Category: Coverage

ON CAMPUS: Becoming a Cannabis Applied Science Student

ON CAMPUS: Becoming a Cannabis Applied Science Student

April 05, 2019 – When I graduated from Loyalist College’s Biotechnology – Advanced program in June 2018, I gave the valedictorian address to my graduating class and was ready to pursue a career in science.

I’ve been passionate about science and research my entire life. Having spent three years in labs at Loyalist, gloved and goggled while diving into microbiology, tissue culture and next level extraction technologies, I was everything a young scientist in her early 20s would be – excited to get out there and make a difference in the world.

I never really considered a career in cannabis until I heard about Loyalist’s post-graduate cannabis applied science program, the first of its kind in Canada. Being a part of the program’s initial cohort has been an amazing experience. We’re a small group – there’s 20 of us – and we come from various science-related backgrounds. Having diverse perspectives in the classroom makes for intriguing, thought-provoking discussions which broaden and challenge the boundaries of my thinking.

Click to Read More: ON CAMPUS: Becoming a Cannabis Applied Science Student (Belleville The Intelligencer)

These Niche Cannabis Businesses Will Blow Your Mind

These Niche Cannabis Businesses Will Blow Your Mind

Mar. 22, 2019 – By now, you’ve heard about Martha Stewart’s new partnership with Canopy Growth. You’ve probably also heard about the several American breweries trying to capitalize on the marijuana business by combining weed and beer. Well, these aren’t even scratching the surface of the weird cannabis industry. There are a ton of weird businesses or products related to the booming business of cannabis, and many of them are based right here in Ontario.

Mary’s Wellness

Mary’s Wellness produces a fresh new take on high tea: ‘high’ tea. As you might glean from the name, this tea contains cannabis, perfect for the fancy stoner. While this tea version is much less potent than the average marijuana product, it’s still useful for people with lower tolerances or people who just don’t want to get that high.

Canopy Growth

Unsurprisingly, many different companies are attempting to combine beer and cannabis. Two American companies went so far as to invest in Canopy Growth. While most of these products combine marijuana oil with barley in the brewing process, one Ontario company actually brews their beer from the marijuana plant.

Smith Falls, which used to house a Hershey’s factory (complete with a visitor’s center and other related tourist attractions) now houses Canopy Growth, but kept the tourist trappings. The new factory even has grow rooms that can be viewed by the public.

The CBD Market

The CBD market has also been trending since the legalization of marijuana in Canada. A wide variety of businesses have been incorporating CBD, or cannabidiol, into their products. CBD does have demonstrated health benefits, including the FDA-approved drug, Epidiolex, for epilepsy relief, but it’s thought to only have therapeutic benefits in very high quantities. It’s debatable whether CBD makes any difference in the majority of these commercially-available products, but hey, it’s a great marketing strategy.

Grafton’s St. Anne’s Spa

You can purchase a wide array of cannabis beauty and skin products, including several body butters and salves from Grafton’s St. Anne’s Spa. Calyx, which has locations in Yorkville and Parkdale, sells various tinctures and lotions not just for humans, but for your furry friends too. There are also a wide range of bath bombs and lip balms, both THC and CBD infused, available at many places around Ontario and online.

Government Authorized Ontario Cannabis Store

And hey, you can get some out-there cannabis products from a government authorized Ontario Cannabis Store. Ever tried Fleur de Lune Intimate Spray? Make sure you don’t mix that up with any of the various oral sprays they offer.

Don’t sleep on what you can buy online. Beyond different novelty pipes and rollers, you can also splurge on cannabis-infused perfume, board games, and more.

Some universities and colleges even have courses on marijuana. Loyalist College covers the science behind marijuana. Western University covers the legalities behind the marijuana market. Ryerson University covers the business side of things.

As the cannabis industry continues to grow, there seems to be no limit to where it will spread. We could even be powering our cars with cannabis someday. That’s how science works, right?

Click to Read More: These Niche Cannabis Businesses Will Blow Your Mind (Dine Magazine)

Professors of pot

Professors of Pot

Feb. 25, 2019 – It’s a stoner’s dream come true: you can finally major in marijuana. Here are four post-secondary institutions that have cannabis on the curriculum:

Western University

The course: Marijuana Law and Practice
The professor: Hugo Alves
Alves is a former partner at Bennett Jones, one of the country’s go-to legal advisory teams for the cannabis market. (He’s worked with about half of the country’s licensed producers.) His course covers the battle to legalize medical marijuana and famous charter challenges to Canadian cannabis laws.

Ryerson University

The course: Business of Cannabis
The professor: Brad Poulos
In 2015, serial entrepreneur Brad Poulos sought a new industry to work in, eventually settling on weed. (Blockchain and drones were runners-up.) His 13-week crash course includes lectures on design, start-up principles and retail guidelines for cannabis.

Loyalist College

The course: Cannabis Formulation and Product Development
The professor: Monica Vialpando
Loyalist is the first Ontario institution to offer a graduate-level cannabis science program. In Vialpando’s course, students learn about the polypharmacy of the cannabis plant, formulation chemistry and methods of administration (such as dermal, sublingual and suppository).

Click to Read More: Professors of Pot (Toronto Life)

These 11 Canadian Colleges And Universities All Offer Weed Programs Now

These 11 Canadian Colleges And Universities All Offer Weed Programs Now

Sep. 10, 2018As we’re sure you are well aware, marijuana will be fully legal to buy and smoke in Canada on October 17th of this year. Meaning there’s just over a month left until you’ll legally be able to get your hands on cannabis for recreational purposes for the first time ever in Canada.

This is also big news for a number of colleges and universities in Canada, which are now starting to offer programs designed to help students find jobs in this entirely new industry. Here’s a look at 11 schools across Canada that will prepare you for the front line of the new job market.

Click to Read More: These 11 Canadian Colleges And Universities All Offer Weed Programs Now (Narcity)

Cannabis Infusions Are the Latest Evolution in Beer’s 10,000 year History

Cannabis Infusions Are the Latest Evolution in Beer's 10,000 year History

Aug. 31, 2018 – Archaeologists suspect that humans have been brewing beer for more than 10,000 years, which would indicate that we developed fermentation technology prior to the agricultural revolution. The oldest known beer sample dates from more than 8,000 years ago, made in China using a mix of rice, grapes, hawthorn tree fruit and honey. In the millennia that have followed, brewed beverages have spread and diversified across the globe. That trend continues to this day as brewmasters in the US and Canada experiment with a new strain of 21st century beer infusions: cannabis. It’s not been easy, but our good friend science has come to the rescue.

It’s not that surprising, really. With the rise of recreational weed in more than half of American states — and legalization at the national level in Canada coming October 17th — interest in novel uses for the plant are at an all-time high. What’s more, cannabis and hops are genetic cousins. “They’re the most closely related plants in the family cannabaceae, genetically speaking,” Elan Walsky, co-owner of Oregon’s Coalition Brewing told The Ringer in July. “So from a practical standpoint, it means they’re producing a lot of the same terpenes, or flavor and aromatic compounds.”

This natural synergy has led a number of brewers to experiment with mixing beer with weed. New Belgium recently released the Hemperor IPA, for example, while Lagunitas now offers SuperCritical. Neither of these drinks actually includes THC (which is prohibited by federal law), only the terpenes, but they mark some of the latest innovations in the current trend towards infused craft beers. And they’re certainly not alone. Strange Days Brewing in Kansas is famous for its unique infusions including rice, ginger and coffee, while Mad Science Brewing in Maryland offers beers infused with fruits and vegetables. Nevada-based startup Cannabiniers plans to release its own infused brew this month.

Even Molson Coors is getting in on the action. The company recently announced that it is “entering a joint venture with The Hydropothecary Corporation” to develop a line of non-alcoholic weed beers.

Keith Villa, who developed Blue Moon Belgian Wheat, recently left MillerCoors after 32 years to start CERIA Beverages in Colorado. “I’m ready to introduce another high-impact brand to the industry again, this time with a new line of custom cannabis-infused craft beers,” Villa writes on the CERIA website. “Today, the opportunity and the demand are here, inviting Americans to enjoy a more social way of consuming cannabis – by drinking rather than by smoking it or through ingestion of edibles.”

But unlike the Hemperor IPA or Supercritical, CERIA’s offerings will contain THC but not alcohol. The company plans to release three varieties — a light beer, a wheat beer, and a stout — this fall.

Whether they contain THC or alcohol, all of these beers share a common characteristic: they’re not actually brewed with cannabis. Most often, the beer is simply infused with cannabis oil after the fermentation process. Province Brands, a Toronto-based startup, is working to change that by being the first company to involve cannabis in the brewing process itself, from the plants roots to its flowers. The company is doing so with a little bit of help from student researchers at Loyalist College in Belleville and a $300,000 research grant from the Ontario government.

Click to Read More: Cannabis Infusions Are the Latest Evolution in Beer’s 10,000 year History (Engadget)

Want a Job in the Cannabis Industry? Try These Canadian Colleges

Want a Job in the Cannabis Industry? Try These Canadian Colleges

Jul. 19, 2018 – When legal marijuana hits Canadian stores this October, every other country will be watching and scrutinizing what happens in our market. “Canada is going to lead this industry globally,” says David Purcell, director of emerging business, at BC’s Kwantlen Polytechnic University.

With legalization, a whole underground industry is set to become legit; Statistics Canada said $5.7 billion was spent on cannabis last year, making it a bigger sector than alcohol or tobacco. Up to 150,000 new workers—growers, sellers, store managers, retail clerks—will need training. In response, Canadian post-secondary institutions with new classes and programs to meet new market demands. But how do you build a cannabis curriculum on short order? And how do you find reputable teachers, given many experts likely gained their wisdom while growing an illegal product? By necessity, colleges and universities are getting creative in their search for talent.

This September, Niagara College Canada launched what some call the country’s first post-secondary credential in commercial cannabis production. Twenty-four students—including PhD candidates, scientists and engineers—were selected from over 300 applicants to learn best practices for growing marijuana. The program is organized around three core fundamentals: large-scale crop cultivation, legal issues, and business fundamentals. (For the record, no cannabis will be consumed.)

Alberta Producer Making Cannabis Oil for ‘Green’ Beer Hitting Regulatory Roadblocks

Alberta Producer Making Cannabis Oil for 'Green' Beer Hitting Regulatory Roadblocks

Jul. 1, 2018 – An Alberta-based cannabis producer is hoping to grease the wheels of the liquor industry with a little marijuana oil.

Element GP, based in Clearwater County, plans to provide cannabis oil for a line of non-alcoholic beers brewed from barley, and infused with cannabis oil. 

The producer is working with Toronto-based Province Brands of Canada to create the concoction, which they describe as a safer alternative to alcohol. 

Under the new business alliance, Element GP will produce custom cannabis oil for some of these new beers. 

Province Brands heralded the beer — which is still in development with patent pending. They say cracking open one of their cold ones would provide a short-lived buzz similar to an alcoholic beer.

“All Province Brands beverage products will feature its accelerant to shorten the intoxicating onset time as well as its proprietary decelerant to shorten the offset time, ultimately creating a dose-response curve similar to that of alcohol,” reads a news release.

Click to Read More: Alberta Producer Making Cannabis Oil for ‘Green’ Beer Hitting Regulatory Roadblocks (CBC News)

Toronto Startup in Race to Develop Cannabis ‘Beer’

Toronto Startup in Race to Develop Cannabis ‘Beer’

Brews News: Anderson Beers Win Medals at National Competition

Brews News: Anderson Beers Win Medals at National Competition

Jun. 6, 2018 – Never mind the Canadian Country Music Awards or the Junos. What a city like London needs to land in order to be hip are the Canadian Brewing Awards.

Especially when there’s a hometown contender and a whiff of cannabis in the air (not that there’s any connection between the two).

The 16th annual awards recognizing the best of Canada’s craft beers were held in Halifax this year and Anderson Craft Ales was among those leaving with medals from among the 310 breweries submitting more than 1,900 beers.

The Old East Village brewery captured gold for its cream ale and, in the European-style amber to dark lager category, bronze for Anderson Spring. Not too shabby.

There were 56 categories, each representing a style of beer from brett to spiced to smoked.

Among the other medal winners:

• Gold for Walkerville Purity pilsner from Windsor

• Silver for Walkerville’s Kremlin Russian Imperial stout

• Silver for Westcott cream ale by the Grove Brewhouse of Kingsville

• Silver in the North American lager category for Frank’s cream ale by Frank Brewing of Tecumseh

• Silver for Scotch ale, Niagara College Teaching Brewing Beer 101 Strong

• Silver for Come to the Dark Side chocolate stout by Upper Thames of Woodstock

• Bronze for Ace Hill Light. One of the Toronto-based Ace Hill founders is Blake Anderson, formerly of London.

• Best of show was an English brown beer brewed in Quebec by Brasserie Mille-Iles and brewer of the year was Dageraad of British Columbia.

And the cannabis? That was the subject of an eye-raising seminar as cannabis beer edges closer to the marketplace via Province Brands of Canada. In anticipation of legalization for recreational use, the Toronto company has plans to make a beer using cannabis instead of hops.

Dooma Wendschuch, co-founder and chief executive of Province Brands of Canada, told CTV News the cannabis beer would have 6.5 mg of THC, the psychoactive agent in pot.

“Our goal is to make a product that is only as intoxicating as a standard beer would be for someone who has drank beer before,” Wendschuch told the broadcaster.

Hops are a plant cousin of cannabis and the research for using cannabis in beer is partially funded by you. The Ontario government chipped in $300,000 for Loyalist College of Belleville to work with Province Brands in the development of the new adult beverage category. Think of that as you vote in the provincial election.

Click to Read More: Brews News: Anderson Beers Win Medals at National Competition (The London Free Press)

Ontario Government Just Gave Loyalist College An Insane Amount Of Money To Create Weed Beer

Ontario Government Just Gave Loyalist College An Insane Amount Of Money To Create Weed Beer

May 7, 2018 – When you think of how people ingest marijuana you would usually think of people smoking it, or eating it in a something like a brownie. 

But apparently Ontario wants you to have the opportunity to drink it as well, and not just drink it in some kind of nice tasting flavoured drink, but as beer.  

Yes, the government of Ontario is actually funding research to make weed beer a thing. 

Student researchers at Loyalist College in Belleville Ont. have been given $300,000 in order to make everyone’s marijuana beer dreams a reality. 

The basic idea behind this plan is that instead of making beer out of barley, brewers would make it out of cannabis instead. 

They want this to be completed and made available to sell to the public by next year when edibles, or in this case drinkables, will be legal in Canada. 

Click to Read More: Ontario Government Just Gave Loyalist College An Insane Amount Of Money To Create Weed Beer (Narcity)