Kris Stock didnât have to go to work on Tuesday. Instead, the actor/model-turned Uber driver had a date with a Fruity Pebbles-crusted donut and 3.5 grams (not all at once) of Connecticutâs newest commodity â retail cannabis.
âIâm old school,â Stock said. âI used to work in a head shop where if you said the word âmarijuana,â you had to get out. This is kind of, I donât know, surreal for me. This is just something I never thought would happen.â
After 2021 legislation legalized recreational cannabis use for adults 21 and over, doors finally opened to Connecticutâs first recreational-use dispensaries Tuesday. In late 2022, the state reported nine dispensaries completed the licensing process for retail sales. But only seven were up and running throughout the state on the first day of sales.
Retailers braced themselves for â and warned customers of â extended waits and long lines. But the expected rush didnât happen. Some locations reported between 40 and 50 patients lined up for opening, but the rest of the day saw steady flows and a simple process.
âI went on the website, typed in what I wanted, confirmed order and that was it,â Stock said. âItâs so super simple. In and out in less than a minute, maybe two.â
Stock lives in Hamden. He said he placed the order online around 11 a.m., drove to RISE, a retail dispensary in Branford, and was out before noon.Â
Customers have two options for purchasing. They can pre-order online or select items in-store. Either way, only two things are needed to purchase cannabis â government issued identification and payment. Most locations, like RISE, are set up to handle cash or debit transactions. Credit is not accepted for cannabis purchases.
All retail customers first check-in at the door before entering an anteroom with a glass-paned counter for medical customers to check in. Retail customers at RISE proceed through another door where budtenders (the marijuana equivalent of a bartender or barista) greet you. Customers who purchased online are directed to the registers where they can pick up an order. In-store purchasers make their way over to touch screen monitors to build a cart.
Those in the know are free to select what they want. But anyone with questions can work closely with one of the budtenders.
âWe take them from the threshold and walk them through, take them to the kiosk and ask any questions,â Daniel Bolton, who works in marketing for RISE, said. âWe really curate their order for what will work for them. We want them to achieve the effect theyâre looking for.â
Customers have a few options. They can choose either concentrated oil in the form of a vape cartridge, flower, or pre-roll joints. One joint, weighing about a gram, sold for $18 Tuesday. Depending on size, cartridges ranged from around $50 for a half-gram cartridge up to $98 for a full gram. Eighth-ounce containers of flower were around $50. Customers are limited to purchasing the equivalent of Œ-ounce of flower per transaction.
Representatives from RISE said longevity of product will vary from user to user. A one-gram joint can get an average smoker through a single usage or be broken into two or three. The 1/8-ounce serving of flower can last a week or two. Vapes are a little more scientific. They are designed to last for about 150 seconds.
Some edibles are also available for retail sales, but were not in stock on Tuesday at RISE.
John Turcotte, a RISE budtender, said choosing product depends on the desired outcome. The product comes in two strains. Sativas, he said, can provide a bit more energy and stimulation, while indicas offer more relaxation. Hybrid strains are also offered.Â
âIf I wanted to clean or do a set of errands, I would recommend a sativa that might be good,â Turcotte said. âItâs basically, try the product, see what you like because one sativa might not be the same as another.â
Customers can find information regarding each strain on the companyâs website when making an order or at a kiosk. Each product lists its strain. Connecticut has pharmacological descriptors, so youâll see names like âIndicol Eâ instead of its more common names like OG Kush or Head Cracker. The product also lists the THC content, an indication of its potency, and can include information on terpenes, CBD content and other cannabinoids contained in the flower.
âTerpenes are like the ancillary chemicals. They help drive the train in a sense,â Turcotte said. âThe THC is the liftoff that gets the engine going and help get you there. These chemicals work synergistically with the THC to make you happy, calm or relaxed depending on what youâre looking for.â
Turcotte said once youâve picked the strain you choose how to ingest. He said he likes the âhighâ effect smoking flower provides, but also enjoys the clarity and convenience of a vape.
âThose were convenient for when I was bowling,â he said. âI was a medical patient. I had a herniated disc and I had pain. Thereâs no smell or anything, so those worked perfectly when I was bowling.â
After building an order, customers make their way to a checkout line, which, on Tuesday, was a clear path to a full contingent of cashiers.Â
Even customers making in-store purchases breezed through. Claire Vissers came from Killingworth to buy at RISE. She was parked, through the store and back in her car with an eighth of flower in under 10 minutes. The longest portion of the trip was spent talking to the budtender about her experiences buying at Nova Farms, a dispensary in Massachusetts.Â
She said the options were broader and the prices were better. Stock said he bought in Massachusetts as well. Retail cannabis has been in operation there since 2018 (its been legal since 2016). Stock said the prices in Massachusetts were better, but the staff at RISE was much more helpful and friendly, he said. He said other statesâ budtenders seemed more jaded and less willing to help.
Still, Vissers said she was happy to see retail sales open up in Connecticut, even with a bit of a higher price tag.
âItâs safer than if I had to go to New Haven and meet some random guy or girl,â she said. âI would rather pay the extra 25 bucks for an eighth and know that it came from somewhere safe.âÂ
On Tuesday, Nova Farms had a selection of eighths priced from around $20 to around $45. But RISEâs Bolton said Connecticut customers can expect prices to drop as supply increases and more stores open.
But aside from logisitics like parking â and the steel drum band and free donuts that greeted customers opening day â customers can expect similar products and experiences as Connecticutâs retail cannabis industry begins to light up.
Dispensaries advise customers to check inventory online before heading to a shop.
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