No 'significant issues' from marijuana legalization, says Colorado medical officer

GroErr

Well-Known Member
Exactly my thoughts. Those who smoke already have a source. I suspect that there will be a lot of initial demand for people who are curious about it and can try it legally. But after that when the novelty wears off and just be back to business as usual. And I think a lot of the producers who are weak financially will fall by the wayside and the strong will survive and take up the market share...
At least that's how it usually works with new markets
Exactly, a short/small burst initially, perhaps even generate some business from travellers/visitors (will they allow non-residents to buy rec?), but the vast majority of users, where the volume is, are already smoking and have reliable hook-ups, why would they change to buy legal shwagg at twice the price?
 

Farmer.J

Well-Known Member
Exactly my thoughts. Those who smoke already have a source. I suspect that there will be a lot of initial demand for people who are curious about it and can try it legally. But after that when the novelty wears off and just be back to business as usual. And I think a lot of the producers who are weak financially will fall by the wayside and the strong will survive and take up the market share...
At least that's how it usually works with new markets
Hence the reason why Health Canada wasn't prepared for so many ACMPR grower registrations. If it was quality cannabis, at a price set in comparison to home grown costs, who wouldn't buy from an LP?
 

Gquebed

Well-Known Member
Hence the reason why Health Canada wasn't prepared for so many ACMPR grower registrations. If it was quality cannabis, at a price set in comparison to home grown costs, who wouldn't buy from an LP?
Exactly. I was even looking into buying my meds from an LP but what I found was that the product was completely inferior... laughable really
 
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