight hoppy

taste, but that doesn’t mean this isn’t an IPA you shouldn’t try. The lemon,

orange and coriander flavors remind me more of an unfiltered wheat beer.

Bayerische Staatsbrauerei Weihenstephan, Weihenstephaer Hefe

Weissbier—Bavaria, Germany

5.4 percent ABV / Beer Advocate score 98 / 100 (world-class)

Malts: Dark Barley / Light Barly / Wheat

Hops: Hallertauer Perle / Magnum

Locations: Hideaway, LowBrau (DRAFT!!), BevMo, Total Wine & More,

Firestone Public House

The oldest brewery in the world produces this amazing beer. Nothing

more needs to be said about this beer, but considering I’m supposed to

review this I probably should say a little more. Hands down this is the

best Hefeweizen beer I have ever tasted. Not only is it awesome, but it

is also widely distributed and inexpensive. My go-to beer, if there is one.

Traditional Hefe at its best with all the banana, clove, and a slight citrus

flavor that one would expect from a brewery that follows the legendary

Bavarian Purity Law of 1516, which states that beer may only contain

three ingredients: barley, hops, and water.

From the Bottle, From the Tap

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AltAndAboutSacAlt dropped by Inked Up at the Box presented by Bento Box and Muerto Tequila. Check out some of the sights from our night out!Where: Bento Box When: 3.20.14 / 7–8:30

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SAFE ACCESSPREMIUM MEDICAL CANNABIS

OPEN 4/20EXCLUSIVESPECIALS!

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golden health

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CannabisCommunityCornerAltPolitics

After a lengthy, more than 75 year timeout in the United

States, hemp is now free to sprout in nine states, thanks to an

amendment tucked inside the Agriculture Act of 2014, otherwise

known as the Farm Bill.

Signed by President Barack Obama in early February, the Farm

Bill allows state agriculture departments, colleges and universities

to cultivate the non-psychoactive crop for both academic and

research purposes. For now, the bill only applies to states where

industrial hemp farming is already legal and recognized under

state law. The amendment also defines industrial hemp, ‘‘… the

plant Cannabis sativa L. and any part of such plant, whether

growing or not, with a delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration

of not more than 0.3 percent on a dry weight basis.” Translation:

hemp is A-OK to cultivate just as long as the THC content

is no more than 0.3 percent.

For Julia Carrera, a medical marijuana farm inspector and

consultant in Mendocino County, the Farm Bill opens the flood

gates to hemp’s myriad benefits for both the environment and

the economy. “What’s good about the Farm Bill allowing hemp

is that it’s the first step toward federal legalization,” Carrera said.

“The plant itself is one of the most unique because of its multiple

uses as a fiber, to its spiritual rituals, and everything in between.”

From rope and paper, to clothing, animal food, and even cleaner

burning biofuels, the possibilities of hemp are boundless

according to Carrera.

Representative Jared Polis, Democrat of Colorado, Kentucky

Republican Rep. Thomas Massie and Oregon Democratic Rep.

Earl Blumenauer introduced the amendment, which overrides

the Controlled Substances Act and other federal laws against

hemp production.

Since the federal government granted the cane-like weed with

its own definition, hemp is now excluded from the definition of

“marijuana” in the CSA where it was previously shackled. This

action also leaves the sole responsibility of hemp regulation up to

the qualified state and its respective laws.

Still, one issue medical and recreational marijuana farmers worry

about is the proximity of hemp farms in regards to their crops

and the high possibility of cross-contamination. “You have to

look at cross-contamination issues in the state of California, both

for medical and recreational marijuana,” Carrera said. “This is

an issue that the Small Farmer’s Association is working on, but

[hemp] would cross-contaminate fields.”

Hemp is an industry that earns an estimated half-billion dollars

annually in retail sales and is mainly imported from places like

Canada and China. Now, the nine U.S. states set to grow the

fibrous crop include California, Colorado, Kentucky and Maine.

Under the Farm Bill, eligible states will be able to participate in

agricultural pilot programs outlined under the “Legitimacy of

Industrial Hemp Research” portion of the document.

These pilot programs will study “the growth, cultivation, or

marketing of industrial hemp” according to the bill and also

requires that grow sites be registered with the state’s department

of agriculture.

Although concerns of cross-contamination are still being ironed

out within the Small Farmer’s Association, experts like Carrera

feel the plant is ripe for cultivation in California. “Hemp was our

number one growing crop in the U.S. centuries ago. It’s easy to

grow [and] it doesn’t require a lot of water, which is important for

our state’s drought situation,” Carrera said.

Hemp in the Heartlandby Steph Rodriguez

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Doc’sOrders

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420Events

by Steph Rodriguez

Sac Alternative magazine reaches out to dispensaries, smoke shops and even combs the region for fun happenings in our first-ever 420 guide. Find the best deals and discounts on new water pipes, dab sets or vaporizer pens. Decide who has the best raffle prizes, giveaways and entertainment between all featured businesses. For starters, one dispensary’s grand prize is valued at more than $200, while another collective chose to counter fancy winnings with the return of its “420 Bus,” complimentary edible samples and also an in-house glass blowing demo. Celebrate cannabis culture all weekend long with Sac Alt’s event suggestions that include comedian Ngaio Bealum’s 4/20 Comedy Festival and the third annual Sacramento Beer & Chili Festival to take care of those inevitable, 420-inspired hunger pangs.

Dispensary DealsTHE GIVING TREE When patients stop by Abatin Wellness Center (2100 29th St.) on Sunday, April 20, budtenders will automatically gift an edible and a pre-rolled cone joint. Food platters up for grabs will counter any case of munchies and a raffle with an over $200 value is at stake. One lottery ticket is issued per purchase, but spend over $50 and receive two. The winner will be announced at 4:20 p.m. and the grand prize includes a vaporizer pen, wax or “budder,” flowers and edibles. www.abatinsacramento.com

WEEKEND WARRIORS Some dispensaries celebrate 420 for just one day, but that’s not the case for the folks at A Therapeutic Alternative (3015 H St.) because their specials go all weekend. On Friday, April 18 patients receive 15 percent off all edibles, followed by Saturday’s free pipe with any $50 purchase. Still, Sunday tops all with complimentary edible bites. There is also a raffle for a Nurse Good-brand body healing kit that includes an eye mask, lip balm, body scrubs and more. Tickets are issued at the register and the winner will be announced on Monday, April 21. (916) 822-4717

PUFF, PUFF, PASS All aboard the “420 Bus” at Two Rivers Wellness (315 North 10th St.), which allows patients to relax and medicate inside its comfy quarters with wrap-around seating. Live music, complimentary eats and an in-house glass blowing demo by @jawsglass are just a few more features in honor of the holiday. This dispensary also welcomes several vendors specializing in edibles like Heavenly Sweets, Bhang and Korova samples. Sweet tooth required. www.tworiverssac.com

One-stop shopsWHACKY TOBACKY Hook up with Blow & Tell (1914 Fulton Ave.) and receive 30 percent off purchases over $100 and a free pipe or grinder for first 100 customers. The owners of the smoke shop also operate The Shisha Lounge next door (1912 Fulton Ave.). In honor of 420, the lounge

420 in SAC

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offers their signature fruit bowls for only 20 bucks (regular $35 to $45). Choose between pineapple, apple, or pear to be carved into a bowl and stuffed with tobacco flavors like white gummy bear, orange cream or watermelon blast. See website for additional locations and store hours. www.blowandtellsmoke.com

GOODY TWO-SHOES The employees at Smoke City (6745 Watt Ave. Ste. B) say it’s a “420 Extravaganza” at their store. The first 40 customers will receive goodie bags filled with a combination of papers, pipes, grinders, lanyards and T-shirts. Purchase $1 raffle tickets for a chance to win a new water pipe or spend $25 or more to draw random prizes out of a hat. Last year, one lucky customer went home with a new vaporizer pen. www.smokecityshop.com

PREMIUM STASHES Customers who visit the staff at Habits Cigars & Smoke Shop (8391 Folsom Blvd. Ste. 7) on Sunday, April 20 receive 25 percent off all glass, which includes pipes, steamrollers, water pipes, dab sets and even oil rigs. What’s more, the shop also carries portable vaporizer pens, e-cigarettes and premium cigars. So, if fancy hand-rolled tobacco is more your bag, the store offers 10 percent off its San Lotano, Cohiba and Rocky Patel brands. (916) 383-1185

Out and aboutLAUGH OUT LOUD Ngaio Bealum not only writes the “420” column for the Sacramento News & Review, he’s also an activist, marijuana advocate and a comedian. So, it’s only fitting that Bealum hosts and organizes the 4/20 Comedy Festival each year at the Punch Line Comedy Club (2100 Arden Way, Ste. 225). Tickets are on sale now for $15 and all shows are 18 and over with a two-drink minimum. This event also doubles as a DVD release party for the “420 Friendly Comedy Special” filmed last fall at Momo Lounge. An Easter egg hunt is set to occur right inside the club, too because why not? Join Bealum with comedians Keith Lowell Jensen and Caitlin Gill at 7 p.m. for laughs and jokes all centered on cannabis culture. www.punchlinesac.com

HEARTBURN FOR A CAUSE Start a Saturday afternoon off right with beer and chili. In fact, lots and lots of chili. Yes, vegetarians are invited, too. The third annual Sacramento Beer & Chili Festival in Fremont Park (1515 Q St.) features four categories: individual, industry, vegetarian and people’s choice. Endless beer tastings provided by Speakeasy Ales & Lagers, Two Rivers Cider and more. Bring the whole family and peddle down to the park with its complimentary bike valet, kids’ zone and live music provided by Twilight Drifters, Hans Eberbach and URDOM. Twelve restaurants will compete for the tastiest industry chili title like 58 Degrees & Holding Co., Blackbird Kitchen + Beer Gallery and Tank House BBQ & Bar. The cook-off begins at 1 p.m. on Saturday, April 19. Tickets start at $35 and include a 5-ounce beer mug and1-ounce chili bowl both good for endless tastes. All proceeds benefit the Sacramento Artists Council, an organization that supports art programs for homeless children and Sacramento regional schools. www.sacramentobeerandchilifestival.com

Free meal from our foodtruck with full paid admission, 9pm-2am

Free meal with paidadmission, 9pm-2am

Hiring Entertainers! Call for more info!

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AltOpinion

About 4:30 a.m. on a chilly May morning Little Chris and I pulled across from Monsanto Corporation, Davis and parked in front of the community garden. Turns out Little Chris with his anarchist fashion sense and expertise on major issues turned out to be an agent provocateur working with the government, but I’ll save that for another story.

The vegetable stalks in the community garden started swaying and crunching then parting and out of the garden appeared Kim, Ryan, Sarah and Autumn bikes and supplies in tow. They had biked over from Sacramento the night before to get an early start. They began to line up the bikes in the driveways as I began to string the bio hazard tape over the front two driveways. Ant and his crew showed up by 5 p.m. and began to make barricades in the back driveways out of discarded pallets. Ant is a barrel-chested activist with a hard edge commitment to ending Monsanto’s deadly practices and a sense of humor that can disarm and charm even the toughest security guard. The driveways were now blocked and the employees were not going to get in. Headlights glare was cresting the ridge line through the early morning mist as more of our troops were arriving. By 10 a.m. there would be over 100 of us lining the Monsanto campus making noise and waving at passing cars.

This was our fourth shut down of Monsanto Davis. Most of them had been successful. Our one attempt at shutting down Monsanto Woodland was not successful. They had hired a massive amount of second tier mercenaries to shut us down.

The shut downs were the brain child of Bobby Payan. The first one took place in May of 2012. Since then others have picked up the mantel and spearheaded the events. We shut down Monsanto to raise awareness. Monsanto’s business practices are deadly. This is the corporation that brought you Saccharin and Aspartame, genetically modified crops, PCB’s, Round up, terminator seeds and DDT. Almost everything Monsanto is involved in is at its core is toxic. Just consider their handling of the PCB fiasco. Turns out PCB’s cause a ravenous cancer in humans. Monsanto knew this and waited eight years to inform the public.

A real mind blower was the Monsanto Protection Act, a nasty rider attached to the farm bill holding Monsanto harmless from any law suits that may arise from their malfeasance. A first of its kind corporate rider that was dropped when public awareness

demanded that this gift from paid off politicians was not to be renewed. Those of us in the Monsanto wars took credit for the victory. Hooray for us. It is easy to see how Monsanto can pull off these bits of nasty. They have politicians in their back pockets, former employees in positions of authority within the government and more lobbyists than one could shake a terminator seed at.

By about 6 a.m. Cass and the Aztec dancers have arrived to dance the sunrise ceremony. The parking lot is still empty but we have gotten word from Ant and his partner Taylor that cops were trying to escort the employees through the very back driveway. I raced over and I found my son Kahlen and his best friend Colin from Chicken Foot Ranch and Activist Center, standing on top of the barricade waving red and black flags. Fellow activist Paul and his crew from Reno were effectively forming a chain. Only one employee got through. He was going to be very lonely today. The scene looked like a tableau from the revolutionary play “Les Misérables.” I have never been so proud of my son.

As social justice street activists all of us are dedicated to bring corporations who are bad corporate neighbors to their knees and Monsanto is one bad corporate neighbor.

By 10 a.m. the Fresh Juice Party was setting up their sound system to get us all rocking. Jenn Rogar was off on the side tuning her guitar and conspiring with a few activists. Ryan had begun the arduous task of cooking a vegan meal for a hundred or so people. Al Rojas, who battled along side of Cesar Chavez, was our keynote speaker and he tore it up, firing us up, connecting the dots between Monsanto and the deaths of farm workers. Quanah from the American Indian Movement gave a fiery speech on indigenous peoples and Monsanto’s destruction of the Earth.

As the day concluded, our thoughts drifted toward our friend and fellow justice warrior Andrea Mrotz, who was organizing for the “No on GMO” battle and preparing our seed exchange. Mrotz was found dead less than six months later, hit by a train at the Davis Amtrak station. No one knows how she got on the tracks.

We do this Monsanto closure every six months for ourselves but also for the press. We are the canaries in the mine shaft. Street activists always play a major role in shaping public opinion. We will continue to shout and jump about from the front line because our tactics work. Join us on May 23 as we close Monsanto Davis for the fifth time. For more information, look for us on Facebook or on the streets.

The Real Radicals of SacramentoClosing Monsanto’s Doorby Andy Conn

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AltMusic

by Steph Rodriguez

Prepare the acceptance speech The guys in Kill the Precedent are nomi-nated for two Independent Music Awards for its album “Dialogues with the Dead” and song, “Free Reign (Everybody’s Dead),” in the metal/hardcore categories. KTP’s 12-track album released through Minus Head Records last August was quickly followed by a music video for its song, “Goodbye Lullaby,” which cap-tures the theatrical antics the band often showcases during live performances. So, just imagine blood, ninjas and pillow fights that end in decapitation. Forged from members of longtime Sacramento hardcore bands like Hoods, Red Tape and Pipedown, KTP’s seven-member army is equipped with decades of musical experience. What’s more is the guys draw influence from myriad genres, like the dark and gloomy attitude of gothic rock band Bauhaus, to the more thrash-metal years of Agnostic Front. All these sounds put through a KTP-approved meat grinder, encapsulate the band’s complexity with its heavy, electro-rock moments. Want to help KTP bring home two music awards? Fans are encouraged to log onto the Independent Music Awards’ website to

cast their votes. Also, see KTP live on Friday, April 18 with Armed for Apocalypse, Horseneck and Solanum at Midtown Barfly (1119 21st St.); $8, 8 p.m., 18 and over. www.independentmusicawards.com; www.facebook.com/killtheprecedent.

Punks on a big screen—local sister-duo Dog Party were contacted by the filmmak-ers and creative minds behind the movie “SLC Punk” to audition for the sequel currently in production titled, “SLC Punk 2 Punk’s Dead.” Producers asked Lucy and Gwendolyn Giles to tryout by recording two of their favorite scenes from the ’90s flick. So, they did and sent them away. Shortly after, the young musicians’ audition videos appeared on the SLC Punk Face-book page and the movie’s cult fans con-tinue to “like” each one. I messaged Lucy (drummer) to ask her about the videos and she’s quite excited about the possibility of a Dog Party cameo, but the only news safe for public release is negotiations are afoot. www.facebook.com/dogpartylive; www.facebook.com/slcpunk2.

Which room?—Deep purple walls, velvet red curtains, intimate cushioned booths,

and slow-burning candelabras give Witch Room (1815 19th St.) a real “Interview with the Vampire”-like vibe. The new music venue hosted a five-band lineup on its first night Tuesday, March 25, which included So Stressed, Darlingchemicalia and Wax Idols. As the house photo booth flashed, So Stressed demonstrated what the new feng shui of the room does for sound—a huge improvement and cannier use of space. Witch Room inhabits the same building as former venue, clothing store and art gallery Bows and Arrows, which had an awkward, designated area for live music. Now, the stage occupies a nicely sized corner of the space allowing music to naturally fill the room and reach the back patio at a decent volume. Sangria, cheap, and craft beers filled the hands of many and the space’s lascivious décor seemed to inspire tons of black lace, combat boots and flowing dark clothing. Despite this tone, Witch Room is open to all genres according to its website. Three days after its debut event, hip-hop groups Tel Cairo and DLRN performed. www.witchroomsac.com.

Kill the Precedent www.facebook.com/killtheprecedent

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35SacAlternative | April 2014

AltFood

by Joey Cline

Honey, one of the most delectable natural foods on earth, is becoming

scarcer as the creatures that produce it mysteriously disappear.

A common source of food for many species other than our own, including

bears, possums, skunks, badgers, birds and insects of many types,

honey is vanishing along with the bees that produce it.

In addition to honey, bees are also responsible for the production of many

different crops. Not only do they pollinate the plants that we eat, but also

those that are the sources of feed for the animals that we consume.

The list is long and varied, but bees are central to the systems that

support food production for human beings throughout the world.

According to the Royal Society of London, an international study of 115

food crops grown in over 200 countries showed that 75 percent of the

crops were pollinated by animals, especially bees.

Fruits, vegetables, nuts, and feed stocks require pollination either to

produce fruit or to allow plants to produce seeds for the next crop.

According to the Department of Agriculture, 20 different genera of fruit

trees, 10 varieties of berries and vines, over 26 different vegetables and

beans, six different species of nut trees, many sources of animal feed,

vegetable oil crops, cocoa, vanilla and coffee are all dependent on bee

pollination in order to thrive.

In addition to their role as agricultural pollinators, bees are often keystone

species and play a crucial role in maintaining the structure of their entire

ecological community. An ecosystem may experience a dramatic impact

if a keystone species is eliminated and a reduction in bee populations has

the potential to produce a ripple effect throughout the global ecosystem,

which is why the plight of the bee is being investigated by scientists and

organizations all over the world.

George Meindl, a researcher at the University of Pittsburgh, said

that pollinator declines can greatly impact species diversity

within communities.

“The vast majority of wild plant species, roughly 80 percent, rely

directly on insect pollination for fruit and seed production,” Meindl said.

“Generalist pollinators, such as honeybees and bumblebees, provide

pollination services for many species of plants and thus are particularly

important for maintaining community structure and function.”

Renée Johnson, a specialist in agricultural policy, cites an infestation of

hives by Varroa and Acarapis mites. Dr. Sainuddin Pattazhy, a researcher

from India, suggests electromagnetism from microwaves and power

lines cripples the “navigational skills” of worker bees when they leave

their colonies to collect nectar. Tim Lovett, director of public affairs at the

British Beekeepers’ Association, claims erratic climate change is to blame

and academics at Washington State University say the increasing use of

neo-nicotinoid pesticides to suppress harmful insects and increase crop

yields is the cause. Farming is, after all, about profits.

It is widely believed that not just one of these factors is to blame, but a

combination of all. However, most researchers place a heavy emphasis

on pesticides and their resultant effect on the immune systems of

bees. However, the chemical industry, in defense of its products, rejects

the influence of pesticides and attributes colony collapse disorder

primarily to mite infestation.

“The idea that it all started in 2006 and coincided with the introduction of

neo-nicotinoid insecticides is a myth,” said David L. Fischer, director of

Environmental Toxicology and Risk Assessment at Bayer Cropscience.

Recent findings in Europe are proving otherwise.

Recognizing the importance of restoring bee populations, the European

Union (EU) banned systemic neo-nicotinoid pesticides from all 28

member nations on April 29, 2013. While supported by 15 nations in the

EU member states, the ban did not reach the required majority under

voting rules. The hung vote accordingly handed the final decision to

the European Commission, which implemented the ban for two years

effective Dec. 1, 2013.

Tony Borg, European Union health and consumer commissioner,

remarked at the time: “Our proposal is based on a number of risks to bee

health identified by the European Food Safety Authority, [so] the European

Commission will go ahead with its plan.”

The EU’s conclusion that the ecological effect of heavy pesticides

could be causative of Colony Collapse Disorder will allow scientists

an opportunity to evaluate the removal of neo-nicotinoids from the

bees’ habitat.

The Environmental Protection Agency is in agreement with the EFSA

findings regarding the impact of neo-nicotinoid nerve agents on bees

and is currently reviewing three of them: clothianidin, imidacloprid

and thiametoxam. After further assessment and in accordance with

Department of Agriculture policy for risk management, the EPA will

determine the next course of action to be taken in the United States.

What does the future hold? If honeybees continue to die off at the

present rate, will we see a ripple effect throughout the global ecosystem?

The answer, according to Madhu Roye of the Wildlife Conservation

Society and Trond Larsen of Princeton University, is most likely yes.

“On a broader scale, loss of pollinators or disruption of pollination

systems may cause reduced seed and fruit production and ultimately

plant extinction,” Roye said.

Are we really willing to trade food for profits?

Bees: Nature’s Provider

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AltFood

by Reverend Dane

Over 25 million Americans suffer from diabetes,

according to data from a 2011 report from the

American Diabetes Association—that’s over 8

percent of the population, costing over $245

billion in direct and indirect medical expenses.

Treatment can be invasive, painful and

expensive, but a 2007 study exploring the

therapeutic benefits of one of the most

universal elixirs known to mankind, raw apple

cider vinegar may provide those suffering from

diabetes a natural and pharmaceutical-free

treatment regimen.

According to the study conducted by Andrea M.

White, Ph.D. and Carol S. Johnston, Ph.D, the

data collected suggested that “vinegar ingestion

at bedtime may favorably impact waking glucose

concentrations in Type 2 diabetes.”

As someone who has suffered from high

blood pressure, acid reflux, arthritis, and an

occasional toothache, I’ve experienced the

healing power of this medicine of the ages.

Raw ACV has been purported to be a natural

remedy for many maladies throughout history.

In 400 B.C. the father of modern medicine,

Hippocrates, discovered apple cider vinegar’s

antibiotic properties and prescribed it to his

patients for its therapeutic benefits. It had been

used for centuries since then, but forgotten

in most current times by modern medicine in

favor of costly prescription drugs and over the

counter remedies.

Raw ACV has anti-viral, anti-bacterial, and

anti-fungal properties. Described as a panacea

for many issues that include, but are not limited

to: toothache, weight loss, rheumatism and

arthritis, gout, allergies, high cholesterol, high

blood pressure joint pain, dandruff, chronic

fatigue, acne, sore throat, acid reflux, gum

infection, sinus infection, flu, ear infections, leg

cramps, and the list goes on.

There’s even relief for Fido: As a topical, it has

also been used as a treatment for flea, tick,

and mite problems in pets—all through the

power of alkalinity.

Most question that since vinegar is acidic, how

can it have an alkaline effect on the human

body? Raw ACV causes pH levels to become

more alkaline via a chemical reaction in the

digestive system known as oxidation.

When the digestive process breaks down the

ACV, the resultant “ash” is alkaline in nature

and this counteracts the tendency of the typical

American diet to create an acidic pH in our

bodies. Many health issues are attributed to

this, according to “Folk Medicine: A Vermont

Doctor’s Guide to Good Health” by D.C. Jarvis.

Consuming a tonic made with apple cider

vinegar can help restore alkalinity, and therefore

assist the body in combating the health issues I

mentioned above.

In over 25 years of studying herbalism and folk

remedies, and researching the health benefits of

raw ACV, I’ve found a lot of anecdotal evidence

but not much scientific evidence to back up

all of these claims. Since there is an absence

of clinical studies regarding the efficacy of

using raw ACV to obtain an alkaline status

of the body, definitive proof by the medical

In the RawHealth benefits of Raw Apple Cider Vinegar

establishment remains unavailable. However,

the lack of scientific evidence proving its validity

does not necessarily indicate an ineffectual

result in its use.

Since science allows us to deconstruct things

to their individual components in order to

understand how they work, I believe too often

scientists only see things as their component

parts; missing the synergy found as a result

of their interactions together. Composites have

the potential to be much more than the sum

of components

The health benefits of raw ACV are dependent

on the organic construction of its composition.

In this hurry up world of profitability, the original

nature of many products is adapted to make

money first, compromising the product just to

get the item to market.

You’ll see the greatest health benefits derived

from raw ACV that is made properly from

organic apples, using traditional fermentation,

raw (unpasteurized) and unfiltered. A simple

tonic can be made from 1-2 teaspoons raw

ACV, and 1 teaspoon of honey in a cup of

warm water.

There are two major brands on the market, but

it can be difficult to find locally. Fortunately,

it’s easy and very inexpensive to make. It just

takes some time to ferment; I will be happy

to supply you with my recipe for making it

at home just by emailing me at

[email protected].

Good health to you!

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SacAlternative | April 201440

[contiuned from page 17]

was caused by current polling of millennials showing massive support for liberal causes like marijuana legalization and gay marriage. Also the efforts of people in the marijuana community to educate and guide the Democrats down the right path are starting to bear fruit. Lanny Swerdlow, a registered nurse, founded a political club of marijuana activists named after Mary Jane Rathbun or “Brownie Mary” as she is commonly known, a medical cannabis activist in San Francisco famous for illegally providing cannabis brownies to patients with AIDS.

Rathbun and activist Dennis Peron lobbied for the legalization of cannabis for medical use, and were instrumental in the passage San Francisco Prop P (1991) and Ca Prop 215 (1996). In addition, Rathbun helped establish the first medical cannabis dispensary in the United States, The San Francisco Cannabis Buyers Club. Since its inception in early 2013, Brownie Mary chapters have cropped up around California including Sacramento. These clubs have reached out to local Democratic politicians giving endorsements in races sending out letters and filing motions with various groups to move the marijuana legalization agenda forward. Swerdlow was instrumental in preparing language about cannabis legalization to the 26-page document that was submitted for the California Democratic Party platform.

Marcia Blount, president and founder of the local Sacramento County Brownie Mary Democratic Club, spoke to me after attending the convention in Los Angeles. “The Brownie Mary Democratic Club was well-represented at the [convention],” she said. “Lanny Swerdlow, Susan O’Leary, Loren Brauner, Yamileth Bolanos from their respective Brownie Mary Clubs, Cheri Sicard (Cannabis Cheri), and Diane Goldstein from Law Enforcement against Prohibition, were there at the Brownie Mary booth talking to lots of folks. We spoke about the waste of lives with so many young people being incarcerated for minor drug offenses. We spoke about the financial cost of incarceration versus the cost of education. And we spoke of the incredible medical uses of marijuana. All in all, there were a few people who had negative views of marijuana; but, for the most part, most people were quite supportive of our cause.”

Marcia Blount said that anyone who wants to get involved in helping the cause should contact their local Brownie Mary Club, National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), Americans for Safe Access (ASA), Drug Policy Alliance, and/or the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP) groups.

I’m not inclined declare the drug war over, or believe that the Democrats will be able to shift the country to full legalization; but here in California, they essentially rule. Having people like Newsom, Sen. Mark Leno and Assemblyman Tom Ammiano in our state government will help move progress and mainstream acceptance forward. Local politicians like Steve Cohn, Rosalyn Van Buren, and Ali Cooper are now seeking endorsements, wanting to champion our cause. In the case of Cohn, we saw real progress in keeping our medical dispensaries open in the city.

Party politics move slowly, it takes time to shift consciousness, and though many of us would rather this change in 2014 rather than 2016, we are grateful for any progress.■

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41SacAlternative | April 2014

Sunday Brunch at the Shady Lady With Dance Gavin Dance’s own Matthew Mingus

As Sacramento’s own post-hardcore heroes embark on a national tour, SacAlt sat down with one of its band members to get the lowdown on the new album and his take on the local music scene.

What instrument do you play? I play the drums in Dance Gavin Dance

You’re currently on tour promoting your fifth studio album. Tell me a bit about the process of recording “Acceptance Speech?” The process of recording “Acceptance Speech” was pretty much the same as all the other process for our previous records before that. We wrote it here in Sacramento, all the music, this time we were able to travel to Atlanta to record with Matt Malpass. I went to Atlanta to record drums the first couple of weeks, and then we did the guitars, base and vocals. Vocals were actually written back home and in the studio, a mixture of the two.

Your music typically incorporates many different genres; does “Acceptance Speech” follow that recipe? Yes, “Acceptance Speech” definitely incorporates lots of different genres, that has sort of has been the style for DGD through the years. It’s kind of just throwing in different parts and aspects of different genres of music, such as, R&B and hard core, some punk rock; So It makes for an interesting sound.

The band is known for switching up its members quite frequently. Does it work in favor of this formula for mixing it up genre-wise?  [Laughs] Now, yes the band is known for switching up the members throughout the years. But, that definitely has worked in our favor in a way, as far as mixing up the genres. All three of the singers that we have had, all have like a slightly different style of singing; Johnny Craig was more R&B and Kurt Travis was kind of more rock ‘n’ roll, and Tilian is more like a pop singer, so it definitely has helped us up mix up our genres. But as far as like writing the music goes, it has been Will Swan, the guitar player, and I over the past nine years, so definitely all the records will always have that similar DGD sound.

I’ve seen quite a bit of your fans in Europe begging for a European leg of this tour. Any plans to jump across the pond

to perform any gigs over there? As far as going back to Europe this year, I’m not too sure. We just did a headlining tour over there last summer which was very successful for us, but this year I think that we are just staying in the states. Something might pop up, you know it would have to be a good tour for us to take on since we just headlined.

I know a few of you are also in Secret Band. Tell me a little bit about how Secret Band differs from Dance Gavin Dance, and why there was a need to form this additional musical outlet? Secret Band is a project that we have with myself playing drums, Will Swan on guitar, and then Jon Mess on vocal. And then our buddy Jordan McCoy who was actually a touring bass player for DGD and my friend Martin, who played guitar in the band I was in before DGD. On this newer full length record that we just finished writing for secret band, myself and my buddy Martin were the main writers for it, It definitely differs from DGD; it is a lot heavier, it has more aspects of metal; Its fun, and we are really excited about it. The full length should be out by the end of this summer, August. Hopefully we will do a tour on it.

What are your post-tour plans? Our plans after this headlining show are to come home and record the secret band project. DGD will be playing at CIP [Concerts in the Park] on June 6 and following that, an after party show at Assembly featuring all of our side projects. It should be a very good night.

Having been formed in Sacramento, how has the River City influenced your sound and what do you think about how the music scene as evolved here? Being from Sacramento, and being in the music scene here since I was a kid, I have seen lots of transformation and lots of evolution. Right now I think our music scene in Sacramento is strong. With more and more newer venues going in downtown and obviously Ace of spades, Assembly and Luigi’s, any given night you can go to a show or an open mic, you can definitely see a live show within walking distance wherever you live downtown. I would say the music scene is very good here.

Catch Dance Gavin Dance at Assembly with Capture The Crown, Palisades, Bleach Blonde, Defy the Odds and Our Native Tongue on April 18 at 6 p.m. for $15.

Dance Gavin Dance www.facebook.com/DanceGavinDance

AltMusic

by Sarah Sinclair

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Canna Care

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AltShop

A longtime player in the smoke shop game, Smoke City is a one-stop shop for all of the requisite gear required for a righteous smoke sesh. SacAlt sat down with E. Jweinat, owner and operator of the joint, to talk trends, longevity and the haps on 4/20.

There are a lot of smoke shops in Sacramento and

competition seems pretty tough. Why have you been able to

thrive in this economy and what sets you apart?

To begin with, this shop has been here for over 13 years and

so we’re well established. During that time we’ve found that the

most important key to success is putting our customers first. We

pride ourselves on providing the best customer service we can.

We take our time and educate our customers about the items we

sell and try to answer all of their questions before they make any

purchases. We carry the latest merchandise and top shelf glass.

We also take custom orders on glass and offer glass repair, which

I think gives us that extra edge.

What is the hottest thing on the market right now?

That would definitely be vaporizers. We’ve always had them, but

with the addition of liquid and herb attachments we’ve seen a

huge jump in the market for vape-pens. Dab rigs and the extra

accessories that go along with them, like the domeless Titanium

nails and dabbers from Highly Educated, are also hot right now.

You mentioned that you have a lot of repeat customers. Why

do you think they keep coming back?

We pay attention to customer service and keep our shelves

stocked with the newest products on the market. We listen to

what our customers want and do whatever it takes to get it to

them. We try to get to know our customers and are on a first

name basis with a lot of them.

How and why did you get into the business? Was it a family

thing or did you strike out on your own?

I got into the business because I love the art of glass, the culture,

and people. There’s no other place to get all that than at a shop

like this. It’s also a plus when your brothers have shops of their

own. You should see us when we get together. We’re like little

kids always trying to outdo each other and that’s what makes us

strive to be the best.

Do you enjoy cannabis and do you think it should be legal?

I’d give a big “yes” to both those questions.

What’s happening in the store on 4/20?

We’re planning a lot of things. We will be open from 10 a.m. until

midnight. We will be giving away goodie bags filled with every

smoker’s need you can think of. We will be raffling off some glass

and vaporizers. We will also be giving away gift cards and other

items from the shop. We are also working on something big, but

it’s a surprise so you will just have to come in that day to find out

what it is.

What is your favorite part of running your own smoke shop?

It’s got to be our customers and of course getting to play with

all the new products that are out there. It’s like being a kid in a

candy store.

What is your least favorite, if anything?

To be honest I don’t think there’s anything I don’t like about the

smoke shop business.

Is there anything consumers should be wary of when

shopping for smoke products and accessories?

Always go into a reputable shop and make sure that the person

behind the counter helping you knows his products and can

explain everything about the product you’re interested in.

I heard a rumor you pulled a baby from a burning vehicle on

Watt Avenue recently. Is there any truth to that?

It’s not a rumor. What you heard is correct. That baby is now safe

and living in the shop. He’s the smoke shop baby..

Disclaimer: this last question is an inside joke. No babies

were harmed in the making of this interview.

Smoke Cityby Josh Burke

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46

Directory

Dispensaries and Evaluations420 Med Evaluations 2015 Q Street Sacramento, CA 95811 916.476.6142

Abatin Wellness 2100 29th Street Sacramento, CA, 95817 916.822.5699 www.abatinsacramento.com [email protected]

Canna Care 320 Harris Ave., Suite G Sacramento, CA 95838 916.925.1199 www.cannacare.net

CC101 6435 Florin Perkins Rd. Sacramento, CA 95828 916.387.6233 www.cc101sac.com

Cloud 9 5711 Florin Perkins Rd. Sacramento, CA 95828 916.387.8605

Doctor’s Orders 1704 Main Avenue Sacramento, CA 95838

916.564.2112 www.DoctorsOrdersRX.com Florin Wellness Center 7047 Land Park Drive Sacramento, CA 95831 916.706.0563 www.florin-wellness-center.com

Golden Health and Wellness 1030 Joellis Way Sacramento, CA 95815 916.646.6340

Horizon Non-Profit Collective 3600 Power Inn Rd. Sacramento, CA 95826 916.455.1931

House of Organics 8848 Fruitridge Rd. Sacramento, CA 95826 916-381-3769 sachouseoforganics.com

Mendos Meds Deliveries Only 916-800-4204

RCP 1508 East El Camino Avenue Sacramento, CA 95815 916.925.5696 www.RCPSacramento.org

Sacramento 420 Doc 2100 Watt Ave, Unit 190 Sacramento, CA 95825 916.480.9000 www.Sac420Doc.com

Take Care 420 721 N. B Street Sacramento, CA 95811 916.572.5215

THC 6666 Fruitridge Rd. Sacramento, CA 95820 916.476.4431 www.916thc.com

A Therapeutic Alternative 3015 H Street Sacramento, CA 95816 916.822.4717

Two Rivers Wellness 315 North 10th Street Sacramento, CA 95811 916.804.8975 www.tworiverssac.com

Valley Health Options 1421 Auburn Blvd. Sacramento, CA 95815 916.779.0715

Smoke ShopsBlow ‘n’ Tell 4552 Auburn Blvd. Sacramento, CA 916.485.5205

1914 Fulton Ave. Sacramento, CA 95825 916.485.5205

Habits Cigars and Smoke Shop 8391 Folsom Blvd., Ste. #7 Sacramento, CA 95826 916.383.1185

Jacobo’s Smoke Shop 2017 I Street Sacramento, CA 95811 916.440.0331

Smoke City 6745 Watt Ave., Ste. B North Highlands, CA 95660 916.334.2067 www.smokecityshop.com

Illusion Smoke Shop 5514 Pacific St., Suite 160 Rocklin, CA 916.415.1750

4809 Laguna Blvd. Elk Grove, CA 916.395.8610

Not in the directory? Send an email to SacAlt at [email protected] to get listed.

SacAlternative | April 2014

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