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Showing posts with label Maine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maine. Show all posts

The Weirdest Cannabis Laws in the U.S.: A State-by-State Breakdown




Cannabis legalization across the U.S. is a messy patchwork, with each state making its own rules about what’s legal and what isn’t. From strange possession limits to odd restrictions about cultivation, here’s a state-by-state breakdown of some of the weirdest cannabis laws still on the books.

1. Delaware: You Can Possess, But You Can't Buy

In Delaware, adults can legally possess up to an ounce of cannabis, but here’s the kicker—retail sales aren’t allowed yet. This means that while it’s legal to have weed, there’s technically nowhere in the state you can legally buy it until dispensaries open in 2024. This awkward gap leaves people in a legal gray area when it comes to acquiring their stash.

2. Washington, D.C.: Legal to Grow, But No Sales

In Washington, D.C., residents can grow up to six cannabis plants and possess up to two ounces for personal use. However, retail sales are still illegal, meaning that while you can have it and grow it, you can’t technically buy it from a store. This has led to a thriving "gifting" economy, where people sell a product—like a T-shirt—and "gift" the cannabis as a bonus.

3. Connecticut: Home Stash vs. On the Go

Connecticut’s cannabis law is one of the more peculiar in terms of possession limits. Adults can possess up to 1.5 ounces of cannabis on their person but are allowed to store up to 5 ounces at home or in a locked vehicle. This creates a strange disparity between what you can have with you versus what’s okay to keep in storage, making it one of the most compartmentalized possession limits in the country.

4. Arizona: The 25-Mile Rule for Cultivation



In Arizona, medical cannabis patients are allowed to grow their own weed, but only if they live more than 25 miles away from the nearest dispensary. This rule effectively prevents the majority of patients from growing their own plants, since dispensaries are spread throughout most populated areas, making personal cultivation more of an exception than a norm.

5. Michigan: Locked Containers at Home

Michigan law allows residents to possess up to 2.5 ounces of cannabis in public, but they can keep up to 10 ounces at home—as long as anything above 2.5 ounces is stored in a locked container. Essentially, you need a weed "safe" if you plan on stocking up beyond the public carry limit. This unusual stipulation makes Michigan's home storage law one of the more specific in terms of security requirements.

6. Maine: Unlimited Seedlings

In Maine, adults can grow up to three mature cannabis plants and 12 immature plants at a time—but here’s the odd part: there’s no limit on seedlings. This means a person could theoretically grow an unlimited number of small cannabis plants as long as they haven’t matured, creating a loophole that some might use to maximize their grow operation without technically breaking the law.



7. New Jersey: No Home Grow

Despite being one of the states to legalize recreational cannabis, New Jersey does not allow residents to grow their own plants—at all. Unlike neighboring states like New York or Connecticut, New Jersey residents are stuck buying from dispensaries, making it one of the few legal states with a complete prohibition on home cultivation.

8. Missouri: The 6-6-6 Rule

Missouri allows residents to grow up to six flowering plants, six immature plants, and six seedlings at a time for personal use. This specific "6-6-6" rule makes it unique compared to other states, where plant limits are often less stratified by growth stage. This structured approach provides a very detailed framework for what residents can grow at different stages of plant development.

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The Weekly Roll-up With Hazy Blaze: Episode 3

 


In this episode of the “Weekly Roll-Up,” we delve into a spectrum of stories that illuminate the shifting landscapes of cannabis culture, comedy in the context of cannabis, and the intersections of sports and entertainment. This week features a significant illegal grow bust in Maine, Nick Swardson’s altitude-induced comedy mishap, Duke Nolan’s critique of cannabis stereotypes, and Nancy Reagan's hypocritical "Just Say No" campaign. 




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