Southern California’s first festival with legal marijuana sales, consumption coming this weekend

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This weekend, for the first time in Southern California, adults will be able to buy and smoke marijuana at a music festival legally.

“Legally” is, of course, the key word. Though it’s never been legal for Californians to smoke weed in public, it’s also never been tough to catch a whiff of marijuana being smoked, in public, at local concerts. And for many years the state has had a thriving, unregulated cannabis festival scene.

But High Times Dope Cup High Desert landed the first state license for a legal cannabis event in the southern half of the state, with some 12,000 people expected to attend the free show that’s coming Saturday and Sunday (March 23 – 24) to the grounds of a small professional baseball stadium in the high desert town of Adelanto.

Along with music performances by Waka Flocka Flame, Soulja Boy and others, the festival will include dozens of vendors legally selling marijuana to anyone 21 and older, with no forced doctor’s recommendation required. Attendees also will be able to smoke cannabis in a designated area without worrying about security tapping them on the shoulder or law enforcement giving them a ticket.

That legitimacy comes with some trade-offs — as the entire cannabis industry has come to understand all too well since Californians voted to legalize and regulate marijuana in 2016.

High Times magazine launched its famed Cannabis Cup circuit 30 years ago in its counterculture heyday. The festivals thrived in California’s gray medical marijuana market, with thousands of people flooding National Orange Show Events Center in San Bernardino and other venues a few times a year to listen to music and smoke weed.

  • In this April 23, 2017 file photo, vendors offer marijuana for sale at the High Times Cannabis Cup in San Bernardino. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel,File)

  • Both medicated and non-medicated food is available at High Times SoCal Cannabis Cup in San Bernardino on Friday, April 21, 2017. (Photo by Matt Masin, Orange County Register, SCNG)

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  • Honey Pot offers medicated topical massages inside the citrus building at the High Times SoCal Cannabis Cup in San Bernardino on Friday, April 21, 2017. (Photo by Matt Masin, Orange County Register, SCNG)

  • Honey Pot infused products on display at High Times SoCal Cannabis Cup in San Bernardino on Friday, April 21, 2017. (Photo by Matt Masin, Orange County Register, SCNG)

  • Flowers on display at the demonstration grow room at High Times SoCal Cannabis Cup in San Bernardino on Friday, April 21, 2017. (Photo by Matt Masin, Orange County Register, SCNG)

  • A Cannabis Cup attendee has her photo taken in front of the High Times flower sign at High Times SoCal Cannabis Cup in San Bernardino on Friday, April 21, 2017. (Photo by Matt Masin, Orange County Register, SCNG)

  • People clammor for free goodies thrown out during the cannabis cooking competition at High Times SoCal Cannabis Cup in San Bernardino on Friday, April 21, 2017. (Photo by Matt Masin, Orange County Register, SCNG)

  • People wait in line for food near the food trucks at High Times SoCal Cannabis Cup in San Bernardino on Friday, April 21, 2017. (Photo by Matt Masin, Orange County Register, SCNG)

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Today, High Times is a multimillion-dollar, publicly traded corporation. And it’s now filing detailed site plans, paying thousands of dollars in licensing fees and agreeing to submit to strict state and local regulations so it can host events like High Times Dope Cup High Desert this weekend.

That means visitors shouldn’t expect free hits of weed from vendors or to chase their joints with beers, which were both common sights at Cannabis Cup events of the past but are illegal under new state laws.

It may sound like a buzzkill. But it’s still a step up from 2018, when a state policy limiting events to county fairgrounds and requiring local approval meant just six cannabis festivals were sanctioned all year — and all of them were in Northern California.

This year, festival organizers can apply for state permits at any venue where they have local approval.

Only one licensed cannabis event has taken place so far in 2019, with Hempcon held earlier this month in the Bay Area.

High Times got the second green light from the state three weeks ago for its Adelanto festival. It’s also planning Cannabis Cup events in Sacramento in April and in Santa Rosa in June.

High Times Dope Cup High Desert marks the first event put on in partnership between the two once-rivaling magazines.

High Times bought Dope Magazine in September for $11.2 million in cash and stock. Seattle-based Dope Magazine has earned a following with its Dope Cup festivals, but has never held one in California.

This weekend’s event is being promoted as the best of the Cannabis Cup and Dope Cup worlds. It includes a cannabis competition, with farmers and manufacturers competing in 35 categories. There’s also space for more than 200 vendors, rows of food trucks and interactive art exhibits planned.

“We’re excited to bring the first legal cannabis event to Southern California, and look forward to planning events for years to come,” High Times CEO Adam Levin said in an email Tuesday.

Levin didn’t respond to a request for further discussion about the new climate for cannabis festivals in California. But it’s clear that High Times has adjusted its expectations for this first sanctioned Southern California show by swapping past year’s pricey ticket packages to shows at large fairground venues for free passes to the more remote stadium grounds.