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Saturday, December 06, 2008 1:58 PM

http://www.istockanalyst.com/article/viewi...id_2861108.html

(Source: Press, The; Christchurch, New Zealand)By McCRONE John

copryright 2008 all rights reserved

 

 

Cannabis has become part of ordinary Kiwi life. We lead the world in both usage and in drug arrests and convictions. Next year the Law Commission will review the 33-year-old Misuse of Drugs Act. JOHN McCRONE considers the public debate. --------------------

 

Two youths in baseball caps and work boots are in earnest discussion with the shop assistant about the $195 bottles of liquid fertiliser.

 

It's a kitset system, they are told. You need the Growzilla to get the lush vegetative growth, then the Budzilla to blow up the flower heads like footballs.

 

The central Christchurch hydroponics shop clearly caters for every scale of grower from the home hobbyist to the industrial. You can buy a boxed four-pot starter set, plus lights and reflectors, for about $700. Red- mite spray and other essentials would add another $100 or so to the bill. For the somewhat more ambitious, there are the indoor zip-sided tents and "hide it in a wardrobe" vented kits.

 

For the professionals, the shop floor has sections devoted to motorised lighting tracks, heat pads, cooling fans, cloning equipment, ducting pipe and carbon filters for odour removal. The last of these are the size of hulking gas cylinders.

 

Hey, don't I recognise some of this gear from a photo of a recent police bust - a suburban home turned into a metal halide-lit marijuana factory?

 

It is a bit surreal. Last year, this shop was selling camping gear. Now it is one of 15 branches of the flourishing Switched On Gardener chain. You may have seen them advertising on TV.

 

New Zealand plainly has a very liberal attitude towards cannabis these days, even if our head shops still coyly market their bongs as "vases", and vaporiser machines - for those who worry about lung cancer - have to be sold disassembled in kitset form.

 

Open a copy of NORML News, the magazine put out by the National Organisation for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, and you can read a report from the fifth annual Auckland cannabis cup.

 

Bud porn they call it, these photos of plump and fluffy sinsemilla heads lined up on the judging table. Growers bring their best product and are judged for taste, smell, look and, of course, effect. There are separate trophies for indoor and outdoor grown. This year's champion AK-47 is a dusty mauve, the Mother's Finest a more conventional brown and green.

 

And what about the Friday 4.20pm pot-smoking sessions that have been springing up around the country?

 

Dunedin students have established these afternoon public toking clubs as a campus fixture. Christchurch has not been quite so successful. The weekly get-together at a shed in Hagley Park, up by the Riccarton Rd roundabout, was shifted to a more after work- friendly hour of 5.20pm, but has been lucky if it attracted more than five enthusiasts.

 

But, yes, you would have to say good, old uptight New Zealand now has a very different attitude to the electric puha, the wacky baccy. If there are laws for the everyday user, officialdom seems to be turning a blind eye. Except you would be wrong.

 

New Zealand does lead the world in cannabis use. We way outstrip other famous ganja culture countries like Jamaica and the Netherlands, says substance-use researcher Geoff Noller, of Dunedin.

 

A 2008 World Health Organisation (WHO) study of 17 countries found that 42 per cent of New Zealanders have tried it. And among the young, it is now truly ubiquitous. Some 27 per cent of under 15s, and 62 per cent of under 21s, have had a taste of the devil's weed.

 

Even a fellow rabid user, the United States, manages only 20 per cent and 54 per cent by comparison. For youth users, the Netherlands is down there at 7 per cent and 35 per cent.

 

Yet New Zealand also leads the world in drug arrests and convictions.

 

To D2 From D1

 

Casual cannabis use is not being treated with a nod a wink. And the results of being caught can be devastating.

 

One Christchurch health worker tells of a lad who was on his way to a football apprenticeship in Germany until the police caught him with a joint in his pocket and did him for both possession and supply because he had shared with a mate.

 

"That's the end of his career. A conviction and you're finished."

 

Paula Lambert, Christchurch organiser for Norml, says this is a too-common tale. And even when the police do not prosecute, they like to scare.

 

She was talking to a 17-year-old who had been picked up outside Eastgate Mall. The police were there on other business -- probably called to check out a shoplifter -- and questioned four youths in the street. One got lippy. The police got heavy. Have you been smoking, they asked?

 

"He should've just said no, denied it. But the young don't realise the way the system works. He said yes and so legally they could make him turn out his pockets.

 

"The boy was only taken to the station and locked up in the cells for a few hours while he was processed. But he was gutted. He was left feeling this outrage, this powerlessness.

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