Tweed shrugs off competition from marijuana home growers

gb123

Well-Known Member
CEO says growing your own weed is not like 'putting in a terrific patch of geraniums'

Canadians who use cannabis for medical purposes will soon be able to grow their own weed under new rules outlined by the federal government on Thursday. But a licensed producer based in Smiths Falls, Ont., isn't worried about having to fend off competition from medical marijuana users intent on producing their own plants.

"People could decide to grow their own," said Bruce Linton, founder and CEO of Tweed. "But they prefer to buy from a lawful, properly produced, safe supplier."

Under existing rules patients who use medical marijuana are required by law to buy their weed from one of 34 licensed producers across the country. Health Canada announced in a statement that the new access to cannabis for medical purposes regulations will allow Canadians to produce "a limited amount of cannabis... or designate someone to produce it for them."


Bruce Linton, founder and CEO of Tweed, says he believes people will prefer to buy from suppliers. (CBC/Jennifer Chevalier)

The new rules are a response to a federal court ruling that struck down the regulations restricting the rights of medical marijuana patients to grow their own cannabis. The Allard v. Canada decision gave the government six months to amend regulations for medical marijuana. The new rules come into effect on Aug. 24.

The amount that can be grown will depend on a patient's prescription. A patient with permission from a doctor to ingest one gram of medical marijuana a day will be allowed to grow two plants outdoors, or five plants indoors.

Cannabis 'not a geranium'
Linton says there were good reasons the old rules were put into place, and the risks of growing at home still exist.

"The police chiefs, fire chiefs, municipal officials found there were frequent fires, electrical shock dangers. It caused mould, mildews. It caused access to kids, and if you got really good and grew a lot of it you became a great target to steal from," he told CBC News.

"Growing your own isn't... putting in a terrific patch of geraniums. This is not a geranium."


Tweed is Canada's largest licensed medical marijuana producer. (Photo courtesy of Tweed)

One of Tweed's customers might be willing to give the new regualtions a try.

Mandy McKnight's son Liam uses a cannabis oil to help control his epileptic seizures. She says his medicine costs more than $600 a month.

"It's beyond affordable to be able to maintain buying Liam's meds from a licensed producer," McKnight said. Although she has no plans to start growing her own immediately, she welcomes the government's decision.

Safety concerns remain
Health Canada says it remains concerned about the health and safety risks of home growing operations and that Canadians exercising the option to grow at home should follow guidelines.

"They're expected to comply with municipal bylaws that touch on electrical and fire safety," said Jacqueline Bogden, assistant deputy minister of Health Canada's cannabis legalization and regulation branch.


Alex Newcombe says he's concerned that the new rules only allow users to grow plants from seeds and plants from licensed producers. (Jennifer Chevalier/CBC)

Linton says Tweed intends to offer a service to those users who worry about the safety aspects, or even the smell, of growing at marijuana at home. In certain municipalities, Tweed will rent a designated small space and do the growing for them.

"What Tweed will bring is the soil, the seeds, the fertilizers, the methodologies," Linton said.

But another Ottawa-area man who uses medical cannabis to control his severe anxiety is concerned that the new rules only allow users to grow plants from seeds and plants from licensed producers like Tweed.

"They're grown in a very detailed environment where there is temperature control, humidity control," said Alex Newcombe. "These are very, very non-resistant strains that they're using. So you're typical growers at home will find it very difficult to maintain any level of quality crop."

"We want our local growers... all the people who are putting the love and caring into their plants instead of these big industrial grows."

The new regulations do not change other laws that make it illegal for Canadians to use marijuana recreationally.

Dispensaries and compassion clubs are also not authorized to sell marijuana and remain illegal under the new laws.
 

doingdishes

Well-Known Member

"They're grown in a very detailed environment where there is temperature control, humidity control," said Alex Newcombe. "These are very, very non-resistant strains that they're using. So you're typical growers at home will find it very difficult to maintain any level of quality crop."

and yet they want to teach you to grow crap too
 

Medipuffs

Well-Known Member
i am a lawful, safely produced provider :)


"The police chiefs, fire chiefs, municipal officials found there were frequent fires, electrical shock dangers. It caused mould, mildews. It caused access to kids, and if you got really good and grew a lot of it you became a great target to steal from," he told CBC News.

"Growing your own isn't... putting in a terrific patch of geraniums. This is not a geranium."

this is a load of bullshit and was all proven to be false during trial due to len garis's incompetence

"It's beyond affordable to be able to maintain buying Liam's meds from a licensed producer," McKnight said. Although she has no plans to start growing her own immediately, she welcomes the government's decision.

this is also a farce (the previous paragraph above the quote states 600$/month for oil) that 600$ could go a lot further then what she is getting for it, especially since the oil they make is very low thc% (so its been diluted to reduce the cannabinoid content to "acceptable levels by health canada's standards")

"They're grown in a very detailed environment where there is temperature control, humidity control," said Alex Newcombe. "These are very, very non-resistant strains that they're using. So you're typical growers at home will find it very difficult to maintain any level of quality crop."

This guy is also off his rocker. What kind of special cannabis do they grow that can't be replicated at home? My 75*F is different from theirs? Or the 40-60% humidity in their garden is different from mine? If you don't have control of your temps and humidity your crop is going to be hard done by regardless if your outside or in a warehouse. Climate control is a big deal to all cannabis because its all the same species (of course some are landrace genetics that have been genetically conditioned over time to deal with arid temps or extremely high humidity etc...)

All in all this article is full of shit but it shows you how desperate they are with their business practices. Undeducated patients and stock investors are the target of this tripe, anybody else should know better..
 

GroErr

Well-Known Member
What a crock of shit, quoting the already dismissed "issues" related to safety, fires, mould etc. Phelan clearly called them on this bull-shit and they're still quoting it? Goes to show how credible these idiots are - NOT.

Help spread the word of how easy it is to grow your own and help patients stay away from these LP greed bags!

@The Hippy now is the time to get the Boycott message out!
 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
Where did Tweed and the others get it's growers and original clones and seeds from? That was 'dirty' mmar crap grown by stoners with no idea what they were doing, according to Mr. Tweed. They claim to support a person's right to grow in one breath and then try to discredit our abilities in the next. Tweed just keeps tryin' to impress.
 

doingdishes

Well-Known Member
They're shitting their drawers that the rec market will allow home grows, likely why so many of them are spewing crap out of their greedy mouths.
absolutely. they know we can grow as good or better than they can...the big part is we care about our product! they care about profits.
who's going to want to grow crap for themselves? would the beginner grower want to get better?
my old grower who used to come to this forum-only grew absolute crap! but he did include free bugs
 

torontoke

Well-Known Member
So I guess if lp weed needs to be tested before it's ok sell but patient weed doesn't have to be tested and tweed has a certain strain that isn't sellable couldn't they move it to these rental sites to get around needing an inspection?
Or does patient grown in an lp facility need to be tested?
 

doingdishes

Well-Known Member
and how do we know that if someone decided to grow at Tweed's site and grew better than they could-that their product won't get "misplaced" or accidentally replaced by an inferior product?
i wonder the cost for using their facilities to grow
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
So I guess if lp weed needs to be tested before it's ok sell but patient weed doesn't have to be tested and tweed has a certain strain that isn't sellable couldn't they move it to these rental sites to get around needing an inspection?
Or does patient grown in an lp facility need to be tested?
im betting they hav been offing their shit since day one. To the BM.
 

Tektek

Well-Known Member
Been talking here about you brew / pot stores for months. Small potatoes $.
IMO LP's don't care about home grow, small $.
Cannabis and extracts poised to be a multi $B global big Pharma new product line.
Long term strategies for Canada.

3g/d outdoor grow, one time per year. I need to hold a kg. The rules will change.

Can't stop seeds. Could close retailers. Oooppss… my plant made a seed, lock me up.
 
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