HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Plumbing The Potent Pleasures Of Puffing Pot
Pubdate: Sun, 01 Feb 2004
Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)
oll=bal-artslife-society
Copyright: 2004 The Baltimore Sun, a Times Mirror Newspaper.
Contact:  http://www.sunspot.net/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37
Author:  John Woestendiek, Sun Staff

PLUMBING THE POTENT PLEASURES OF PUFFING POT

Cannabis Catalogs: Secretive Author Has Made Marijuana His Life's Mission.

Jason King, on 'Texada Timewarp': Superbly perfumed flowery aroma and 
flavor .. very nice, cerebral ... King's take on 'Sweet Skunk': Quite 
complex - pungent on the inhale, super sweet on the exhale ... Like an 
overripe mango .. thick skunky tones ... intense yet manageable.

And 'Princess Bob'? King gives it a definite thumbs up: Velvety flavor . 
exactly like those little blue marshmallows in Boo Berry cereal . blooms 
and mounts in a sublime crescendo, then lingers for an eternity ... 
Powerful and psychedelic, it gave me light hallucinations and an inability 
to stop laughing.

As you may have guessed, King is neither wine enthusiast nor cigar 
aficionado. What he scouts out, sorts through, savors and documents in his 
books - The Cannabible and its newly released sequel The Cannabible 2 - is 
marijuana.

King, a college dropout, now travels the globe, following the hemp harvest 
the way he once followed Grateful Dead tours. His mission? To inventory, 
through words and photos, new and existing strains of cannabis - where 
they're grown, what they look like, how they taste and the "type of high" 
they deliver.

"Documentator," King said when asked to describe his profession. "Is that a 
word? That's really what I'm doing. I've photographed thousands of strains 
already, and I haven't even scratched the surface."

King, 32, spoke in a telephone interview from his home, the location of 
which - though he's rarely there - he asked not be disclosed.

His travels for the first two books have taken him from Hawaii to northern 
California, from Switzerland to Jamaica, from Australia to England - more 
than 10 countries in all, he says - and he's planning an around-the-world 
trip, including "an African ganja safari," for his third volume.

Part scientist, part photojournalist, part cannabis gourmet, King spends 
months in a single location as he tries to earn the confidence of "some of 
the most cautious, private and paranoid gardeners on Earth," Roger 
Christie, a marijuana activist in Hawaii, writes in the foreword of 
Cannabible 2.

Once he does - and it's become far easier since publication of the first 
book - King, toting more than 50 pounds of camera equipment, photographs 
the plant, samples the harvest, (usually with a committee of fellow 
tasters) and records the strain for posterity, be it 'Trainwreck,' 'Killer 
Queen,' or 'Super Silver Haze.'

King says he has yet to run into legal troubles on his quest, which he 
attributes to having "good pot karma" and keeping a low profile. His 
likeness isn't on the book cover, and he declined to be photographed for 
this story. "It [using marijuana] is still illegal in this country," he 
said, "so I figure I don't need to push it that much."

The books' publisher hasn't confronted any problems, either. "I can only 
guess one hasn't been slammed down on the drug czar's desk yet," said Phil 
Wood, president of Ten Speed Press in Berkeley.

Inspiration In Hawaii

King's relationship with marijuana started 17 years ago, while he was in 
high school in San Diego. He enrolled in junior college, but dropped out to 
become a Deadhead, following the rock band on tour for six years. It was 
during that period that his fondness for marijuana bloomed into something 
approaching expertise.

After several "stupid little jobs," he concluded that mainstream employment 
"wasn't doing it" for him. "I'm not the type of person who does good 
working for someone else."

At 25, while living in Hawaii, he came up with the idea of cataloging 
marijuana strains. "There are a million billion different varieties and no 
one has done anything to document them. They're all different - the 
effects, the aromas, the flavors. I knew this was my new goal."

King pays for his research trips by freelancing photos and articles for 
cannabis magazines and selling marijuana calendars and posters that feature 
his photographs. He has several more cannabis-related ventures in the works.

Soon to be available through his Web site (www.thecannabible.com) are a 
cannabis clothing line, featuring the subtle, paisley-like patterns of 
marijuana buds, and cannabis trading cards.

"They're like baseball cards, but every card will feature a different 
strain," he said. "Every pack comes with a scratch and sniff, and a 
three-dimensional piece of art."

King said he spent more than five years working on the first Cannabible, 
about two years on the second. By then, his task was easier. Some marijuana 
growers - the people he used to have to track down - started inviting him 
to come see and photograph their crops.

"Growers are generally a pretty paranoid bunch, but after the first book, 
they started contacting me. It was, like, 'If you're ever in Michigan, drop 
by ... ' "

'Such A Beautiful Flower'

King's photos and articles have appeared in several cannabis magazines, 
including Head and Cannabis Culture, and photos and excerpts from The 
Cannabible 2 are scheduled to appear in a coming issue of High Times, a 
magazine that features a monthly centerfold, often of a plant or bud.

Well-developed buds - also known as "nuggets" or "nugs" - provoke a 
near-lustful reaction among some marijuana users, and few photographers get 
as up close and personal as King, whose microphotography of buds, 
glistening with resin, are the foundation of his two glossy, oversized 
picture books.

"They're just such a beautiful flower," King said, "the most beautiful 
flower on the planet, really - black, red, green, gold, yellow, purple. 
They're so diverse, in size, shape and aroma."

King doesn't name strains himself. "It's not my place to do that. That 
would go against everything I'm trying to do," he said.

Instead, he's trying to sort through the confusion - different names for 
the same strains, names given by growers vs. names given by sellers, 
renamed strains.

"I have to filter through all that and find out what the real truth is. 
It's a challenge because so little is known, and because of its illegality."

There is no government agency that designates official names to strains of 
marijuana. Asked who or what is the final authority on naming types of 
marijuana, King replied, "I am."

Pinpointing Descriptions

In judging the taste and effects of different strains, though, King relies 
on help.

"I'll sit down in a circle with a bunch of different connoisseurs and we'll 
pass it around and get everyone's experience. It's pretty subjective, but 
usually there's a consensus on what people are feeling."

It's not unlike a wine tasting, King says - and the descriptions in his 
book sometimes sound like the pontifications of a wine snob - but the 
similarity ends there, he notes.

"You will never hear a wine connoisseur boasting about the killer buzz that 
his favorite Chardonnay packs," he writes. "It's all the same."

King, who does not drink alcoholic beverages or smoke tobacco, said both 
his parents smoked marijuana, and that they have no problem with what he is 
doing.

While police look him over when he's peddling his books at festivals, King 
says he probably gets on their case more than they get on his. More often 
than not, he'll open a book and start showing them pictures.

"I say to them, 'Come on, do you really think this is evil? Look how 
beautiful it is. Do you really think this was a mistake of God, that this 
is something somebody should to go jail for?' "

After he completes his third volume, King plans to take a break from 
writing the cannabis books to pursue a career in music. He plays keyboards.

And for the next couple of months, in fact, he's taking a break from cannabis.

He has begun a 100-day marijuana fast - primarily for health reasons, even 
though he doesn't think marijuana is dangerous or addictive. He sees only 
benefits to the plant, but still recommends moderation. "Anything, 
overused, can be bad for you."

As of last week, he had gone 21 days without marijuana, he said, leaving 
him 79 more days to go.

"But," he added, "who's counting?"
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman