World’s weed growers have new rival to fear from South America

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
Colombia, famed for cocaine cartels, has the right climate for growing and is developing a medical marijuana export industry

By Bloomberg News

BOGOTA — Colombia, famed for the violence of its cocaine cartels, is planning a move into the more genteel drugs business of marijuana-based oils and creams.

The Andean nation’s climate and regulations make it ideally suited to profit from the incipient trade in legal marijuana, Health Minister Alejandro Gaviria said in a Jan. 8 interview in his Bogota office. The country legalized use of the drug for medical purposes last month.

“This is going to be a new commodity, there’s an emerging global medical marijuana business,” Gaviria said. “This year, we’re going to see international companies coming to Colombia to produce medical marijuana.”

The increasing legal use of the drug in the United States, Canada and elsewhere creates an opportunity for Colombia to develop an export industry similar to wines in Chile and broccoli and asparagus in Peru, Gaviria said. Marijuana-based pharmaceuticals are used to alleviate pain and nausea stemming from chronic diseases and treatments such as chemotherapy. The highly regulated industry is a long way from the mass murders and kidnappings that marked the life of cocaine kingpins such as Pablo Escobar.

Existing pharmaceutical marijuana products include Sativex, a spray form of marijuana used to treat symptoms of multiple sclerosis or chronic pain. The drug, developed by GW Pharmaceuticals, has been approved for use in 27 countries, according to the company’s website.

Under the new regulation in Colombia, companies need to request licenses to cultivate marijuana seeds and transform the plant into products such as oils and creams, Gaviria said. He declined to say which companies have expressed an interest in investing in the South American country.

Colombia was already a major producer of illegal marijuana, with much of the farming concentrated south of Cali, the nation’s third-largest city, in mountains controlled by Marxist rebels. Authorities seized 307 tons of the drug in 2014, up from 255 tons in 2010, according to data gathered by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

Neither has Colombia left its cocaine problems behind. In 2014, the area planted with coca, the raw material for making cocaine, rose 44 percent to 69,000 hectares, according to the UNODC, more than in Peru and Bolivia combined.
 

Medipuffs

Well-Known Member
in the 70's yes importing outdoor cannabis was popular here in north america.

we don't need shitty outdoor that has to travel all the way up here from columbia taking a shit kicking on its way. temperature & humidity issues during travel, tumbling the buds in the packaging as they are moved, amateur hour growers etc...

stick to cocaine, that shit obviously makes you piles of money and you have the market cornered
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
almost made a post about starting an import company when this news came out a few days back.
one could easily undercut and over sell..buying from the south 8-)
Im sure someones on it ... :lol:
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
More greed eh......I stopped buying their products in the 70's.....don't come here we don't want or need it.
 

qwizoking

Well-Known Member
nah theyre still there. i know alot of old school farmers in mex, same plants they been growing for generations.. i have alot of landrace seeds too, hope isnt lost. and everyone loves the old strains, they know that. im sure thats what theyll be producing on mass scale. only the new growers and cartels are using hybrids. occasional polination happens. but im talking about the old family farmer, he still sifts through all the plants and usually not as close...they have an amazing eye
 

OLD MOTHER SATIVA

Well-Known Member
nah theyre still there. i know alot of old school farmers in mex, same plants they been growing for generations.. i have alot of landrace seeds too, hope isnt lost. and everyone loves the old strains, they know that. im sure thats what theyll be producing on mass scale. only the new growers and cartels are using hybrids. occasional polination happens. but im talking about the old family farmer, he still sifts through all the plants and usually not as close...they have an amazing eye

yes of course i am sure the genetics are not totally gone..

yes family farms and people like us who have held onto them for decades

i talked with a grower person from Colombia on a forum and he says its basically all indica ville

lets hear ot for family farmers who know the dif!
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
Gotta learn how to grow it first, ask any LP. They're still fumbling around with that like a teenage boy trying to undo a bra for the first time
There are many in the area who already know how to grow it. Really growing it isn't the problem. It's how it's processed.

Equitorial countries will dominate the market if it ever goes full legal (for drug type cannabis anyway).
 

rikdabrick

Well-Known Member
Who wants to start a farm with me down there and grow some amazing sativas, ha ha :) I have been actually considering it since I heard about this last week. I just want to grow 1000 plants or so just because I like growing weed, especially some fine landrace sativa and extreme sativa crosses. I was thinking the cold desert region or Mediterranean climate areas in the Boyaca Department or near Medillin. My wife would probably think I'd gone nuts if I told her we were moving to Colombia to grow (literal) tons of weed though. She'd still come, but she'd probably not be happy about it for awhile at least, ha ha.
 

rikdabrick

Well-Known Member
Kinda hard to properly dry in 100% r/h..
Where I live RH is usually between 80% and 100%. I have to use A/C and it works great. It makes for a good slow dry. I'd rather be taking humidity out of my dry area than try to slow dry in a place with low RH, but you're right, it's very difficult to get bud dry with high RH without the use of A/C or dehueys.
 

qwizoking

Well-Known Member
also note landrace sativas in that area have different terp profiles than elsewhere. its not by chance, evolution has surprisingly played an important role..some of these terps have potent anti fungal properties.
 
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