Vintage Cannabis: Explained

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Summary

Only Vintage cannabis flower truly reveals and fulfills its destiny to serve, heal, entertain and inspire those who consume her. PHOTO Brian Parks How does this magic come about? and why does it take so long to create Vintage cannabis? We often talked excitedly about making hash from aged or vintage cannabis, how it had a different flavor and different effect. Now your Vintage cannabis is finally ready to smoke. The normal two-to-four-week drying period is just the beginning of the sequence which leads to vintage cannabis.

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In today’s California cannabis market, most dispensaries have a three-month shelf-life limit for flowers. That is three months from packing date—not from harvest. The reason given is that customers don’t buy “out-of-date” weed. 

Maybe the retailers are not storing the flowers under the proper conditions, or maybe the flower was bucked and trimmed or packed in a hot room. So, after three months in the store, the product has deteriorated to a point that it is no longer sellable. Perhaps the real reason is improper handling along the route of the supply chain. Maybe the retailer just wanted to move it off the shelf. Some buyers won’t even...

Read the full article @ Cannabis Now