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17
Jul 10

Video & Media Footage: TY Medical Marijuana & Hemp Expo

You can watch our webisodes in low-res on YouTube, you can click on the images below to preview the footage in medium-res, or right click the links provided and “Save as” to download high-res Quicktime movie files.

Webisode 1: TY Medical Marijuana & Hemp Expo Overview & Highlights

Preview Video (Low-Res ~50MB) Production Video (High-Res ~600MB)
*See footage from the show floor and view sample speakers & interviews from the show.

Webisode 2: TY Medical Marijuana & Hemp Expo Overview & Highlights

Preview Video (Low-Res ~50MB) Production Video (High-Res ~600MB)
*See clips from the fashion show, boat cruise, comedy show & cannabis cup footage

Webisode 3: TY Medical Marijuana & Hemp Expo Overview & Highlights

Preview Video (Low-Res ~50MB) Production Video (High-Res ~600MB)
*See clips from musicians, medical cup winners, documentary filmakers and more.

TY Medical Cannabis Cup Celebrity Judging Highlights

cannabis-cup-celebrity-judges

Preview Video (Low-Res ~50MB) Production Video (High-Res ~600MB)
*Celebrity judges vote on their favorite strains in the TY Medical Marijuana Cannabis Cup – Results not official*

TY Expo Comedy Night Highlights

TY-comedy-night-webisode

www.lifestylemedia.videolsm.com/clips/Day1_MediaClips_Comedy_SM.mov
www.lifestylemedia.videolsm.com/clips/Day1_MediaClips_Comedy_LG.mov

Preview Video (Low-Res ~50MB) Production Video (High-Res ~600MB)
*Heard a good joke lately? Here are some funny moments from Comedy night!

TY Patient & Exhibitor Boat Cruise Party Highlights

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Preview Video (Low-Res ~50MB) Production Video (High-Res ~600MB)
*See highlights of the VIP patients boat cruise party on Toronto’s waterfront

Ha-Swesh Fashion Show Highlights

fashion-show-TY-expo-highlights

Preview Video (Low-Res ~50MB) Production Video (High-Res ~600MB)
*Check out the Ha-Swesh fashion show highlights from the John Bassett Theatre

General Footage B-Roll & Interviews (For Media Use)

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Preview Video (Low-Res ~50MB) Production Video (High-Res ~600MB)

*Right click and “Save As” to download complete Quicktime .mov files.
Need the Apple Quicktime Player? Download it here
.

EXPO TWITTER POSTS:

Click here to view Twitter posts about the Expo

ARTICLES & NEWS COVERAGE ON GOOGLE:

Click here for news about the Expo on Google

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Click here for Yahoo Links & News Coverage

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Click here for Expo news coverage on Bing

YOU TUBE USER SUBMITTED VIDEOS:

Click here to search for Expo videos submitted on YouTube

Please use the links provided above to download interviews, b-roll and news footage from the Treating Yourself Medical Marijuana Hemp Expo 2010. This footage is free of charge to broadcasters. These files are provided in two (2) different data rates available for media outlet distribution. Under each video you will find large file at a broadcast quality (~600MB) and a preview file (~50MB). Both are the same frame size. Right click and “Save as” to download the quicktime movie file, or click the low-res to preview online.

*These files are being made available as public domain, media oulets are encouraged to use this footage for production purposes. Please credit TreatingYourself.com for making footage available to your news production, bloggers please provide a link back to treatingyourself.com*


02
Jul 10

Expo 2010: Confirmed Exhibitors List

The following exhibitors are confirmed for the TY Medical Marijuana & Hemp Expo: 2010

7 Leaf Studios #410
Advanced Nutrients # 400
Author T.A. Sedlak # 808
BC Northernlights # 320
Bodebuz Clothing # 221
C.A.L.M. # 825
Cannabis Connoisseur # 519
Cannabis Medic.ca # 333
Cannabis Trade Association # 812
CubeCap # 732
DNA Genetics # 606
Dolce Vita # 117
Dragonluck Inc. # 425
Dutch Passion # 618 & # 620
Easy Grow # 720
Effort Industries # 431
ENCOD.org # 827
End Prohibition # 513
EYE1DER # 520
Finest Medicinal Seeds # 420
Free Marc Emery # 511
Green Harvest # 517
Green House Seed Co # 725
Green Planet Nutrients # 821
Grow Magazine # 519
GTA Seed Bank # 816
Ha – Swesh # 300
Hemp Haven # 518
Hemp Museum # 824
HerbalAire # 427 & #429
High Times Smoke Shop & Gifts # 734
Hitzimports.com  # 726
Honey Bee Extractor # 518
H.U.M.A.N. # 521
Indoor Garden Solutions #414 & # 416
Intro Apparel # 111
Ivan Art # 118 & # 120
Jack Herer Art Auction
Jack Herer Documentary & Memorial
Jardin Du Futur / Ecosystem # 101
KDK Distributors # 424
Help Kill Bills S10 & C539 # 728
Kushh # 724
Lethal Glass # 107
Live Art by Joshua Boulet # 407
MA # 406
Maple Reef Plant Products # 97
Marijuana Music Award Performers # 430
Medical Cannabis Journal # 515
Medicalmarijuana.ca # 95
Medical Marijuana Cup # 735
Medical Marijuana Seeds Wholesaler # 418
me Glassworks # 804
Mountain High & Cones # 621
OGA # 418
Online Medical Marijuana Seeds # 721
Paradise Seeds # 432
Patients Out of  Time # 434
Plant Pharmacuticals # 814
POL-COA Defence # 730
Puff Mama # 433
Pure Hemp # 510
Quebec Import # 225
Quintessential Tips # 820
Rainbow Med Cannabis Canada # 411
Rasta Troll # 516
Reeferman Seeds # 96
RooR # 224
Sacred Seed # 201
Section 56 Medical Marijuana Resource Centre # 835
Serious Seeds # 419 + # 421
SHINYA Pipes # 512
Skunk Magazine # 100
Smoking Papers # 510
Tabac # 800
THC Expose # 606
The Happy Hippie # 818
Toronto Compassion Centre # 201
Toronto Hemp Company # 201
Treating Yourself Magazine # 406
Trim Pro # 325
Vancouver Seed Bank # 802
Vaporite Vaporizers # 220 + # 321
Vaporizers.ca # 319
Volcano Vaporizer # 200
Weed World Magazine # 324
West Coast Gifts # 507
Where Heads Meet # 806
Wong Bong Glass Werx # 810
Zephyr Vaporizers # 119

Return to the Medical Marijuana & Hemp Expo: 2010 Toronto Website.


19
May 10

What’s happening at the Expo

Level 100 – John Bassett Theatre ( 1300 Seating Capacity ) :

  • Seminars by Dr.Bob Melamede, Dr.Juan Sanchez-Ramos, Mary Lynn Mathre, Michael Krawitz, Dr. Alexander Sumach, Dr. Paul Hornby, David Malmo-Levine
  • Music by Los Marijuanos, Rich Hardesty, Winter Springs, Sahra Indio, E.O.S. , Chief Greenbud, Jet Baker, Paul Bullock, Northern Lights, DJ Slim, Wank Punter, Real One, Errol Blackwood
  • 5 International Documentaries Premiering in Canada
    Jack Herer’s The Emperr Wears No Clothes ( USA ) – By Jack Herer & Melissa Balin
    Perscribed Grass  ( Isreal ) – By Zack Klein
    Strain Hunters India ( Holland ) – By Arjan Roskam aka King of Cannabis
    Waiting to Inhale (USA) – By Jed Riffe                                                                        
    What if Cannabis Cured Cancer? (USA) By Len Richmond
  • Hemp Fashion Show by Ha-Swesh
  • Howard Dover Extravaganja Comedy Night – Friday July 16, 2010 @ 8:30 pm  – -Dave Martin
    - Paul Haywood
    - Jeffery Peterson aka The 420 Comic
  • Medical Marijuana Cup and Marijuana Music Award Ceremony – Sunday July 18, 2010 @7:00 pm

Medical Marijuana Cup
Private Grower , Compassion Club , Seed Company – Indica , Seed Company – Sativa

Marijuana Music Awards
Song of Year, Album of Year, Best Artist, Rap/ Hip Hop, Reggae/ Dancehall, Rock/ Pop, Best Video, Poetry and DJ Mix

Level 200 – Room 201 ( 4,600 sq ft ):

  • Being promoted as the WORLDS LARGEST VAPOR LOUNGE
  • Attendees can try various vaporizers for FREE in comfort thanks to our Vapor Lounge Sponsors

See Below: Introduction Letter From the Organizer:

Re: Treating Yourself Medical Marijuana & Hemp Expo: 2010

Expo OrganizerGreetings from Canada’s first Medical Marijuana and Hemp Expo! Treating Yourself magazine is excited to host the upcoming Medical Marijuana and Hemp Expo in July of 2010 at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.

expo-capture

Visit the Medical Marijauana & Hemp Expo: 2010 Website

We are currently seeking vendors, exhibitors, and sponsors for this very high-profile event and we want you to be a part of it. Mark July 16th – 18th, 2010 on your calendar and join patients, their friends and loved ones, professionals, distributors, manufacturers from the hemp, medicinal marijuana, and alternative medicine industries from across North America and Europe. Showcase, demonstrate, educate about, and sell your products to a wide range of attendees. Your product or service has the potential to reach thousands at the Expo!

From your product’s name on our event website, full page ads in Treating Yourself magazine issues #22 and #23, exposure of your product and/or services to not only the public in attendance and also our professional national media and public relations team; these are just a handful of the benefits our vendors will enjoy. Counting patients, vendors, medical and professionals from the alternative medicine and hemp industries among it’s expected attendance of 30,000+. Treating Yourself Magazine’s first Medical Marijuana and Hemp Expo promises to be a world stage like no other seen before in Canada, offering three days of networking, learning, advertising, and vending in an interactive, inclusive environment. Don’t miss your chance to be a part of this extraordinary event!

Founded by yours truly in 2002 and distributed in countries world-wide, Treating Yourself is a journal written for patients, by patients. Our mission is to build awareness, generate interest, educate and provide our readers (which include medical marijuana, alternative medicine users, members of the hemp community, their caregivers, professionals in this and related industries) with conscientious, ethical, and reliable information to assist them with the management of their wide and varied health needs and provide them with access to safe and reliable products.

To help us achieve this goal, the 2010 Medical Marijuana and Hemp Expo will be hosting a series of workshops, seminars, documentaries and short films in the John Bassett Theatre on subjects like medical marijuana, activism, security and safety, alternative medicine, nutrition, hemp, cooking, and more.

This one-of-a-kind event will also have a facility-approved 4,600 square foot vapor lounge to accommodate medical marijuana patients who can feel comfortable and relaxed medicating. While there is absolutely no selling or distributing of marijuana permitted at the Expo, we encourage patients to bring their own medicine along with them, as vaporizers of all makes and models will be available for use. These include, but are not limited to the HerbalAire, Volcano, Zephyr Vaporizers and the De-Verdamper. Our hope is to give patients an opportunity to determine which type is most suitable for their individual needs.

By joining us as a vendor and saying yes to the exhibit opportunities of Canada’s first Medical Marijuana and Hemp Expo in 2010, you’re saying yes to the growth of your brand’s visibility among the consumers and decision-makers of your target market. This year will offer our vendors unique opportunities to exhibit their merchandise. You will also be extending your reach to a national and world-wide audience. With representatives, sponsors, vendors, and professionals from across Canada and around the world, there’s no better place for you to showcase your products and information.

Register early for your best chance at securing your first-choice location on our expansive floor plan. I am also pleased to answer any questions you may have about the event at the email address listed below.

I look forward to seeing you in Toronto in 2010!

Take Care and Peace,
Marco Renda
Publisher

weedmaster@treatingyourself.com


27
Oct 09

Treating Yourself Magazine Issue #19

TY Issue #19 Now On Sale
TreatingYourself Magazine Issue #19 is now on sale. Featuring: Everyone loves to Harvest, Cannabinois in the GI Track, Ice Wars, Terpenoids, WIN a Custom RooR Package and more.
You can subscribe today, or preview TY back issues.
TY Issue #19 Now On Sale

27
Oct 09

Just Thinking

By: Jef Tek

This just in: the last episode of Jay Leno hosting the Tonight Show signals the end of an era, and as spring usually brings new awakenings. This year brings us an awful lot of closures, from massive job losses happening to the Michigan auto sector to California’s Eddie Lepp and Phil Spector going down for the count, I sense an end of an era upon us. Even Canada’s own Prince of Pot, Marc Emery is going to have to face the music this year or perhaps risk a harsher penalty.tek-monkey1

Don’t get the wrong idea and think that I think it’s alright to off your assistant, even if she was just a “B” movie star; what I’m talking about here is the obvious flaunting of this penal system that captures the weak, stupid or accident prone with no distinction between hardened criminal or social pariah. The Reverend Eddy Lepp was just growing marijuana for the sick and dying, as was his now-deceased wife and long-time companion Linda Senti. She succumbed to the cancer that he was trying to combat with medicinal marijuana last year.

Way-the-hell back in 1978, Stacy Keach’s character, Sgt. Stedanko from Cheech and Chong’s Up in Smoke movie, said it best, “Marijuana is the last bastion of free enterprise left in America.” The more the world changes, the more is stays the same (in many ways). 30 hellish years later and people still don’t comprehend that cannabis has been used medicinally for centuries — for eons — with dramatic success. We have CB-1 receptors in our brains and nervous systems and CB-2 receptors in our immune systems and these receptors readily bind with THC, or Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannibinol, the primary chemical found in cannabis.

The “union” of THC binding with the two types of cannabinoid receptors can produce everything from euphoria to pain relief. Cannabis has proven itself effective at managing the pain from new nerve growth, which isn’t manageable even with strong and addictive opiates. Opiates depress the central nervous system to the point of death (in the case of overdose), but marijuana/cannabis is easily titrated/regulated, giving the user finite control of dosage and efficacy depending on their circumstances and situation.

Jay Leno will return squeaky clean to prime-time in September and by then old Phil will have slipped on a bar of soap or some other heinous accidental retribution. Maybe he will die from a wall of soap. Okay, bad joke.   The spiritualist Reverend Lepp of Northern California’s Lake County has until July 6 to right his affairs before doing ten. Even the judge agreed the sentence was unusually harsh, considering the evidence, but the real deal is that the Cannabis Crusader Lepp hasn’t cooperated with authorities, at all, effectively tying their hands. District Court Judge Marilyn Patel just went with protocol, two ten-year sentences to run concurrently (not sequentially as the judge could have done), to begin on July 6, 2009. After prison, he will have five years of probation, if he lives that long.

Recently, in Abbottsford BC, medicinal marijuana patient/grower Jason Wilcox was a victim of police harassment. While away from his residence, Abbottsford Police broke-in and arbitrarily chopped down more than half of his legal cannabis plants, some of which were merely weeks from fruition. They then left him a card and skedaddled, with no case number and no charges. Jason, who just moved to the area, was not unknown to Abbottsford police or their City Counsel — he had gone to the city with his action plan for a medicinal marijuana dispensary just a week prior, which they overwhelmingly supported and where he was hailed as an asset to the community — but the Abbottsford PD had a hidden agenda.

Arriving on scene, just a day later, Jason and his wife are visibly shaken — I’ve seen that look in the Army before. Both the front and back doors of his rental home are off their foundations and will cost hundreds of dollars to just secure the home again. The visqueen fabric separating his vegetative room was slashed in multiple places, even though there were two obvious zippers for entering. Irretrievable genetics were decapitated and laying in a dried-out pile of unnecessary brown death.  Some of these strains were nurtured for over a decade, only to be killed in their prime for no apparent reason.

Jason called the number on the card when he got home. He first imagined that the police interrupted “rippers” or burglars and this was the result. The Police claimed that his alarm company had notice of a “panic” button being pressed within the residence, which gives them a 30 minute window to “look” for a person. No panic button was actually pushed and why they searched Wilcox’s 8 year-old-daughter’s doll house remains a legal question. Apparently ADT, and I’m sure all monitored alarm companies, have a deal with local police; after all, they are just a private company, with no allegiance to their customers who actually generate their payroll in the first place. Nazis, I say! The police representative simply apologized. Lawyers were called. I took photos documenting the tragedy. We mourned. Fire it up!

Jason Wilcox’s Health Canada paperwork was correctly and prominently displayed with the limit of 96 plants, which he had, in various stages throughout the two rooms. Coppers randomly cut, or should I say ergonomically cut, because the cops just hacked down the biggest and healthiest plants within easy reach. Over half his plants, for no reason! What burns me up personally is the arrogant way cops love to pop the electrical panel cover, to look for who-knows-what. Are cops now certified electricians? No – I think not; do they hope to catch Wile E. Coyote “stealing” amps, in the flesh? It is like a dog who chases cars — if he caught one, he couldn’t drive it. This is a clear cut case of cannabis discrimination in my eyes and in the eyes of the lawyers Jason has retained to fully investigate this matter. So, boys and girls, for better or worse, this crooked cannabis case is just starting to unfold.

Tim Felger, also of Abbottsford, B.C., a long time activist and marijuana instigator, was arrested late May and spent the week in jail for allegedly selling pot to minors. His prominent store, “Da Kine,” is now closed while he awaits bail. The future doesn’t look good to be an activist in Canada — just ask Marc Emery, who has been wanted by the U.S. government since July 29, 2005, when an indictment from Seattle Washington’s federal court was served on Canadian soil by the DEA and Vancouver PD, accusing Emery, Greg Williams and Michelle Rainey of seed selling, money laundering and conspiracy charges.

Seeds are still available worldwide.

Are you fired up, yet?

As one door closes another opens. Michelle Rainey and Greg Williams recently accepted a plea agreement wherein they admit guilt but receive two years probation instead of the life sentences these crimes originally called for. Life, man! They are scheduled to receive sentencing in July. Now, the U.S. wants five to ten years for Marc in a federal gulag. The Dude’s cameo drinking partner in The Big Lebowski, The Stranger played by the one-and-only Sam Elliot, said it better than I ever could: “Sometimes you get the bear and sometimes the bear gets you!” That’s how I feel now as I helplessly report from this stinking laptop and watch heroes and champions of compassion, care and circumstance now flailing for the right to walk the streets with you and me. My back aches!

Not now, not with Chocolate Jesus sitting in the White House and Arnie the Governator almost ready to open a dialog with medicinal growers about paying taxes and delivering California from certain bankruptcy! Everything seems to be going so well… Not now, not just as the summer is ramping up and everything wants to grow; not now, don’t put my friends into a grey 10 by 10 hole! Without sunshine, nutrients and a community, nothing blooms. Draconian, paranoid fear-mongering laws that bind the Judge presiding over a case to “mandatory minimums” were the worst practical joke ever played on the justice system. No shoes, no shirt, no justice — no kidding?tek-monery2

Everything I was about to say has already been said before, many times and many ways, more eloquently and by far greater men than me. But please hear my primal scream; I’m just speaking up now, for my brethren, so if the time ever comes there just might be someone left to speak out for me.


27
Oct 09

The Dope on Cannabis Doping in Sports

Can low-Dose Cannabis Induce Ergogenesis in Highly Skilled Athletes Evidencing Signs of Tolerance to the Effects of Regular Cannabis Use?

By Ally (aka pflover)

“Preserve Neuroplasticity!”

Ally1

This last April a mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter by the name of Nick Diaz was asked about his use of cannabis in a prefight interview. The Times quoted him as replying “I’m more consistent about everything being a cannabis user.” This was followed up by “And I have an easy way to deal with [being tested]. I can pass a drug test in eight days with herbal cleansers. I drink 10 pounds of water and sweat out 10 pounds of water every day. I’ll be fine (1).” Sure enough he passed the post-game drug test later that month (2).

Nick has not always passed in the past however. At least two different state commissions have caught him testing positive for cannabis when he did not expect to be tested. First, in 2007, while fighting for the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) Mr. Diaz had a win over Japan’s Takanori Gomi revoked after testing positive for THC because it was claimed his levels were so high he must be numbed to the pain. This effect is considered ergogenic, something which improves performance as it relates to sports or physical activity. He tested positive again in his first post-UFC fight (2).

Preferring Nick keep his private life private, neither his coach nor his opponent approved of Diaz’s candor about his “lifestyle choices,” but for different reasons. When asked about his opponent’s comments, Frank Shamrock, a veteran MMA fighter, said: “He definitely smokes marijuana. That’s his own business, but it’s not the greatest thing for the sport. We’re fighting a stigma. Still, there’s something refreshing about his honesty… I respect his talent, he brings it (1).” “But I certainly don’t agree with his lifestyle and his marketing of that lifestyle as a part of mixed martial arts, because I don’t think that’s a part of the sport.  I think he’s somewhat of a freak in that way (2).”

Although not appearing to care about the use of cannabis itself, Cesar Gracie, Nick’s coach and long time mentor, has repeatedly asked Nick to stop being so open about his cannabis use, saying “Smoke weed all you want —legally in California, you’re allowed to. Just stop talking about it.” Gracie wishes he could get it through Nick’s head. “I want him to be known for his skills, not his drugs. He doesn’t need to be the spokesperson for cannabis (3).” (I for one commend Mr. Diaz for his integrity.)

Nick Diaz is not just a recreational cannabis user. The Stockton resident is prescribed cannabis under California’s Prop 215 to help manage the symptoms of his ADHD (1). As he says, it makes him more consistent. Apparently Nick has tried to oblige his coach’s request in the past, but one characteristic of those with ADHD like Nick and myself is that we tend to be open books — ask us anything and we spill it, so to speak. It tends to make for a very poor poker face (3).

ally23

You might be wondering at this point, “Why is cannabis a prohibited substance by the California State Athletes Commission, considering Prop 215?” The answer is not clear, but it seems likely they agree with the Nevada SAC when they revoked his win over Takanori Gomi, in stating that “the drug is banned because of the damage it does to the person taking it. It could make you lethargic, slow your reflexes, and those are dangerous things in a combat sport (1).” This, of course, leads to another question: what does Mr Diaz’s record look like? The 26 year old is in fact a champion fighter, having held multiple titles in his weight class. Technically he has won 75% of his 28 professional fights, however, officially it is 71% because of the No Contest ruling in the fight against Takanori Gomi (4). For comparison, The Shamrock, Diaz’s most recent opponent and another multi-title Champion, has only won 66% of his 35 professional fights (5) and Randy Couture, also a multiple title holding UFC Champion, has only won 64% of is 25 professional fights (6). Clearly, Mr. Diaz is doing something right, but maybe he is just a fluke in the system and of no real significance to the bigger picture.

I had my suspicions, however, that he was not just a fluke and decide to investigate the effects of cannabis use on performance. I focused my research in six different areas: the official word on cannabis as a doping agent in sports, performance in driving, performance in general in novice vs. regular users on several measures, performance in other athletes known to use cannabis and how they feel about it, how this relates to the psychological state of flow known colloquially as being “in the zone” or “in the groove,” and finally, the evidence the state that regular cannabis use produces should facilitate getting into this zone and what this should mean to the novice versus skilled athlete.

Cannabis Doping: The official Word

In 1998, Ewing published an investigation into differential use of cannabis in athlete vs. non-athlete high school students. Interestingly, he found that cannabis use was higher among the male athlete population than in the non-athlete males. The reverse was true for female athletes. Ewing suggested that this might be due to a delayed first exposure effect in this group who were more likely than their non-athlete counterparts to forgo trying cannabis until after high school (7). In 2005, a similar study was published on French Sports Science University students which suggested both what might be possibly motivating this use and whether or not it had an enhancing or deleterious effect on the athletes. The authors suggested that cannabis was used to enhance performance via the relaxing qualities it produces. Furthermore, reported cannabis use for this reason was positively correlated to the competitive intensity of the sport in question (8). This is the closest contemporary science appears to have come to observing or recognizing this potential for cannabis to play a beneficial roll in an athlete’s overall plan or, depending on one’s perspective, to act as an effective doping agent.

Most available attempts in the literature to address the topic of cannabis use by athletes have been quite firmly against it. Although most acknowledge that cannabis is used by athletes for its relaxing effects they claim this is not enough to account for a performance enhancing effect considering all the other effects of cannabis. Often these studies focus on the immediate effects of acute cannabis intoxication such as impaired explicit and spatial memory functions, impaired focused attention on complex tasks, impaired sustained attention, impaired balance, reduced psychomotor activity, reductions in total cardio output and resulting reduced stamina for sustained activity (9, 10, 11). Indeed, this appears to be the end of the mainstream scientific party line with no attempt to dig deeper to elucidate why so many athletes choose to use cannabis (see Table 1) or what it might be doing for some of the more skilled individuals among them.

Cannabis and Driving: Performance in a Complex Behavior

Performance of skilled athletes, who regularly use cannabis, especially at various times following administration, has not particularly been studied yet. That said, many researchers use the evidence provided by studies on the effects of cannabis intoxication on driving performance for an example of a reasonably well-learned complex behavior requiring many functions required by sports minus the physical exertion (I suggest this simple difference matters, more on this later). I shall do the same while attempting to point out some of the issues with this analogy as it pertains to skilled athletes.

In drivers apparently novice to, or at least not significantly familiar with, the effects of cannabis, THC was orally administered via either 20mg Marinol or 16.5mg /45.7mg THC hemp milk drinks. Blood samples were taken at various intervals following administration to track serum levels of THC, its active metabolite 11-HO-THC, and their inactive carboxylated metabolite 11-nor-9-COOH-THC. This was accompanied by tests of skills necessary for safe driving. Subjects were also asked how willing they were to drive in several situations of varying degrees of perceived importance. Peak serum levels of THC were reached within an hour but peak intoxication correlated better with the peak in the ratio of (THC + 11-HO-THC):11-nor-9-COOH-THC. This is also when the strongest impairments on the tests of driving related skills, such as tracking, were observed and when subjects were least willing to drive, reporting the effects of intoxication to be unpleasant at the highest dose. Even so, many subjects were still willing to drive in the situations with the highest perceived importance (12).

The subjects in this study do not appear to be regular users of cannabis or may even be novice to its effects. I think it goes without saying that in this population, THC intoxication can be quite intense and overwhelming. There is also no evidence that these drivers had much — if any — familiarity with performing the skills asked of them while under the influence of cannabis. Finally, these subjects were average drivers and not highly skilled/trained athletes such as racecar drivers. These issues are important when trying to relate the effects on performance observed here to that which might be seen in trained athletes attempting to use cannabis as an ergogenic agent. Most athletes attempting to use cannabis in this fashion are likely to be regular or at least semi-regular users and as such are already familiar with its effects and, if attempting to use it ergogenically, would quickly become familiar with performing under these effects. Trained athletes, especially Olympic or professional level athletes, are by definition highly skilled and not just the average Jane who knows the rules of the game and plays with her friends. As such, when they compare to the population of drivers, they are the equivalent of a competitive race car driver.

An attempt was made to address at least one of these issues when the study was replicated. This time the researchers used participants who were all at least “occasional cannabis smokers” (13). It could therefore be argued that the subjects were reasonably familiar with the effects of cannabis and may have even driven under its influence in the past. This, however, only helps address some of the issues with the first study and does not resolve even those as signs of tolerance do not usually express in occasional smokers, which more often express signs of sensitization to the effects of cannabis especially in novel environments like the laboratory. Furthermore, both studies use oral and not intrapulmonary administration of THC. Most users of cannabis who have tried both routes of administration would agree that they produce discernibly different effects, one of which is a more prolonged and steady intoxication with the oral route while smoking peaks quickly and beginning to drop off within two hours. All these factors make it hard to equate such studies to the performance of highly skilled athletes evidencing signs of tolerance to the effects of cannabis, who are used to smoking small quantities before engaging in their chosen specialty.

A pilot study has attempted to address the issue of regular vs. novice or irregular use of cannabis but because of a sample size of two, it is of limited value at this time. However, the fact it utilized PET scans as part of the measure of performance both when the participants where sober and under the influence of THC makes the results interesting. When under the influence, the participants appeared to have higher metabolism compared to when sober in areas related to attention and motor coordination, and less activation in the motion traction parts of the visual cortex. These findings suggest that even in regular users, cannabis intoxication may negatively impact tasks that require coordinated movement, such as driving or sports (14). That said, the task was not one the subjects were highly experienced with or had experience with under the influence of cannabis.

Most of the previous issues, except for the high performance sports driver comparison, were reasonably effectively address finally by Ronen, et al. 2008. Ronen and colleagues mainly found that soon after smoking, cannabis appeared to impair driving abilities and increase the physical effort and discomfort involved in driving. This was accompanied by a tendency to compensate by slowing down compared to baseline scores. Compare this to a blood level of 0.05% alcohol, which was found to increase sleepiness while increasing speed over baseline scores. The subjects in this study smoked either 13mg or 17mg THC, were familiar with driving and the effects of cannabis, and they still showed signs of impairment (which they correctly adjusted for) in this complex behavior. That said, no impact on driving was observed 24 hours after the 17mg dose (15). So, based on these findings, our analogy can at least say that it is likely that for average, non-professional athletes who use cannabis on a semi regular to regular basis outside of doing their chosen sport, getting high shortly before participating would probably impair their performance. That said, give even one day since their last use and there should be no impact.

This still however leaves the question of the high performance drivers (no pun intended) experienced with the use of cannabis of which there are several (see Table 1). How would this group perform if they were given time to adjust to the testing environment (i.e. the driving simulator) and to the effects of cannabis in this environment? I would not be satisfied with this analogy for sports until about 15 sports drivers familiar with the effects of cannabis were given at least ten 30 to 60 minute training sessions on the simulator, five tests sober and five after smoking cannabis, followed by two testing days both sober and after smoking. It is suggested that only under these conditions would it be most likely to observe the ability of cannabis to facilitate getting “in the zone” during a measure of driving performance and that only this would make the analogy complete since facilitating psychological flow is the primary reason athletes would use cannabis ergogenically.

Another implication of this analogy is that perhaps Nick Diaz is special in the way he responds to cannabis because of his ADHD. This would definitely appear to be a possibility when one considers the case report of the young German man with ADHD who in the process of reapplying for his driver’s license was tested under the influence of rather high serum levels of cannabinoids and was found to be better than averagely fit to drive on several of the measures of performance taken and at least passing on all the others. It was suggested that cannabinoids were producing a beneficial effect on this individual’s ADHD symptoms and may actually be improving his performance over baseline (which was not taken because the subject was clearly in no state to drive) (16). If we apply this to our driving/sports analogy, we see that it is possible the same could be happening for Nick Diaz, even though it has been demonstrated he can win just fine while testing negative for cannabinoids. If this were the case, then he would be outside the norm and not be representative of the impact of cannabis use on athletes.

Chronic Intoxication in Experimental Animals

Some of the effects of cannabis intoxication believed to be important to performance in sports have been studies in rats, so it would be reasonable to ask for which effects are tolerance observed and for which is it absent. One effect of CB1 agonists, like THC, which repeatedly apparently fails to induce the development of tolerance is the acquisition and retrieval of spatial memory. Even after repeated daily exposure for two weeks, rats and mice both appear to express spatial memory deficits when tested under the influence of the drug (17, 18).

That said, other findings have called these findings into question. One measure of a drug’s rewarding properties is whether or not, and to what degree, it can produce preference for a drug-linked environment given a choice when sober. This is called the conditioned place preference paradigm. Most drugs of serious abuse (nicotine, caffeine, alcohol, cocaine and other stimulants, opiates, benzodiazepines and barbiturates) readily induce place preference in lab animals. The cannabinoids, on the other hand, appear to only do so when very specific conditions are met. Otherwise, THC and synthetic cannabinoids have been repeatedly shown to produce place aversion (19, 20). Furthermore, cannabinoid antagonism appears to induce place preference in these animals (19). This finding has implications for performance of spatial memory tasks in rodents suggesting that “distaste” for cannabinoid intoxication could be inhibiting performance as much as or more so than impairment of spatial memory as such (20). Even worse, such effects as place preference or aversion only grow stronger with repeat exposure, which would indeed give the impression of lack of tolerance to the supposed spatial memory impairment. Another study of especially long-term exposure (13 weeks) to high doses in rats, followed by seven weeks abstinence from the drug, found that not only did the THC-treated animals show no impairments compared to their untreated counterparts, but that those who had received the two highest doses exhibited less signs of anxiety and better complex maze performance (21). It appears if anything that long term exposure to THC improved sober spatial functioning in these animals.

Even though spatial memory issues observed in animals following cannabinoid intoxication are used to strengthen the arguments against the use of cannabinoids by athletes, the full picture makes it hard to tell what if any relevance these observations have to human athletes. Furthermore, tolerance is indeed observed to many of the adverse acute effects of cannabinoid intoxication in animals. For example, although acute intoxication inhibits both acquisition of new tasks and performance on acquired tasks, tolerance to these effects developed after chronic administration. Interestingly, if a low-dose cannabinoid antagonist was substituted for THC following repeat exposure to THC, the ability to acquire a new task was impaired (22). This suggests that the brain learns to compensate for the disruptive effects of cannabinoids on learning, possibly through adjustments in the tone of the endocannabinoid system, and that learning can be impaired by any change significantly deviating from that which this system is currently set to.

Another potentially beneficial effect has been observed in animals following administration of low-dose cannabinoid agonists. Moderate to high doses of cannabinoids were found to inhibit stimulus detection processes. However, low doses appear to facilitate stimulus detection (23). This suggests that not only can athletes develop tolerance to many of the adverse effects of acute cannabinoid intoxication but that a hit or two of cannabis might actually improve some parts of the athlete’s game, such as “keeping their eye on the ball.” It might be particularly interesting to study this question in cannabis smoking jugglers, of which there are many.

Measures of Performance in Regular Users

Although a consensus has not been reached, many studies have presented evidence suggesting intoxication-induced impairment even in long-term regular cannabis users. There is, however, general consensus on the acute effects. During acute intoxication, cannabis disrupts vigilance, ability to perform mental tasks, explicit and working memory, and one’s ability to correctly estimate intervals of either time or space. Negative reactions such as panic, random disconnected thoughts, hallucinations, delusions and other disturbing perceptual changes can also occur in some individuals (24). Although occasionally appearing at typical recreational doses, such responses occur more frequently with does significantly larger than typical for the individual in question (Interestingly, the WHO has suggested that at least synthetic THC be placed on Schedule IV of the United Nations Convention on Psychotropic Drugs, the lowest and least restrictive of this scheduling system (24).). It seems that, with rare exception, acute cannabis intoxication will result in impaired performance in sports.

Ally4

So how does frequent intoxication compare to the acute intoxication? One of the first studies to really effectively address this question found that while mental processing speed was slower, accuracy in task performance was unaffected by the intoxication produced by smoking THC in regular users of cannabis (average: 24 joints a week) (25). This suggests that while processing speed for explicit tasks requiring executive functions may be somewhat impaired in regular cannabis smokers, they have found ways of compensating for many of the other effects, possibly at the cost of this reduction in processing speed. Another study found that in regular users smoking 13mg, THC produces no significant cognitive-motor skill or coordination impairment, and only a slight impairment to processing speed. On the other hand, the same users were significantly impaired by 17mg THC on measures taken. This is despite the fact that both doses were rated as pleasurable, with good drug effect and high (26). A year later, another study essentially confirmed this finding. Here it was demonstrated that even at the peak of effect, frequent uses showed no significant impairments other than a slight reduction in processing speed as evidenced by a slight increase in reaction time in the stop signal task. In contrast, the same dose significantly impaired performance of occasional users on all measures taken. This suggests that the performance of athletes who frequently use cannabis would not be particularly impaired by low doses of cannabis.

Where do the Athletes Stand?

There is little question where Nick Diaz stands. Cannabis helps him approach life more consistently, possibly even including his training, though this is not so clear. In the past, smoking the night before a fight has not appeared to affect his performance. However, Nick Diaz is just one of millions of athletes the world over. He is also not the first to come out publicly in support of cannabis. For example, Mark Stepnoski, five-time All-Pro center and member of two winning Dallas Cowboy Super Bowl championship teams, is a long time cannabis smoker who went on from football to take over as president of the Texas chapter of NORML. Although admitting to socially using cannabis periodically from high school through his career, Mark claims to have done his best to have kept his cannabis use and his athletic life separate. Although not providing much input on the effects of cannabis on performance, Mark is clearly no slouch and his story does not suggest that his cannabis use hurt his career in any discernable fashion (27).

On an administrative level, the UK’s Sports Minister, Richard Caborn, stated in 2006 that he felt the ban on cannabis should be lifted for the 2012 London Olympic Games, suggesting the real threat lay in the realm of ever evolving serious doping agents. Let the police focus on policing society and social drugs. He suggests, “[The World Anti-doping Authority is] not in the business of policing society. We are in the business of rooting out cheats in sports. That’s what WADA’s core function is about (28).” However this is of little consolation for those, like Canadian Olympic Snowboarder Ross Rebagliati, have already had their gold medals revoked due to testing positive for cannabis. Clearly Ross was not impaired by the significant level of cannabinoids in his bloodstream when he won that good medal. However, you never know, this might be just what multi-record breaking multi-gold medalist, Michael Phelps, was hoping to hear. Perhaps then he might grow some integrity, instead of caving and apologizing for something reasonably benign at the first sign of corporate sponsor pressure. Let your record speak for itself, Michael, it demands no apology.

ally6

In most cases, the portion of cannabis users inside any given sport is often significant and may in some cases even be a majority. Those cannabis users inside pro sports have often reported that cannabis use amongst their peers is common if not rampant. During an interview with the New York Post in 2001, basketball player Charles Oakley claimed that about 60% of his fellow NBA players use cannabis, which agrees with the findings of a 1997 poll which found between 60% and 70% of players at the time consumed cannabis. Indeed, NBA and NFL players get busted for cannabis possession or for testing positive for it on a regular basis and many of the highest performing NBA players are rumored to be regular users (29). One NFL player, Ricky Williams, has even retired rather than unnecessarily change his lifestyle for the game (30).

In a truly inspirational piece of work on the subject, semi-retired pro-wrestler and avid cannabis activist Rob Van Dam, not only suggested cannabis was quite common in his sport, telling stories of personal use with other wrestlers and pointing to numerous cannabis-related busts of pro-wrestlers, but suggested that it could provide performance enhancing effects “in athletic and contact sports (such as wrestling, power-lifting, football), co-ordination sports (snowboarding, surfing, basketball), and finesse sports (golf, bowling) (30).” His observations appear to be confirmed by Table 1, which lists a diverse variety of athletes caught “doping” with cannabinoids. Rob Van Dam is perhaps the most extreme pro-wrestler to date. Starting out at Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) and eventually moving to World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) when the original ECW went under in 2001, Rob Van Dam has participated in over 1000 events. He is the only wrestler to have held both the ECW and the WWE championships at the same time (31). All together, he held 19 Championship belts, some multiple times, and received numerous other commendations throughout his primary wrestling career.

For those stuck on the fact that pro-wresting is a semi-scripted sport, to put it bluntly — some of that shit simply can’t be faked! He has also received numerous injuries over his career, ranging from concussions to broken limbs and eventually surgery on one of his knees (30). As he said in a 1999 interview with High Times when asked what it’s like to land on a concrete floor, “It feels exactly like what it looks like. When I jump over the top rope and land ten feet down on my head on the cement, it feels like I just landed on my head on cement (32).” Not wanting to impede his dream of pro-wresting, Rob did not even try cannabis until his 21st birthday, a year after he became a professional wrestler. He was at an event in Jamaica with other pro-wrestlers he had always looked up to and it was these fellow athletes who introduced him to cannabis. He has used cannabis regularly ever since, claiming to have frequently used cannabis at events, even once almost missing his cue while passing a joint with his peers. In other words, he performed his extreme death-defying feats exceptionally well, even when technically high (30).ally5

When asked what it was like to perform after smoking a joint and if he had ever experienced what he felt were negative effects on his performance, Rob had this to share this with me:

“The effects of cannabis block stresses of the mind and body, and also seem to bring out a happy, positive emotion that can be referred to as ‘comfortable.’ Finding comfort while performing high pressure situations is extremely helpful. The pressures applied by the circumstances as well as by oneself to be at one’s very best in front of a live crowd of screaming fans makes most performers visibly nervous, often for hours before the event, gaining momentum as the moment approaches. To be able to walk through the curtains feeling fine and even looking forward to ‘doing your thing’ can turn an intense experience into a pleasurable one at times, and it shows in the performance.

I’ve found that agility and gracefulness are not affected, only attitude in a positive way. On the other hand, I do believe that a slight measure of respiratory stamina is sacrificed, meaning the performer may breath just a little bit harder when intoxicated — which is offset by being in great condition. If the competition is a breath holding contest or maybe even a long distance run, it is possible that a lot of toking could work against you, but I also believe that the amount of consumption is a huge factor at that point, meaning one or two tokes (prospectively) may benefit that same runner.”ally7

In his article, Rob goes on to discuss how cannabis might facilitate performance in different sports. By far the most insightful of his observations, and one crucial to the development of the central thesis of this article, is that cannabis appears to facilitate the change in mental and physical state required to “get into the zone” (30). This observation is important because in it is the key to unlocking how cannabis can be ergogenic under the right circumstances. It is also one very familiar to the cannabis using population of jugglers such as myself but one which I had not personally put much thought into before.

Flow into the Zone

After reading Rob Van Dam’s comments on “the zone,” or psychological Flow as it is officially called, I was able to build a picture of what is going on in the brain during this process on a variety of measures and related these to how cannabis effects the same measures. In so doing, I came up with a testable theory for the most likely conditions under which ergogenic effects from cannabis might be observed experimentally, thereby proving what many athletes have been saying all along. I propose a theory of low-dose cannabis-induced ergogenesis, in the form of improved access to the state of flow, in highly skilled athletes evidencing signs of tolerance to the effects of regular cannabis use.ally8

Psychologist Mihály Csíkszentmihályi proposed the concept of “Flow,” deriving the name from the phrase “going with the flow.” Although he admits he is not the first to document this state, he may be the first to describe it in Western psychology. There are several features which commonly occur during the state of flow, not all of which need be present for the state to qualify. Wikipedia lists the nine features as (33):

“Clear goals (expectations and rules are discernible and goals are attainable and align appropriately with one’s skill set and abilities).

Concentrating and focusing, a high degree of concentration on a limited field of attention (a person engaged in the activity will have the opportunity to focus and to delve deeply into it).

A loss of the feeling of self-consciousness, the merging of action and awareness.

Distorted sense of time, one’s subjective experience of time is altered.

Direct and immediate feedback (successes and failures in the course of the activity are apparent, so that behavior can be adjusted as needed).ally9

Balance between ability level and challenge (the activity is neither too easy nor too difficult).

A sense of personal control over the situation or activity.

The activity is intrinsically rewarding, so there is an effortlessness of action.

People become absorbed in their activity, and focus of awareness is narrowed down to the activity itself, action awareness merging (33).”

There are several situations in which flow is commonly experienced. Musicians often experience it, especially when performing improvisational solos. It may also be experienced during some forms of meditation. Modern video games are often designed around the concept so as to make for a full emersion experience; when playing, you lose awareness of time and to a great extent the rest of your inner and outer environment. It has also been suggested that runners in the depths of a “runner’s high” experience this state. The ability to enter and utilize this state is necessary for the mastery of such sports as tennis and golf. Professional racers have even described the experience of flow during particularly good races (33).

When challenges and skills are simultaneously above average, a broadly positive experience emerges. Also vital to the flow state is a sense of control, which nevertheless seems simultaneously effortless and masterful. Control and concentration manifest with a transcendence of normal awareness; one aspect of this transcendence is the loss of self-consciousness (33).

In some people, cannabis can produce flow-features 3, 4, 9 and possibly 8. This is the second suggestion that cannabis might facilitate entering the state of flow, the first coming from athletes stating so. Besides these psychological features of flow, there are also brainwaves and neural features which accompany it. Decreases in beta and increases in alpha, theta and sometimes even delta brainwaves are believed to be associated with the same situations as flow is associated with. This includes meditation (34), the runner’s high (35), golf (36) and group drumming (37). The use of cannabis also increases theta and alpha waves at the expense of beta waves. Even the relatively non-psychoactive cannabinoid, cannabidiol (CBD), on its own is capable of producing this effect (38). Acute administration of THC produces this effect on the brainwaves transiently (39) whereas heavy use for 15-24 years consecutively produces a constant increase in theta and alpha waves (40). This change in brain activity has been dubbed “transient hypofrontality” because of decreases on frontal lobe activity observed during activities such as endurance running, daydreaming, meditation and many forms of drug intoxication (41).

The neurocognitive basis for the transient hypofrontality observed during the experience of flow has been elucidated by Dietrich in 2004 (42). Cognitive theory has proposed separate but equal forms of memory/processes in the brain called the implicit or procedural memory and explicit or declarative memory. Explicit memory involves deliberate, conscious retrieval of learned information or previous experiences. The definition of implicit is a bit more elusive for some. Implicit memory involves things exemplified by the phrase “you never forget how to ride a bike.” The use of the implicitly learned memory “how to ride a bike” gets automatically accessed and utilized with no conscious effort on your part. An explicit process would be consciously working out how to read a new word whereas an implicit process would be the typical effortless reading you are non-consciously doing now (43). Not only do these two types of memory differ in function but also differ in which brain regions they utilize. Dietrich, 2004, used this framework to analyze flow and develop a very enlightening picture of the phenomenon. First he discussed neural structures associated with the two types of memory. Implicit memory is mostly supported by the basil ganglia whereas the frontal lobe and medial temporal structures underlie explicit memory. Where skill-based implicit memory is more efficient, explicit processes involve the executive functions associated with greater flexibility and gone awry allow us to over-think things. Usually explicit functions dominate conscious awareness and neurocognitive resources, however, during flow, these functions are suppressed and resources are diverted to the more efficient implicit processes that come to the forefront of awareness. This allows the most practiced skills to be put to use without any interference from the “over-thinking” explicit processes (42). The experience of flow thus by definition requires a state of transient hypofrontality very similar to that produced by cannabis.

In diverting resources away from the forebrain and its related executive processes to the areas of the brain associated with coordinated movement such as the visual cortex and motor cortex, this transient hypofrontality is produced by exercise and is likely responsible for much of the cognitive and emotional benefits observed after exercise (44). Similar changes in neural activity have also been observed in jazz improvisation using functional magnetic resonance imaging (45, 46, 47). Some athletes have suggested that the easier it is to reach this state and the faster one reaches it, the more benefit one gains from the exercise and that cannabis provides just such facilitation. As Rob Van Dam might say, if you are not comfortable, you are just not going to get in the zone. Cannabis provides a comfortable state of mind. Considering the historically high frequency of cannabis use among jazz musicians, one must wonder if they feel similarly.

As it turns out, cannabis too produces this state of hypofrontality (48), transiently at first (39) and then pervasively with heavy daily use over a period of decades (40). Cannabis suppresses the explicit memory and related functions while leaving implicit memory and working memory functions untouched. Indicative of the implicit/explicit efficiency/flexibility trade off, THC can produce a speed/accuracy trade off (48).

Conclusion

These findings help elucidate the effects of cannabis and THC which could prove useful in inducing flow and thereby improve performance. The use of low doses of cannabis in regular users may improve stimulus detection and visual tracking (23), suppress the executive functions in the forebrain, and allow well-learned skills in the implicit memory to readily come to the forefront. This facilitation of flow would be most likely to occur in regular users of cannabis and when the difficulty of the activity at hand was well-matched to the skill level of the person performing it. In the case of low-dose cannabis combined with exercise and sports, there may even be a degree of hypofrontality synergism produced. It is likely that these benefits would be lost after administration of moderate and strong doses and therefore should be avoided in combination with such activities. It is suggested that the less of a skill base an athlete already possessed, the less benefit cannabis could provide. For some activities, cannabis could even be an impediment until the skill as been mastered.

The theory I have proposed here is based on anecdotal and experimental evidence. The theory itself has not been directly tested to date in the laboratory but is clearly worth investigating. Future research should focus on the highly skilled “artisans” of any field, in particular the regular cannabis users among them, while they are under the influence of small doses of THC or cannabis. It may also be useful to rule out the amplified effects of cannabis intoxication in a novel environment by providing at least two training sessions in the experimental environment under the influence of cannabinoids. A couple fields which might be particularly worth investigating are high performance drivers, skilled jugglers capable of improvisational juggling (i.e., not following a single pattern or routine), and video game savants.

Would this potentially ergogenic effect from cannabis facilitated flow be considered cheating by the various sports authorities? Or would UK’s Sports Minister, Richard Caborn, withdraw his request that cannabis be removed from the list of substances banned from 2012 Olympics if he suspected it? Perhaps yes, but it is also possible that such an effect would be determined to be inconsequential as hints to its existence have often been scientifically dismissed in the past. In the meantime, it is likely that those athletes in the know like Ron Van Dam and Nick Diaz will simply continue to do what they know works while outperforming their peers, setting records, winning championships and earning gold medals.

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Brain Wave States & How To Access Them. Synthesis Learning 2005-2008. HYPERLINK “http://synthesislearning.com/article/brwav.htm”http://synthesislearning.com/article/brwav.htm (Accessed 5/24/2009).

Baumeister, J, Reinecke, K, Liesen, H, and Weiss, M. Cortical activity of skilled performance in a complex sports related motor task. European Journal of Applied Physiology, 2008 Nov; 104 (4): 625-31.

Winkelman, M.  Complementary therapy for addiction: “drumming out drugs”. American Journal of Public Health, 2003 Apr; 93 (4): 647-51.

Murillo-Rodríguez, E, Millán-Aldaco, D, Palomero-Rivero, M, Mechoulam, R, and Drucker-Colín, R. The nonpsychoactive Cannabis constituent cannabidiol is a wake-inducing agent. Behavioral Neuroscience, 2008 Dec; 122 (6): 1378-82.

Struve, FA, Manno, BR, Kemp, P, Patrick, G, and Manno, JE. Acute marihuana (THC) exposure produces a “transient” topographic quantitative EEG profile identical to the “persistent” profile seen in chronic heavy users. Clinical Electroencephalography, 2003 Apr; 34 (2): 75-83.

Struve, FA, Patrick, G, Straumanis, JJ, Fitz-Gerald, MJ, and Manno, J. Possible EEG sequelae of very long duration marihuana use: pilot findings from topographic quantitative EEG analyses of subjects with 15 to 24 years of cumulative daily exposure to THC. Clinical Electroencephalography, 1998 Jan; 29 (1): 31-6.

Dietrich, A. Functional neuroanatomy of altered states of consciousness: the transient hypofrontality hypothesis. Consciousness and Cognition, 2003 Jun; 12 (2): 231-56.

Dietrich, A. Neurocognitive mechanisms underlying the experience of flow. Consciousness and Cognition, 2004 Dec; 13 (4): 746-61.

Explicit Memory. Wikipedia. HYPERLINK “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explicit_memory”http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explicit_memory (Accessed 5/24/2009).

Dietrich, A. Transient hypofrontality as a mechanism for the psychological effects of exercise. Psychiatry Research, 2006 Nov 29; 145 (1): 79-83.

Limb, CJ and Braun, AR. Neural substrates of spontaneous musical performance: an FMRI study of jazz improvisation. PLoS ONE, 2008 Feb 27; 3 (2): e1679.

Bengtsson, SL, Csíkszentmihályi, M and Ullén, F. Cortical regions involved in the generation of musical structures during improvisation in pianists. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2007 May; 19 (5): 830-42.

Berkowitz, AL and Ansari, D. Generation of novel motor sequences: the neural correlates of musical improvisation. NeuroImage, 2008 Jun; 41 (2): 535-43.

Curran, HV, Brignell, C, Fletcher, S, Middleton, P, and Henry, J. Cognitive and subjective dose-response effects of acute oral Delta 9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) in infrequent cannabis users. Psychopharmacology (Berl), 2002 Oct; 164 (1): 61-70.


27
Oct 09

Faith Vs. Belief!

By: “Suggarpaws” @ greenpassion.org

Dictionary definitions:

faithvbeliefFaith
–noun 1. belief that is not based on proof

Belief
-noun 1. confidence in the truth or facts


My name is Tish, and I live in the mid-south, where there is NO available help for people in need of medical grade marijuana, and the options for acquiring any decent marijuana are very slim. I was raised in a kind, open minded, and peace loving environment, where marijuana was always present for family unity, quality of life, and spiritual purposes. My father was busted for a large marijuana crop when was I was younger, a Reagan POW until a few years ago. This had a terrible effect on my family, and being so young and naive, gave me a lasting wrong impression of marijuana. He was a long-time hippie-believer in the positive effects of marijuana, and had always stated it could be improved to really help those in need. “Have some faith Tisha,” he would say, “the universe takes care of its children.”

“Hogwash!” I said, “It was an easy way out to easy money at OUR expense!”

Oh, the convictions of a pre-teen know-it-all — until now.

Several years ago, I was diagnosed with SLE (systemic lupus). This has been a struggle for me, but I have managed with very little medical treatment, relying mostly on homeopathic care. The medications they use to treat SLE are awful, only treating certain symptoms, not the disease, and inevitably causing the need for more medication to treat the side effects that those medications cause. My husband has been a great rock for me, always offering care that not all men may extend, and always greeting my needs with a smile and understanding. It will all be okay, I can do this as long as he is by my side… Right…?

And then came August of 2007. We had just moved to Texas as my husband was getting ready to start a new job that we were both excited about. We had a brief window of “time” before he started work, and after taking our own beach trollop, he decides to take a fishing trip to San Francisco with “the guys.” I waved him off about midday, wishing him good fortune and lecturing him about not driving straight through. He was so happy, life seemed to be finally coming together for us…

8:00 a.m. the next morning, I get “the call.”

Imagine heading out on a once-a-year road trip with your friends to see San Francisco for the first time. Excited about the cultural options (and maybe even some bay fishing), you are laughing and joking while each of you take your turn driving throughout the night. It is dawn, and after finishing your eight hours of driving, you stop for some breakfast, gas, and to take a few beautiful desert pics on I-10 in Arizona. Everyone gets back in the car, your driving duties are done, and you go to sleep in the back seat… To then awaken in the hospital in Tuscan.

Not knowing where you are or what has happened, you are hurriedly being told you are being whisked into surgery from the accident you don’t remember being in. “Surgery! For what? Can I call my wife?”

You are missing your right hand and part of your forearm (but they won’t let you see it before the amputation), your ribs are broken, one of your lungs is punctured, you have a hemorraging brain injury (that they want to operate on) and road rash from the very top of your head to the bottoms of your feet. “Tisha, baby, they are going to take my hand! They want to cut my head open Tisha, where are you? Please don’t let them cut into my head! I’ve never been so scared, and they won’t give me any water. What happened to me?”

Speaking via my cell phone at the airport: “I am already on my way my love! You are the strongest man I know; you are going to be okay!”

After surgery and a quick 72 hour stay in the trauma ward, you are “kicked out” for lack of insurance, and told to resume care at home (more than 1000 miles away). This is the very thing that happened to my husband.

Though I have tried, I know that I can’t really imagine what he must feel. This has been the hardest thing either of us has ever dealt with, and for the most part, have had no help in doing so. Garrett now suffers from PTSD as well, due to the fact he was sleeping when the event occurred, which is coupled with the minor traumatic brain injury, both aggravating each other. He is in constant pain. Phantom pains in his arm, where he feels he has electricity running through it or says he feels as if his hand is still there and constantly opening and closing. Constant headaches. Pain in his back, his side, and legs. Terrible trouble sleeping and reoccurring night terrors when he does sleep. Depression. Anxiety. Yet… Somehow… he goes on each day, and tries to hold onto the hope of one day things getting better. I am humbled by his perseverance in the darkest of hours, and the absolute love of life that he so terribly wants to be able to act on once again.

After the first year, having no insurance, we had used all of our savings and extended ourselves financially to try to get him the minimum medical care needed. We were exasperated from being denied all help from Medicaid, Social Security Disability, and government programs. To our dismay, we had to make the difficult choice to move away from our home and closer to his family for help. Since that point, the only medical treatment my husband has gotten has been for his blood pressure. No prosthetic. No therapy. No pain management. No neurologist. Due to our financial devastation resulting from the thousands of dollars spent medically, we had to make due.

Thankfully, one of my family friends got back in touch with me by chance. They told me they were growing medical-grade hydro, a strain called Dr. Atomic, and offered to sell to us at a low cost. I dunno, but really, what could it hurt for Garrett to get high and forget about things for a while, right? Yet, this was a godsend! Amazingly, his panic attacks almost completely ceased. He could sleep again. His headaches diminished. His pain was much more manageable, especially the phantom pains, which were a constant reminder that he no longer had a hand. In some miraculous way, within having this relief, he made leaps and bound with accepting what had happened to him and “moving on.” I finally felt as if I could leave him home alone on a daily basis to work again. For the five months we had this option, life was just better. Both our attitudes and ability to maintain hope were greatly improved, even under our current circumstances. I participated with him, and found that not only did it relieve my stress and depression, but it also helped the intense joint pain I have suffered under for so long! Wow! My stupid conclusions as a child couldn’t have been more inaccurate.

Then came the DEA. Off went our friend, and with him all options we had for what I consider to be our medicine.

I so wish we had the means to move to a medical-marijuana friendly state, and be able to sustain ourselves, but at the moment we don’t. I am keeping the hope that soon that will change, but right now life is kind of difficult again. It is astounding the impact that the lack of marijuana has on our everyday life.

Regardless, I no longer need to rely on the “faith” my father suggested… I am a believer. So much so, that I am a willing to risk a personal medicinal garden until we can move — and hopefully grow into helping others!

happy-hippie


27
Oct 09

To FIM or not to FIM and when to Top, Lollypop or Supercrop

fim1Jef Tek
TY Cultivation Specialist

I recently conducted an experiment lasting over four separate crops of Afghani Bullrider Sweet 16 that consisted of simply FIM-ing two of the four batches and not FIM-ing the other two. The crops were staggered a week apart and fed the exact same Botanicare nutrients and RO water, each in 4-foot square grow beds and under a 1000-watt HPS light. The acronym “FIM” stands for Fuck, I Missed. When a grower was attempting to top his plants, he inadvertently pinched too little plant material from the top then subsequently coined the term when he found accelerated growth in the remaining branches. FIM-ing is subtler than topping and redistributes hormones throughout the plant without stressing the whole plant too much, as can happen when fully topping them. FIM technically consists of simply trimming or pinching approximately 75% of the top-most growing tip. See picture for better view and you’ll get the idea.

fim2j

When a plant is intended to be a mother plant, topping is the most popular choice. Topping will produce many, many individual branches that will make dozens of excellent clone-stock. If plants are just too darn tall to fit into the bud room (over 16” tall for an indica or over 12” tall for a sativa indoor crop), then topping is a good choice for you. Obviously, outdoor crop heights don’t matter as much unless you want your outdoor crop to finish below the level of your fence, for example. I discovered topping by accident when I dropped a wall on some plants — one was totally crushed, but one was only decapitated two inches and was left with a hollow stem. I thought it was done-for because of the gaping hole you could slide a pencil into, but in a few days, the remainder of the plant survived and produced just as much buds as the unbroken plants did. It had two main colas the size of my forearm; the rest all had one main cola. Topping works but growth is slightly delayed while the plant recovers, try it — you’ll like it. Dropping a wall on your plants is entirely optional!fim3

Lollypopping is the technique of trimming-up the lowest branches to give yourself good access for watering and to keep a nice air-gap between the soil and your lowest leaves. These lower branches never get enough light to fully bud and deplete the rest of your plant’s resources if not removed. These lower branches, when removed while still in the vegetative state, make excellent clone donors. They are the oldest part of the plant and have the most hormone buildup and will root quickly. Check them over well and make sure they aren’t infected with thrips or spider mites by giving the fresh cuttings a quick neem oil dip, or H2O2 and water.  If every plant lollypopped yields just one clone, you will have a perpetual crop with no need for mothers. This will free up space and prevent bug problems that come whenever anything sits in the same room for more than a month (like mother plants). Lollypopping ultimately gives the remaining buds more girth and fuller “lollypop” appearance when finished flowering. Lollypopping is a must, this you can trust, much better than having your buds in the dust.

fim4

Extreme twisting of plant main stems results in the inner hurd or membrane breaking but without damaging the outer skin. In a week, these twisted areas of the stem will be almost twice as thick and woody. When gently twisted between nodes, you can hear a celery-like snap within the stem; it even works on side branches when they are big enough. These tougher limbs will carry more water and nutrients, which will in-turn create and support heavier buds. This technique is known as supercropping and it too was discovered by accident. When you really want to maximize a crop but are willing to gently “break” each plant and then wait for growth to catch up, this could be just the ticket for you. It is remarkably easy once you get the feel of it. I once had a crop of 32 assorted plants, seven of them were Jack Herrer and in week three of budding, they shot-up nine inches taller than the rest of the room. I didn’t want to just top them nine inches because there were buds already forming on the top colas, but I didn’t want them touching the lights and burning either. My solution was to actually “break” each Jack Herrer plant about 12 inches from the top, then “break” the main stem back up 6 to 8 inches from the first break and tie the two 180-degree bends with a few twist ties. The very next day, the branches that were pointing down in the center section were now facing the light and without careful examination it was hard to even notice. The two 180-degree turns on all seven plants fattened up and delivered all the nutrients necessary to finish the top buds perfectly. The Jack Herrer finished in nine weeks and was the same height as the rest of the room. This is supercropping and it works; that crop will be talked about forever, it was legendary! My four FIM test crops in this story were Lollypopped but not Supercropped.

fim5

Back to the FIM technique. When you remove the required 60 to 80 per cent of the top sprout, this will cause the rest of the plant’s limbs to firm-up. The top bud will still fill out, but without growing upwards too much. Afghani Bullrider is a mostly-Indica strain that finishes in eight weeks regularly. The FIM-ed crops still finished in eight weeks but some of the main buds were double-wide. You can see some disfiguration of leaves at the FIM level in these photos, but clearly the main bud kept growing. I like the FIM colas because they are flatter and wider, as opposed to the standard pointy colas the non-FIM-ed crop produces. There are still variations from crop to crop because of root development and age of plant when it went into my perpetual bud room, so average weight per plant won’t be a true gauge of performance. My AB plants always average one to two ounces apiece, but the FIM-ed plants are fuller and have more pronounced lateral branches that are fully developed. A theory is if you have the kind of plant that matures from the top down, like Blueberry Skunk does, and you know you can harvest the top cola at eight weeks and the lower buds will keep growing and growing for four or more weeks before finishing, you might try FIM to equalize the harvest time. I like to harvest whole plants and keep the show moving and FIM doesn’t slow anything down. If you pinch off too little there will be no difference whatsoever but when you clip just enough you will wind-up with twin-towering colas on one plant every time, and who out there doesn’t like double colas? I didn’t think so. So the 64 million dollar question, “To FIM or Not to FIM”? The answer is, yes, FIM!  You have nothing to lose, they require a little more trimming because they are stockier and bushier, but that trim makes more hash anyway, so why not? FIM stands for “Fuck, I Missed,” but you really can’t miss with this technique. It’s a Win/Win-FIM situation, for sure.

fim6fim7fim8fim9fim10fim11


27
Oct 09

Ethogarden Botanicals and Natural Universe, Inc.

Herbal and aromatherapy products

By Ally (aka pflover)

I recently had the opportunity to sample several herbal and aroma therapy products available in Canada from Ethnogarden Botanicals and Natural Universe, Inc. and thought I would share my experience.ethno1

Many sources online claim that Sceletium tortousum and its active constituent mesembrine are effective SSRIs. These claims appear mostly to be based off of US patent 6,288,104 which states that mesembrine is an SSRI and describes axiolytic effects following ingesting it (1). Based on these findings I decided to try both whole Sceletium tortousum plant matter and mesembrine tincture. I personally did not find standardized mesembrine tincture to be effective when compared to Sceletium tortousum powder in gum. I did notice some effects from it but overall less distinct than the combination of gum and whole herb. This might be due to the whole herb containing as many as nine more alkaloids which have similar structures and effects to mesembrine. The alcohol content in the original formula of the tincture was rather high and it burned a bit, making me wonder if a glycerin tincture might work. As a result, a glycerin version should now be available. As an SSRI, mesembrine is fast acting. I was able to use gum plus the whole herb to help ease my recent withdrawal from Celexa, a pharmaceutical SSRI, starting at about half a gram of herb in gum down to about 0.05g – 0.1g over about two and a half weeks. I cannot comment on whether or not the tincture would work the same, but it appears to have a slightly less complex effect and at higher doses is more edgy than the whole herb. Onset of full effect is also slower. Although producing a more edgy effect at first, 3ml of tincture appeared to produce effects similar to that of 0.5g whole herb in gum, which became more tranquillizing with time. This may in part be due to a reduced amount of time in contact with the mucus membranes of the mouth, the preferred route of administration. This is good news for those interested in either sceletium or mesembrine products, as the price should be going down soon.

In a hit to anti-addiction research, shortly after Ethnogarden Botanicals made their contract with the Bwiti of Gabon to supply iboga root bark from the Bwiti’s massive farm, the Gabon government passed a ban on the export of iboga products. The primary supplier of Ethnogarden Botanical’s sceletium products in Cameroon has offered to take up the slack and if all goes well, this should allow Ethnogarden Botanicals to once again provide an adequate supply of ibogaine to researchers and clinicians working to break the cycle of addiction.

I had previously reported that the whole kratom leaf available at Ethnogarden Botanicals may be a reasonably affordable choice for those looking to investigate herbal alternatives for analgesic pain relief. Although this is probably true, there has been significant negative feedback concerning adverse effects on mood (irritability and grumpiness) following regular administration; however, investigations into kratom alkaloid and kratom alkaloid derivative tinctures have not reliably observed this effect on mood. As a result, the tinctures and combination tinctures might be the best way to go. However, having no experience with regular administration of whole kratom leaf, I cannot comment on this phenomenon directly. The tinctures available at Ethnogarden botanicals are very effective as analgesics, however, with the Kratom Combo #4 producing the most benefit. Preliminary findings suggest that at a dosage of 10 ml per 24 hours, this combination may have the same analgesic potential as four 80 mg OxyContin over the same time period with less intoxication and runny nose the only observed side effect thus far.  Lower dosages seem to be effective for weaning subjects off methadone. It should be noted, however, that these findings are still awaiting official replication. For those wishing to fine-tune their research, there are also four Essence of Kratom tinctures providing a great deal of control over exact effect achieved.

I also got to try the Diviner’s Elixir from Natural Universe, Inc. recently. It has a minty quality that is really pleasant and a pleasant light to moderate effect, able to satisfy the needs of most customers. Really great job on that one, I have to say. Aminex is another new product from Natural Universe. This pungent aroma therapy blend stimulates the imagination and creativity while helping provide a relaxing environment in which to meditate and/or create.

Finally, soon Natural Universe should also be releasing ololliuhqui rivea corymbosa in three gram packs. On average, this amounts to 2.4mg LSA per pack. This is approximately two starter doses for making LSA tea or wine in order to abort a cluster headache period, or extend the remission period in order to skip the next expected cluster headache attack. Sufferers of cluster headaches, aka suicide headaches, know that while even the most effective available prescription drug for migraine, ImitrexTM, may help abort an acute attack, for some it usually does not abort the current period nor offer any prophylactic effect against future periods. Interestingly, under the Controlled Substances Act, possession of ImitrexTM could be prosecutable as the 5-methanesulfonamide analogue of the Schedule I controlled substance dimethyltryptamine, aka DMT. It should be made clear that cluster headaches are not migraines and vice-versa. Unlike a migraine, which is a more generalized brain disorder involving such regions as the brain stem, the occipital lobe (where the visual processing center is found accounting for the auras) and the cortex, cluster headache by and large only effect very specific regions deep in the brain, namely the hypothalamus, which, among other things, regulates the biological clock accounting for the periodicity of this disorder. Furthermore, the two conditions are epidemiologically different, as well with approximately twice as many women developing migraines than men, and four to seven times as many men developing cluster headaches as women. Therefore, it would not be reasonable to expect them to be effectively treated by the same medicines. For example, chemical relatives methysergide and LSD are inversely effective against migraine and cluster headache respectively. In general, the more potently psychoactive indolamines appear to be more effective against cluster headache, but less so against migraine. These include LSD and psilocybin, however both these two substances are Schedule I substances in the US and in most other countries are also strictly illegal. In comparison, LSA is listed as Schedule III in the US and is therefore not covered under the auspices of the Analog Act. As a result, prosecution for possessing LSA, especially small amounts, is essentially unheard of.  Another advantage of LSA over other ergoline derivatives such as methysergide is that, for cluster headache, significantly less LSA is required to obtain the desired result and as a result, the risk of treatment induced ergotism, a toxic response to large or frequent doses of ergoline derivatives, is substantially reduced. In a preliminary study, Dr. Andrew Sewell has determined the effective dose of LSA for periodic cluster headache to be between 0.5 mg and 3 mg, and 1.25 mg and 3 mg for chronic cluster headache (1). Erowid.org indicates that Albert Hofmann determined the effective oral psychoactive dose of LSA to be 2 mg to 5 mg suggesting that the average cluster headache suffer is able to obtain significant relief from psychoactively sub-threshold doses of LSA. Dr. Sewell suggests grinding the seeds with lemon juice, letting this dry, placing it in a tea bag and making tea (2). Clusterbusters.com, however, suggests soaking the ground seeds in red wine for 12-24 hours, straining and drinking, which is interesting, since alcohol is a known trigger for cluster headaches. Red wine appears to be preferred, as the increased tannins seem to aid in extraction of the LSA.

For more information on these products and more please visit Ethnogarden.com and NaturalUniverseInc.com.

Reference

1. http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsrchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=6,288,104.PN.&OS=PN/6,288,104&RS=PN/6,288,104 (Accessed 5/31/2009).

2. Sewell, RA, Reed, K and Cunningham, M. RESPONSE OF CLUSTER HEADACHE TO SELF-ADMINISTRATION OF SEEDS CONTAINING LYSERGIC ACID AMIDE (LSA). 2008. HYPERLINK “http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/lsa/lsa_article2.pdf”www.erowid.org/chemicals/lsa/lsa_article2.pdf (Accessed 5/18/2009).


22
Oct 09

Medical Marijuana & Hemp Expo: 2010

July 16th-18th 2010: Toronto, CanadaCanada’s first expo promoting the respectable and responsible use of marijuana as medicine.

Medical Marijauna & Hemp Expo
July 16 – 18, 2010.
Metro Toronto Convention Centre “Hall A”
Toronto, Ontario
Canada

icon-leaf-cross-expo-png

Visit The Medical Marijuana & Hemp Expo Website

Introduction from the Expo Organizer:

Greetings from Canada’s first Medical Marijuana and Hemp Expo! Treating Yourself magazine is excited to host the upcoming Medical Marijuana and Hemp Expo in July of 2010 at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.

We are currently seeking vendors, exhibitors, and sponsors for this very high-profile event and we want you to be a part of it. Mark July 16th – 18th, 2010 on your calendar and join patients, their friends and loved ones, professionals, distributors, manufacturers from the hemp, medicinal marijuana, and alternative medicine industries from across North America and Europe. Showcase, demonstrate, educate about, and sell your products to a wide range of attendees. Your product or service has the potential to reach thousands at the Expo!

expo-capture

From your product’s name on our event website, full page ads in Treating Yourself magazine issues #22 and #23, exposure of your product and/or services to not only the public in attendance and also our professional national media and public relations team; these are just a handful of the benefits our vendors will enjoy. Counting patients, vendors, medical and professionals from the alternative medicine and hemp industries among it’s expected attendance of 30,000+.  Treating Yourself Magazine’s first Medical Marijuana and Hemp Expo promises to be a world stage like no other seen before in Canada, offering three days of networking, learning, advertising, and vending in an interactive, inclusive environment. Don’t miss your chance to be a part of this extraordinary event!

For Medical Marijuana & Hemp Expo sponsor and exhibitor opportunities visit medicalmarijuana-hempexpo.com.

Expo OrganizerFounded by yours truly in 2002 and distributed in countries world-wide, Treating Yourself is a journal written for patients, by patients. Our mission is to build awareness, generate interest, educate and provide our readers (which include medical marijuana, alternative medicine users, members of the hemp community, their caregivers, professionals in this and related industries) with conscientious, ethical, and reliable information to assist them with the management of their wide and varied health needs and provide them with access to safe and reliable products.

To help us achieve this goal, the 2010 Medical Marijuana and Hemp Expo will be hosting a series of workshops, seminars, documentaries and short films in the John Bassett Theatre on subjects like medical marijuana, activism, security and safety, alternative medicine, nutrition, hemp, cooking, and more.

This one-of-a-kind event will also have a facility-approved 4,600 square foot vapor lounge to accommodate medical marijuana patients who can feel comfortable and relaxed medicating. While there is absolutely no selling or distributing of marijuana permitted at the Expo, we encourage patients to bring their own medicine along with them, as vaporizers of all makes and models will be available for use. These include, but are not limited to the HerbalAire,  Volcano,  Zephyr Vaporizers and the De-Verdamper. Our hope is to give patients an opportunity to determine which type is most suitable for their individual needs.

By joining us as a vendor and saying yes to the exhibit opportunities of Canada’s first Medical Marijuana and Hemp Expo in 2010, you’re saying yes to the growth of your brand’s visibility among the consumers and decision-makers of your target market. This year will offer our vendors unique opportunities to exhibit their merchandise. You will also be extending your reach to a national and world-wide audience. With representatives, sponsors, vendors, and professionals from across Canada and around the world, there’s no better place for you to showcase your products and information.

Register early for your best chance at securing your first-choice location on our expansive floor plan. I am also pleased to answer any questions you may have about the event at the email address listed below.

I look forward to seeing you in Toronto in 2010!

Take Care and Peace,
Marco Renda
Publisher

weedmaster@treatingyourself.com


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