Industry
Stop Marrying Your Weed: Why the Fastest Money Is Usually the Smartest Money
I’ve sold a lot of things in my life.
Windows.
Mortgages.
Cannabis.
I’ve sat through enough sales meetings, seminars, lectures, and motivational speeches to make a grown man start hearing the word “commission” in his sleep.
One thing I’ve learned is that sales is sales.
The product changes.
Human nature doesn’t.
And there’s one strategy I keep seeing in the cannabis industry that absolutely blows my mind.
The “I’m gonna sit on this forever and wait for a rich guy” strategy.
You know exactly what I’m talking about.
A vendor gets a decent batch. Maybe it’s even a great batch. They put a premium price on it and then spend the next three months staring at it like it’s the last jar of weed left on Earth.
Meanwhile, customers walk by.
Potential sales walk by.
Money walks by.
And the vendor proudly says:
“Nah, I’m waiting for the right customer.”
The right customer?
My brother in cannabis, the right customer just bought an ounce from the table next to you.
The $140 Ounce Problem
Let’s paint a picture.
You’re at an event.
The vendor beside you has ounces for $140.
Your flower is slightly better.
Not twice as good.
Not three times as good.
Slightly better.
But you’re charging double.
Now put yourself in the customer’s shoes.
Most people aren’t shopping for the absolute best flower in the building.
They’re shopping for the best value.
There’s a difference.
Now don’t get me wrong—there are absolutely people like me, OG Strain, who hunt for rare diamonds in the rough and happily pay extra for truly exceptional cannabis. Some consumers chase the best of the best no matter what the price tag says. But those customers are the exception, not the rule.
If they can get something that’s 90% as good for half the price, many of them will happily make that trade all day long.
And honestly?
Can you blame them?
The average consumer isn’t conducting a cannabis wine tasting with a monocle and a clipboard.
They’re trying to stretch their budget.
Profit Is Profit
Here’s where my sales background kicks in.
A lot of vendors focus on maximum profit per sale.
The smart ones focus on maximum profit overall.
Those are two very different things.
Let’s say you make $400 profit from one customer.
Great.
But what if you could have made $150 from four different customers during the same time period?
Now you’re at $600.
And you’ve moved product.
And you’ve built relationships.
And you’ve created repeat customers.
And you’ve generated referrals.
And you’ve freed up capital to buy more inventory.
The goal isn’t to win one transaction.
The goal is to win the game.
Cannabis Isn’t Fine Art
Some vendors treat cannabis like they’re auctioning off a rare painting.
They’re guarding jars like they’re museum exhibits.
Nobody touch it.
Nobody look at it.
Nobody breathe near it.
It’s special.
Meanwhile, the market keeps moving.
Here’s the reality.
Most flower is replaceable.
More is being grown every day.
More is being harvested every day.
More is being packaged every day.
Unless you’re sitting on something truly rare that won’t be available again for six months or longer, why are you acting like it’s the last cut on Earth?
Move it.
Replace it.
Move the next batch.
Replace that too.
Cannabis should move.
That’s what makes businesses grow.
The Rare Strain Exception
Now before somebody starts typing an angry comment, let’s be fair.
There are exceptions.
If you’ve got something genuinely rare.
A cut that’s difficult to find.
A limited release.
Something that won’t be available again anytime soon.
Then yes.
Holding your price can make sense.
Scarcity creates value.
But let’s be honest with ourselves.
Most of the flower people are sitting on isn’t rare.
It’s available.
It’s replaceable.
And if you can call your source tomorrow and get more, then you’re not protecting a treasure.
You’re delaying a sale.
Every Customer Isn’t the Same Customer
Another mistake I see is vendors treating pricing like it’s carved into stone tablets.
The cannabis market has never worked that way.
Every customer is different.
Some customers buy once.
Some buy weekly.
Some buy volume.
Some buy samples.
Some are loyal.
Some are shopping around.
Some vendors.
Some consumers.
Different relationships create different opportunities.
The smartest salespeople understand that flexibility closes deals.
The goal isn’t squeezing every dollar out of every person.
The goal is creating enough value that everyone wants to come back.
Because repeat customers are where the real money lives.
The Jar Doesn’t Get Better Sitting There
One of my favorite questions to ask is this:
How much money is that product making while it’s sitting on your shelf?
The answer is zero.
None.
Not a penny.
In fact, it’s costing you opportunity.
The longer inventory sits, the longer your money is trapped inside it.
That’s money that could have been reinvested into the next pickup.
The next strain.
The next opportunity.
The next customer.
A jar sitting on a shelf is basically a couch potato.
It isn’t working.
It’s just sitting there getting older.
The Biggest Players Understand This
Look around the industry.
The vendors moving serious volume aren’t usually the ones obsessed with squeezing every possible dollar from every sale.
They’re moving product.
Building relationships.
Creating repeat business.
Keeping inventory flowing.
Keeping customers happy.
Keeping money moving.
Momentum matters.
Volume matters.
Reputation matters.
A customer who feels they got a good deal often becomes a customer for years.
A customer who feels they’re getting squeezed usually becomes somebody else’s customer.
Final Hit
I’ve spent years in sales.
I’ve watched top performers in multiple industries.
And one lesson keeps showing up over and over again.
You can’t deposit inventory into your bank account.
You can only deposit sales.
If a product is replaceable, move it.
If a profit is available, take it.
If a customer wants to buy, sell to them.
Because the cannabis industry isn’t a museum.
It’s a business.
And the vendors who understand that usually aren’t sitting around waiting for the perfect customer.
They’re too busy counting the money from all the customers they already sold to.
Industry
OG STRAIN REPORT: MAY 2ND — THE GREAT UPSTATE SPLIT
Two Events. One Saturday. Full-State Cannabis Culture Collision.
Written by OG Strain (Talk Cannabis Edition)
SATURDAY, MAY 2ND — UPSTATE NEW YORK GOES FULL CULTURE MODE
Let’s get this straight from the jump:
This is a Saturday takeover day in Upstate New York cannabis culture.
Not a weekday warmup. Not a “stop by after work” situation.
This is a full weekend-level activation, where the entire scene splits into two major events happening at the same time—both loaded with vendors, music, food, and real community energy.
On one side: Palenville’s Growers Gathering, deep in the woods.
On the other: Fort Plain’s Spring High Festival, structured, open, and fully loaded.
Two destinations. Same culture. Different expression.
And OG Strain? Somewhere between both, pretending fuel prices don’t exist.
⸻
EVENT ONE: THE GROWERS GATHERING — PALENVILLE, NY
Hosted by Damn Sam & Higher Beings
Hidden in the wooded landscape of Palenville, New York, the Growers Gathering returns as one of the most authentic cannabis community meetups in the region.
This year’s event is hosted by Damn Sam and Higher Beings, continuing a grassroots tradition that feels more like stepping into a living cannabis ecosystem than attending a scheduled event.
The gathering takes place at the same private outdoor location used for the 2025 Damn Sam Cannabis Cup, a well-known forest-style venue within the community that has become synonymous with raw, underground cannabis culture in Upstate New York.
This is not polished corporate cannabis.
This is growers, creators, and consumers in the same space actually interacting.
🌿 What You’ll Find in Palenville:
THC vendors (flower, concentrates, edibles, infused products)
Seed and clone vendors for growers and cultivators
Vape and extract hardware vendors
Food vendors keeping the energy steady all day
Live music throughout the event
Real-time networking between growers, breeders, and enthusiasts
Deep-dive cannabis conversations that don’t end in five minutes
It’s outdoor, it’s natural, and it runs through the daylight hours into early evening before wrapping with the sun.
📍 Location: Palenville, NY (private outdoor 2025 Cannabis Cup grounds)
⸻

EVENT TWO: SPRING HIGH FESTIVAL — FORT PLAIN, NY
Hosted by Crisxotics
On the opposite side of the map, the Spring High Festival takes over Fort Plain, New York from 1:00 PM to 7:00 PM at:
📍 317 New Turnpike Rd, Fort Plain, NY
Presented by Crisxotics, this event brings a more structured festival environment while still fully rooted in cannabis culture.
Where Palenville leans natural and underground, Fort Plain leans organized, accessible, and vendor-forward—but both land in the same place culturally: community and plant appreciation.
🌞 What You’ll Find in Fort Plain:
THC product vendors (flower, concentrates, edibles, infused goods)
Seed and clone vendors for growers and collectors
Vape and hardware vendors
Food vendors across the grounds
Live music and DJ sets throughout the day
Community networking and brand exposure
A clean, structured festival flow from afternoon to evening
This is the kind of event where you “just stop by” and somehow end up staying until closing because you ran into six people you didn’t expect to see.
⸻
OG STRAIN’S DILEMMA: TWO LANES, ONE SATURDAY
Here’s where the story actually gets fun.
With new wheels on the road, OG Strain is officially mobile enough to reach either event on May 2nd.
And that creates the real question:
Do you go deep into the woods where the growers are… or stay in the structured festival lane where everything is flowing clean?
Because this isn’t a competition—it’s a split identity moment for the culture.
Palenville represents the raw grower DNA and underground cannabis roots.
Fort Plain represents the organized expansion, visibility, and modern cannabis marketplace energy.
Same plant. Same community. Different frequency.
And OG Strain’s final destination?
Still unannounced.
Because sometimes the story is better when it arrives before the headline does.
⸻
FINAL WORD
May 2nd, 2026 is not just another event date—it’s a statewide cultural split moment for Upstate New York cannabis.
Two events running simultaneously.
Both packed with vendors, music, food, and community energy.
Both representing different sides of the same movement.
Whether you end up in Palenville or Fort Plain, you’re not just attending an event—you’re stepping into a culture that’s actively building itself in real time.
And somewhere on that road, OG Strain will be there… probably acting like the GPS is “deciding for him.”
⸻
Strain’s Strain Reviews (Talk Cannabis)
Plugs Pages Magazine Feature Series
Industry
The Living Engine: How Microbes and Fungi Are Driving Next-Level Cannabis at Hepworth Farm
By Tokalotapot | The Plugs Pages
If you still believe cannabis potency is determined solely by bottled nutrients, you’re already behind the curve.
At Hepworth Farm, something bigger is happening. This isn’t just cultivation—it’s regenerative biology in motion. We’re talking about living soil systems so active they function like a secondary nervous system for the plant itself.
And at the center of it all are the true architects of modern cannabis performance: microbes and fungi.
⸻
The Real Secret Behind High-THC Cannabis
The industry chases numbers—30%+ THC, 3–5% terpenes, and dense, frosted flowers that photograph well under lights.
But here’s the truth most cultivators won’t say out loud:
Cannabis cannot produce elite resin expression without a functioning biological engine.
That engine is built from:
• Bacteria that unlock and cycle nutrients
• Fungi that expand and enhance root systems
• Soil biology that converts organic matter into usable plant fuel
Without this living system, you’re not cultivating—you’re force-feeding a plant and hoping for optimal results.
⸻

Building the Living Soil Network
At Hepworth Farm, plants are not “fed.” Ecosystems are built.
Through deep living beds, biochar integration, compost systems, and carbon-rich organic layers, every input is designed with one primary goal:
Microbial dominance.
When that balance is achieved, the plant responds at a biological level:
• Accelerated growth and vigor
• Stronger natural immunity
• Increased cannabinoid and terpene expression
This is not input-driven cultivation. It is ecology-driven performance.
⸻
The Power Players Behind the System
Bacterial Core
Bacillus subtilis
• Enhances resin and terpene production
• Supports aggressive root development
Bacillus amyloliquefaciens
• Improves phosphorus and potassium availability
• Drives cannabinoid and terpene expression potential
Bacillus licheniformis
• Breaks down organic matter efficiently
• Maintains continuous nutrient cycling within the rhizosphere
⸻
Fungal Network
Rhizophagus irregularis (Mycorrhizal fungi)
• Expands functional root surface area dramatically
• Improves water and nutrient uptake efficiency
Trichoderma harzianum
• Protects root systems from pathogenic pressure
• Stimulates plant growth hormone activity
Beauveria bassiana
• Acts as a biological pest management tool
• Reduces pest stress during flowering cycles
⸻
Why This Matters for Cannabis Culture
The modern cannabis market is saturated with overhyped genetics, inconsistent flower quality, and heavy reliance on synthetic input systems.
What is being built at Hepworth Farm represents a different direction:
• Clean inputs
• Transparent cultivation methods
• Biologically driven performance
When consumers understand what is happening beneath the soil surface—how plants are actually grown, not just what they look like—the entire perception of quality shifts.
This is where cannabis evolves from product to process.
⸻
The Hepworth Movement
This is not just about growing cannabis.
It’s about:
• Regenerative agriculture
• Soil restoration
• Community education
• Transparency in cultivation
And above all else:
Proving that biology outperforms bottled inputs—every time.
⸻
Final Word
If the goal is larger yields, louder terpene profiles, and higher-quality resin production, the question is not:
“What nutrients should I add?”
The real question is:
“What kind of biology am I building?”
Because once your soil is alive, your plants don’t just grow.
They perform.
Stay grounded. Stay learning. Keep building.
Let’s grow!
Tokalotapot Seeds
Industry
You Can’t Smell a Photo—Stop Acting Like You Know Everything
OG Strain
Let me put this in perspective.
I post a photo of some real top-tier flower—premium stuff. I even tell you straight up: the picture doesn’t do it justice. The effects are stronger than it looks. The flavor hits harder than the camera can capture. And yet, somehow, someone in the comments decides they know more than me.
“You paid $50? Yeah… you got ripped off.”
No pause. No experience. No clue what they’re talking about. Just a confident declaration.
Here’s the truth about comments like that: the proper way to respond would be something like, “It doesn’t look like it from the picture,” if I even ask, “Do you think $50 for this was worth it?” That’s perfectly fine. You’re being honest that your opinion is based on what you see, not what you’ve experienced.
Another acceptable response: “I wouldn’t pay $50 an eighth for anything.” Fair. That’s opinion. That’s fine.
But the moment you look at a photo and tell me I got ripped off—claiming it as fact—you’ve just exposed yourself as completely uninformed. You’re pretending to know more than someone who has actually handled, smelled, tasted, and smoked the flower.
Think about it: I smoked ten different strains of haze from ten different suppliers this month. Almost all of them looked better than the one in the picture. Did that mean they were better? Absolutely not. Looks are the worst indicator of cannabis quality. Declaring otherwise makes you look foolish—like you’ve never experienced what you’re trying to evaluate.
Comments like this are public demonstrations of ignorance. They make you look like you skipped every step—smelling, tasting, testing effects—and still landed on a verdict as if it’s fact. You’re not giving insight. You’re advertising that you don’t know what you’re talking about.
The reality is simple: quality cannabis can’t be judged from a photo alone. Looks are misleading. Effects, flavor, and experience tell the real story. Anyone who has spent real time with cannabis understands this.
So the next time you see a post and feel the urge to declare someone got ripped off from a picture, pause. Ask yourself: have you even experienced this product? If not, your confident declaration does nothing but make you look silly. And from where I’m standing, the only thing you’ve proven is how far you are from actually understanding cannabis.
Stop pretending you know more than someone who has. Start respecting experience. And maybe, just maybe, think twice before posting your opinion like it’s fact.
⸻
OG Strain
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