Canada: Master Grower In Demand For Cultivation Expertise

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
From 420 magazine...


Nova Scotia isn’t exactly at the forefront of the country’s burgeoning medical marijuana trade. In the year and a bit since Ottawa threw open the doors to commercial pot producers, 23 companies have been licensed to produce and/or sell medical-grade marijuana, yet not one of those companies is located in the province.

The bulk of licensed producers are in Ontario and British Columbia, but every other province except Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador has at least one.

Local startups like the Truro Herbal Co. and Stellarton’s Vida Cannabis Corp. may yet be granted licences, but they’re competing with more than 1,000 other applicants, so there are no guarantees.

In lieu of any production, Nova Scotia’s most notable contribution to the business may well be Amherst master grower Randy Flemming, who has just been hired by the mammoth American Cannabis Co. to oversee its entry into the Canadian market.

American Cannabis doesn’t produce or sell marijuana. Instead, it lays the groundwork for producer-sellers by designing their facilities, establishing operating procedures, procuring plants and doing hiring and training. At the moment, the company has only five clients in Canada, but with so many startups looking for guidance and some established industry cred, that number will rise quickly.

Flemming’s first project is to get two Maritime startups - one in Nova Scotia and one in P.E.I. - ready for production, but after that he’ll be working with companies across the country.

On the face of it, Flemming isn’t the most obvious candidate for the job. Not only is he from a region with no medical marijuana production to speak of, he has no background in business or consulting. Furthermore, he only began working in the field professionally last year, after responding to a Kijiji job post for a master grower.

The company was Moncton’s Organigram, but the man doing the interviewing was American Cannabis co-founder and chief development officer Ellis Smith. According to Smith, finding local talent is a huge challenge in any market, but Flemming revealed himself immediately as a rare bird.

“I realized very quickly that this guy is highly intelligent about cannabis” says Smith, who hired Flemming almost immediately. “You just do not find people with his acumen when it comes to this plant.”

Even allowing for employer hyperbole, the evidence backs Smith up. Under Flemming’s supervision, Organigram was the only producer last year to consistently pass Ottawa’s stringent quality testing; every other producer failed in some capacity at least once, and many have had to replace their master growers.

According to Smith, Health Canada’s top priority is consistency, and the lack of it among startups is the chief reason so few licences have been issued.

In conversation, the 39-year-old Flemming is a man of few words initially, but get him talking about marijuana and it all comes pouring out.

“People don’t understand how special it is,” he enthuses. “It’s not like growing a tomato plant. It grows so much faster than everything else, and there are so many more variables to it.”

Flemming didn’t come to cannabis by being a stoner - he barely touched a joint until he was in his 20s - but through gardening. He started with his mom and dad, growing annuals and perennials in their yard in Truro.

“I’d be 11 years old and digging a 40-foot flower bed while my buddies were out playing baseball or something.”

By the time he was in his mid-teens, he knew how to grow pretty much everything but marijuana, so he began experimenting with it in the woods near his home. He played around with it for several years, but it wasn’t until his mid-20s, when he began using it to treat both early-onset arthritis and his undiagnosed attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, that the hobby became a full-blown obsession.

“I decided then that I would throw my whole life into it.”

Though Flemming insists he never profited from the sale of his plants, which he eventually got an exemption for, he was heavily involved in what he calls “the subculture” for years. Today, he credits that experience for helping to set him apart.

“There are a lot of people out there now trying to break into the industry who were never part of the subculture - they maybe sold lights to a hydroponic store or something - and now they’re calling themselves master growers.

“But those ‘master growers’ just screw companies up and cost them millions of dollars.”

That is, of course, one of the chief challenges of the medical marijuana trade - that so few traditional gardeners and so few traditional engineers have ever dealt with the stuff.

Flemming says he sat in meetings at Organigram listening to engineers reveal how little they knew about, say, the facility’s air conditioning or dehumidification needs. Getting them to listen to him - some punk from small-town Nova Scotia - was never easy. Now that Flemming has joined American Cannabis, he’ll presumably start commanding a little more respect.

Flemming and his employer aim to establish a reputation in Canada as the go-to company for certified organic expertise. According to Smith, many startups are looking to go organic, if only because organic standards are more likely to appease Health Canada.

Flemming himself has always grown organically, but he says his primary interest isn’t in the eco label, per se.

“I just want to grow the best damn pot around.”

 

rnr

Well-Known Member
"I just want to grow the best dam pot around" will never happen working for a lp. Also the article says he barely touched pot until his early twentys yet he's been growing it since his mid teens? Which is it?
again your brain is reading what it wants to see, your retarted. he didnt touch it, meaning he didn't smoke or use it, dumb ass, and a lot of killer growers I know have never touch mj, or used it, that don't mean to touch the plant, go back to your fake ass corner you chump, now use more words to offend me
 

Gmack420

Well-Known Member
again your brain is reading what it wants to see, your retarted. he didnt touch it, meaning he didn't smoke or use it, dumb ass, and a lot of killer growers I know have never touch mj, or used it, that don't mean to touch the plant, go back to your fake ass corner you chump, now use more words to offend me
No 16 yr old is going to grow and not smoke it you fuckin retard. To suggest that is the case is just more proof of how fucking dumb you really are!
 

itsmehigh

Well-Known Member
Growing cannabis isn't exactly rocket science and to say an LP can't grow quality is assinign. The trick is scaleability, and baby steps, when starting from scratch good things will take time. You need to perfect your methods and systems then grow on those fundamentals. You can't open 100,000sf and expect to be successful, you need to ramp up and expand once you get your ducks in a row. It can be done and will be, you need the right people on your team, suits and tie teams will fail. The most important input would be from someone with cannabis cultivation experience, he/she is an invaluable asset.

Itsme.
 

torontoke

Well-Known Member
I wouldnt trust the opinion of a grower that didnt use.
Obviously he is in it for the money and now notoriety.
Growing cannabis isn't exactly rocket science and to say an LP can't grow quality is assinign. The trick is scaleability, and baby steps, when starting from scratch good things will take time. You need to perfect your methods and systems then grow on those fundamentals. You can't open 100,000sf and expect to be successful, you need to ramp up and expand once you get your ducks in a row. It can be done and will be, you need the right people on your team, suits and tie teams will fail. The most important input would be from someone with cannabis cultivation experience, he/she is an invaluable asset.

Itsme.
i wouldnt say that lps cant grow quality but because those plants are grown strictly for profit they arent going to have the same love and attention as a small scale op.
In theory you are right but this guy saying "he just wants to grow the best ever" is straight bs. He wants to grow extremely large quantities not quality.
Quality i.e less yield doesnt work for lp mentality, at least not without ridiculous costs per gram to the patients.
And the best meds ive tried from multiple lps would be mid grade to what ive smoked from certain designated growers.
I dont care who they hire or how many of em. A bud from a 100,000sq ft room will always be below a smaller grow quality wise imho.
 

doingdishes

Well-Known Member
can you scale it up to 100k sq ft?
i read that huge places like this will fail because it's not scalable....curious
 

GrowTeam

Well-Known Member
Its like the restaurant business. Yes you can spend millions on a nice kitchen. Mcdonalds has a fine kitchen. But when the chef is a replaceable cog then the results are like mcdonalds because thats the model. aka chinese gang model. However if you have a high end restaurant with a talented chef then there is no comparison. Growing cannabis is an art and a science. Anyone with money can have an amazing grow room built with the right consulting. Thats the science part. That doesnt mean they can grow it well without the right chef. Cannabis isnt like growing peppers. (by the way I love growing peppers)
 
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