Posted on 06/07/2014 10:23:57 PM PDT by steve86
Inside a windowless Sodo warehouse teeming with 1,143 pot plants, one of the states pioneering marijuana producers waited anxiously to snap the lights.
To growers, that means putting the leafy stalks on a 12-hour cycle under the lights. The suddenly shorter days signal to the plants that fall is coming in early June.
Thats when we play Mother Nature, said Steve Elliott, an owner of one of Washingtons first licensed pot growers, AuricAG. It puts the plants into hyper-drive.
To propagate the species, the all-female plants then start to flower, secreting resins, sticky with pots psychoactive chemicals, to attract pollen. But not a speck of pollen should be around if Elliott and team have done their job. Desperate, the plants get more sticky, more pungent and more valuable. Their fastest-growing strain should be ready for harvest five weeks after flowering begins.
As the cycle is repeated in coming weeks, AuricAGs owners will confront crucial questions. Can they deliver to the states first recreational pot stores a crop that meets purity standards, makes a decent profit and brands them as mature entrepreneurs who view pot more like good wine than hippie lettuce?
(Excerpt) Read more at seattletimes.com ...
Mmmph mmmph mmmph ... wut?
Pot infused Twinkies would be listed in Cat I of the MOST DANGEROUS !!
Better call Sgt. Stedenko!
That is just not true.
FMCDH(BITS)
They’ll only get to undercut if the state over taxes. That’s the only way black markets ever wind up cheaper than white markets, people won’t take black market risks for white market markups.
people wont take black market risks for white market markups.
Certainly some will; word is that most people who are currently procuring on the black market will continue to do so. The judicial system/law enforcement markup is the difference.
And can be changed by the legislature.
Black market will be considerably cheaper (~40%).
As has been pointed out, as new sellers enter the legal market the legal price will drop. (What's your source for that 40% figure, by the way?)
word is that most people who are currently procuring on the black market will continue to do so.
Just like most people who drank black market booze during Prohibition stuck with the black market when Prohibition ended? LOL!
Taxation wasn’t established as over the top. Black market minimum markup is 300% per transaction, in the white market you pretty much only see that in jewelry, most white market markups are under 100%.
No, they won’t. That’s why black markets are so expensive. If people are going to risk being killed in 2 transactions and going to jail in between they want to do a lot better than doubling their money. Colorado and Washington are showing you’re wrong. The end of Prohibition showed you’re wrong. White markets kill black markets, unless we’re stupid like with cigarette taxes.
"Whaddya mean it's a Cheeto dog?"
Wif bacom! MMMMM dericioush.
This is nothing like the end of prohibition. The end of prohibition basically meant "wide-open" alcohol. The legal availability of marijuana is extremely limited and restricted. Basically one ounce, can't grow your own, can't smoke/use in public (according to state law), no legal hashish, tight limits on edibles, few stores because of siting restrictions, etc, etc., etc. By contrast, I could go down and buy a thousand liters of whiskey this afternoon, no problemo.
Taxation was established long ago, at the time the referendum passed... And can be changed by the legislature.
Yeah, right-o, the Washington State legislature is going to lower taxes. Yep, that'll happen.
Taxation wasnt established as over the top.
The consensus here is that the tax burden will result in retail prices higher than they should be.
You two nuts actually think the cartels are going to leave Washington State because people can legally buy one ounce of pot in a few stores? LOL
Then apparently Washington got it wrong. They taxed it to the point that it will keep the black market alive. Colorado isn’t having those problems. Maybe Washington will learn.
If the tax structure is done right the cartels won’t have a choice, they will simply be priced out of the market. Just like after Prohibition. And it won’t just be in a few stores, it’ll be every place that sells beer or smokes. Of course if the tax structure is done wrong all bets are off. That’s the nature of government, able to screw up even when doing the right thing.
Oh and can the insults. If you have facts stick to them, name calling is for people that lack facts.
If you think the government spent a lot of effort on stopping illegal use, wait until you see what they will do when they think they are missing out on taxes.
Of course the question is will they be smart enough to realize that a lower tax rate results in more tax revenue? And of course the answer to that is, some states will, some states won’t. Same as with cigs.
It’s Washington. They won’t lower the rates.
it absolutely IS true , u r in denial
Some say that, some say otherwise:
'As Washington's so-called "pot czar," UCLA public policy professor Mark Kleiman has furnished the states Liquor Control Board with policy recommendations. [...] Many people in Washington have worried it will be too high, making it uncompetitive with black market pot. [...] Kleiman guessed that once the market stabilizes, producing a gram of marijuana could cost as little as 50 cents. Even adding taxes and profits margins could price it well below what illegal pot costs.' - http://www.kplu.org/post/washingtons-pot-czar-says-legal-marijuana-could-be-too-cheap
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