ill take one of those and anther one of those..
and clone it as may times as I like until next spring!!!
YA BOYEE!!
fuck LARGE POISON PRODUCERS!!! NO ONE NEEDS THEM!!
Some garden centres in Alberta say they’re disappointed that the province won’t allow them to sell marijuana seeds or seedlings when recreational cannabis becomes legal in October.
Customers will be able to buy supplies at garden centres, but they’ll need to go to cannabis stores for seeds or plants.
Lisa Silva from Bluegrass Nursery in Calgary says customers are already asking her about how to grow cannabis, and she’d welcome the right to sell them plants
Cannabis plants are photographed during the grand opening event for the CannTrust Niagara Greenhouse Facility in Fenwick, Ont., on Tuesday, June 26, 2018. (THE CANADIAN PRESS / Tijana Martin)
“It’s another market opportunity for us to capture,” she says.
Federal law allows Canadians to cultivate up to four plants per household, although Quebec and Manitoba have chosen to prohibit home cultivation altogether.
In five provinces – Ontario, Quebec, P.E.I., Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick -- cannabis will only be available from government-owned stores and/or online.
Alberta, Newfoundland and British Columbia have opted for a mix of government-run and privately-licensed stores, while Manitoba and Saskatchewan will offer only private stores.
In Alberta, private retailer NewLeaf Cannabis is planning to open 18 shops, but Chief Administrative Officer Angus Taylor says the company hasn’t yet decided whether to sell seeds or seedlings.
“It's a challenge just training our staff to be good as cannabis advisers,” Taylor says. “If employees were to sell plants and seeds, he adds, they would need to be “good horticulture advisers too.”
and clone it as may times as I like until next spring!!!
YA BOYEE!!
fuck LARGE POISON PRODUCERS!!! NO ONE NEEDS THEM!!
Some garden centres in Alberta say they’re disappointed that the province won’t allow them to sell marijuana seeds or seedlings when recreational cannabis becomes legal in October.
Customers will be able to buy supplies at garden centres, but they’ll need to go to cannabis stores for seeds or plants.
Lisa Silva from Bluegrass Nursery in Calgary says customers are already asking her about how to grow cannabis, and she’d welcome the right to sell them plants
Cannabis plants are photographed during the grand opening event for the CannTrust Niagara Greenhouse Facility in Fenwick, Ont., on Tuesday, June 26, 2018. (THE CANADIAN PRESS / Tijana Martin)
“It’s another market opportunity for us to capture,” she says.
Federal law allows Canadians to cultivate up to four plants per household, although Quebec and Manitoba have chosen to prohibit home cultivation altogether.
In five provinces – Ontario, Quebec, P.E.I., Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick -- cannabis will only be available from government-owned stores and/or online.
Alberta, Newfoundland and British Columbia have opted for a mix of government-run and privately-licensed stores, while Manitoba and Saskatchewan will offer only private stores.
In Alberta, private retailer NewLeaf Cannabis is planning to open 18 shops, but Chief Administrative Officer Angus Taylor says the company hasn’t yet decided whether to sell seeds or seedlings.
“It's a challenge just training our staff to be good as cannabis advisers,” Taylor says. “If employees were to sell plants and seeds, he adds, they would need to be “good horticulture advisers too.”