Cannabis Hemp News
Join the conversation and share your insights in our Cannabis Hemp News category. Our Australian and International Cannabis News sub-forums cover breaking news, legislative updates, and industry insights. Contribute to our community and stay informed!
-
-
- 420 Crew
- 4 replies
- 1k views
Smoke has started to rise over the northern New South Wales town of Nimbin, heralding the start of this year's cannabis celebrations. Organisers say it is the one time of the year when tolerance for the drug rules. A crowd of 10,000 is expected for the event which will include the Hemp Olympics and the Marijuana Music Awards. The Hemp Olympics will have the bong, throw and yell competition and for those with a more creative bent there is the joint rolling and the marijuana music awards. A world record attempt will be made with the "big joint light-up". Organiser Andrew Kavasilas says the record attempt is genuine. "The Guinness people haven't got back to us…
Last reply by generic_hippie, -
-
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/0803/unclep/ozbiker/anzac2005.jpg Bit late, but still a good picture. Lest we forget. :thumbsup
Last reply by WantDaChronic, -
Txt and email
by Tom-
- 420 Crew
- 2 replies
- 680 views
Workers distracted by phones, emails and text messages suffer a greater loss of IQ than a person smoking marijuana, a study revealed today. The constant interruptions reduce productivity and leave people feeling tired and lethargic. But the fact that people constantly break their concentration in order to answer and check these messages shows Britons are obsessed with technology. Almost two out three people check their electronic messages out of office hours and when on holiday, according to the study carried out by TNS Research and commissioned by Hewlett Packard. Half of all workers respond to an email within 60 minutes of receiving one while one in five will …
Last reply by Ozzy420, -
-
- 0 replies
- 661 views
Recent drug-smuggling arrests in Bali have made people more vigilant but will not discourage travellers, according to Travelscene Orange manager Robert Thornberry. Mr Thornberry recently returned from his annual holiday to Bali and said he noticed more people ensuring their luggage had not been tampered with. "I would say 90 per cent of bags going around the carousel at the airport had a lock on them. I know Melbourne and Brisbane airports have machines that can plastic wrap your bags and a lot of people seem to be using them," he said. The case of Australian Schapelle Corby, accused of smuggling cannabis into Bali, the trial has come down to proving whether or no…
Last reply by Tom, -
- 0 replies
- 2.4k views
FITZGERALD Inquiry figure and former SP bookmaker Stanley Derwent Saunders yesterday faced court for possessing marijuana. Saunders claimed he used it to treat ongoing stress from his association with the late Jack Herbert, the infamous licensing branch bagman. The 83-year-old Gold Coast pensioner was "one of the last men standing" from the days when Queensland's police force was "the best money could buy", his solicitor Bill Potts told the Southport Magistrate's Court. Saunders pleaded guilty to three drug-related charges, including possession of a dangerous drug and possession of utensils, namely a water pipe and grinder. Police raided his Surfers Paradise add…
Last reply by Tom, -
- 0 replies
- 670 views
The first status report on new Western Australian drug laws has revealed more cannabis users are being charged or issued with infringements than previously. Under the the WA Cannabis Infringement Scheme, police can choose to either issue a fine or charge people caught with small amounts of the drug. Michael Salter from the Drug and Alcohol Office says fewer people in WA are using cannabis, but of those who are, a higher percentage are facing the consequences. "There's a high degree of compliance with the legislation and that legislation is effective, in that, if an individual is caught with cannabis, there will be a consequence." Spokesman for the WA Coalition Aga…
Last reply by Tom, -
- 4 replies
- 1k views
Marijuana is the most commonly used illegal drug in Australia, but the rise in ecstasy and amphetamine use is more concerning, a new report shows. The Illicit Drugs Report, prepared and released by the Australian Crime Commission (ACC), found more than 11 tonnes of illicit drugs had been seized and 79,000 people arrested during the last financial year. "Cannabis is the most commonly used illicit drug in Australia," the report revealed. And with more than 40,000 arrests during the last financial year and no evidence in a reduction in consumption, it was likely to remain a popular drug into the forseeable future, it said. But ACC chief Alastair Milroy said despite m…
Last reply by fsagertyaef, -
- 1 reply
- 896 views
STATESBORO, Ga. (AP) — Sgt. Jason Kearney hopes all his arrests will be this easy. As Kearney was sitting in his marked patrol car Thursday, waiting for his colleagues to join him for lunch, a man named Ron Stone asked him for a ride. The Bulloch County deputy agreed to take Stone to his car, but first he insisted on searching Stone for weapons, said Sheriff Lynn Anderson. "Stone told Sergeant Kearney to go ahead," Anderson said. Kearney didn't find a gun — but he said he did find two small bags of pot. Stone, 30, told the uniformed officer he had spent the night at a friend's house and the marijuana was not his, police said. Instead of a ride to his car, Ston…
Last reply by Shivan, -
- 2 replies
- 2.9k views
Q: There's a lot of information online about the effects of alcohol and driving, but not much about marijuana. Is there a certain amount of marijuana that can be smoked where it would have virtually no measurable effect on one's ability to drive? Is there a certain amount of time that could elapse between smoking marijuana and getting behind the wheel where one would not be impaired? A: Research has shown that marijuana can have some effect on one's driving performance. More specifically, research has shown that people intoxicated with marijuana may show some sway when driving in a straight line. However, at the same time, research has shown that people high on marijua…
Last reply by Shivan, -
- 1 reply
- 667 views
Dutch Ministers clash over coffeeshops and weed. It is well known that the Dutch Justice Minister, Piet Hein Donner, does not like coffeeshops and softdrugs users, he wants to get rid of them all. That is why he visited the southern province of Limburg yesterday, so he could personally deliver his disapproval of the plans of two of his rebellious town mayors, Mayor Leers of Maastricht and Mayor Som van Kerk of Heerlen, all CDA politicians. These Mayors want to see the production of cannabis for coffeeshops regulated and legalized, they consider the War on Drugs a waste of time, funds and effort. Donner went to Limburg to declare a full war on cannabis growers and drugs …
Last reply by nolvanschaik, -
-
- 420 Crew
- 29 replies
- 4.5k views
"Welcome to our Headspace," says Editor Wayne Collins as he exhales a plume of smoke thick enough to be from a bush fire. "We are going to combine the three separate arguments for law reform into one magazine, the great Industrial hemp hope, Medicinal marijuana magic and recreational lubricity matched by nothing else," he said. "For too long in this country, and indeed around the world, recreational cannabis users have been blamed for not allowing the sick to access the best available medicine, and for denying industry a greener and better crop than anything currently being grown en-masse. Due for release at Mardi Grass 2005, Headspace is available for $4.95 + p&p.…
Last reply by Tom, -
-
- 2 replies
- 974 views
A GOLD Coast hinterland couple convicted of drug production six years ago will lose their property to the state after failing in an attempt to overturn a forfeiture order. The Court of Appeal was told in July 1999 Wayne Lawrence Crew and Judith Ann Crew were convicted of producing cannabis at their Mt Tamborine property between January 1 and April 22, 1999. The court was told a police search of the property found a concealed underground cannabis nursery which contained 63 mature plants. Police also found cannabis seedlings in a tin shed on the property. The Crown got a restraining order over the land because it was "tainted by criminal activity". It was the…
Last reply by fsagertyaef, -
-
- 420 Crew
- 10 replies
- 1.8k views
An American teenager has been arrested for stealing the head from a corpse to use as a bong to smoke cannabis. The 17-year-old boy has been arrested for breaking into a Vermont crypt and removing the head from a man who had recently been entombed there. Police were informed of the boy's plans by a friend who was disturbed by his proposal to steal the head and use it as a smoking device. Officers initially thought the story was a hoax, but disbelief turned to shock when they discovered a local tomb had been broken into and a head was missing. Police department spokesman Richard Keith said: "We had the funeral director come to the scene and we pulled the casket out…
Last reply by Tom, -
-
-
- 420 Crew
- 6 replies
- 2.5k views
THE NSW Supreme Court was today told during a sentencing hearing of the trauma Darren Ward suffered since he being shot in the face by a teenager who murdered his best friend, Sydney footballer Kane Mason. The flatmates, who played rugby league together in Manly's first division, were attacked during a street fight in Mr Ward's hometown of Macksville, on the NSW mid-north coast, in July 2003. The gunman, who was under 18 at the time of the murder and cannot be named. In a victim impact statement read to the court, Mr Ward said he and Mr Mason were "walking casually down a quiet street, minding our own business" when violence broke out. Mr Ward was shot in the fac…
Last reply by WantDaChronic, -
-
- 0 replies
- 636 views
By ADAM NICHOLS DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER They're Generation Rx. Today's teenagers are more likely to pop prescription pills to get high than snort cocaine or drop acid, experts say. A survey of 7,300 American teens shows the nation has had success in tackling illegal drug use. But it also reveals a new trend of kids raiding their parents' medicine cabinets for chemical kicks. "It's a new category of substance abuse that we see emerging, and it is frighteningly large," said Thomas Hedrick, director of the Partnership for a Drug-Free America. The organization's 17th annual survey found more teens had abused a prescription drug such as Vicodin, OxyContin or Ritalin i…
Last reply by Tom,