Pubdate: Tue, 28 Jan 2014
Source: Las Vegas Review-Journal (NV)
Copyright: 2014 Las Vegas Review-Journal
Website: http://www.lvrj.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/233
Author: Kristen Wyatt, the Associated Press
Page: 2B

COLORADO FAIR FEATURES CANNABIS CONTESTS

Plants, Food, Equipment, Hemp Items, Joint Rolling to Be Judged

DENVER (AP) - Pot at the county fair? Why not?

Colorado's Denver County is adding cannabis-themed contests to its
2014 summer fair. It's the first time pot plants will stand alongside
tomato plants and homemade jam in competition for a blue ribbon.

There won't actually be any marijuana at the fairgrounds. The judging
will be done off-site, with photos showing the winning entries. And a
live joint-rolling contest will be done with oregano, not pot.

But county fair organizers say the marijuana categories will add a fun
twist on Denver's already-quirky county fair, which includes a drag
queen pageant and a contest for dioramas made with Peeps candies.

"We thought it was time for us to take that leap and represent one of
the things Denver has going on," said Tracy Weil, the fair's marketing
and creative director

The nine marijuana categories include live plants and clones, plus
contests for marijuana-infused brownies and savory foods. Homemade
bongs, homemade roach clips and clothing and fabric made with hemp
round out the categories.

Judges will look only at plant quality, not the potency or quality of
the drugs they produce.

Other contests - patterned after Amsterdam's famed Cannabis Cup -
already gauge drug quality and flavor.

Top prize is $20, plus of course a blue ribbon. The fair already has a
green ribbon - awarded for using environmentally conscious methods.

The entries will be shown in a "Pot Pavilion" open only to people over
21. Alongside the pot entrants will be 24 categories of homemade beer,
four categories for homemade wine and one category for "spirits and
liqueurs."

Prizes will also be given for speedy joint-rolling, though fair
organizers insist there won't be any marijuana consumption on-site.
Competitors in the live Doritos-eating contest will have to acquire
their munchies elsewhere.

Even the photographs of the winning plants will be viewable only by
adults 21. Organizers don't want 4-H competitors in the popular rabbit
and goat contests wandering by a pot display.

"We have a lot of families and kids at the fair, of course, and we
wanted to be respectful of that," Weil said.

Denver's fair is far from traditional, though. Denver County didn't
have a county fair until 2011. Organizers wanted an urban, hip element
alongside traditional fair favorites like a Ferris wheel and cotton
candy.

There's a speed text-messaging contest, and the highlight staple of a
Western fair, a rodeo, has been replaced with a bicycle rodeo and a
troupe of performing pigs. About 20,000 people attended last year.

The marijuana contests aren't likely to spread to other fairs in
Colorado. Officials in Routt County, in western Colorado, voted last
year to expressly ban marijuana from its county fair.

And Colorado State Fair organizers have expressed no interest in
marijuana competition.

California holds an Emerald Cup at the fairgrounds in Sonoma County,
Calif., where guests with medical clearance are able to sample the
drug. That contest is held at the fairgrounds but isn't a part of the
county fair.
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MAP posted-by: Matt