Pubdate: Sun, 28 Dec 2014
Source: Denver Post (CO)
Copyright: 2014 The Denver Post Corp
Contact:  http://www.denverpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122
Author: Steve Raabe

POT TOURISM GROWS IN COLORADO DESPITE LACK OF OFFICIAL ENDORSEMENT

Look all you want, and you'll find nary a marijuana tourism brochure 
at kiosks operated by Colorado's official travel bureaus.

Yet that institutional prohibition hasn't stopped thousands of 
cannabis tourists from visiting Colorado to experience the phenomenon 
of legal marijuana.

"This is just awesome," said Mike Goldstein of Staten Island, N.Y., 
who visited Denver with three friends in early December. "I think it 
should be legal everywhere. You raise taxes, and you take it out of 
the hands of organized crime."

Goldstein said the reason for his visit was "49 percent weed and 51 
percent Broncos," as his group prepared to go to the Denver vs. 
Buffalo Bills game.

The day before the game, the Goldstein contingent met at a downtown 
Denver hotel for an organized bus tour of marijuana dispensaries and 
cultivation facilities.

"It's been quite a year," said JJ Walker, CEO of Denver-based My 420 
Tours, which claims to be North America's first cannabis tour company.

"We get the 60-year-old business executive who comes here to do 
something different, and we get the 28-year-old who just wants to 
have fun," Walker said.

Government-sponsored tourism agencies such as the Colorado Tourism 
Office and Visit Denver are agnostic toward the concept. They neither 
criticize nor endorse the industry.

As such, no reliable statistics are compiled to show the depth and 
economic impact of the market.

However, Walker said his firm has provided tours to between 4,000 and 
5,000 customers since recreational cannabis sales began Jan. 1.

The company's main offering is a $99, five-hour bus tour that 
includes stops at two dispensaries, a grow and a head shop. Smoking 
pot on the private luxury bus is allowed - and encouraged.

At least 18 companies market similar versions of marijuana touring 
and transportation.

Tourists also can purchase multi-day packages that include stays at 
cannabis-friendly hotels. Walker said he uses three unnamed hotels - 
two in Denver and one in Vail - that allow in-room use of cannabis 
vaporizers and have private outdoor areas for smoking.

In central Denver, The Adagio Bed and Breakfast at 1430 Race St. now 
bills itself as a "bud and breakfast" that caters to 
marijuana-oriented travelers. The lodge offers a morning "wake and 
bake" and an afternoon happy hour - starting at 4:20 p.m. - with 
beverages, snacks and three varieties of cannabis. Rates start at 
$249 per night.

Colorado and Denver tourism officials say they have no interest in 
promoting pot tourism.

"We will not use the legalization of marijuana to market the state of 
Colorado," said Al White, director of the Colorado Tourism Office.

White said that engaging in promotions could put Colorado at risk of 
violating federal and state laws.

Besides, he said, it makes little sense to endorse legal marijuana 
for tourists when Colorado's regulations give them few options for 
places to legally smoke it.

White questions the potential depth of the market.

"If you've been smoking pot all your adult life in Columbus, Ohio, 
and you buy it from the guy on the corner, I really don't think 
you're going to feel a need to go and buy it in Colorado," he said.

Richard Scharf, president and CEO of Visit Denver, the city's 
convention and visitors bureau, said the market for marijuana tourism 
is tiny compared to Colorado's overall stature as a travel destination.

"We just don't have any research at all that says (marijuana) is 
driving demand," he said. "When you have 14 million annual visitors, 
we just don't see pot as a significant driver in that market."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom