Enhanced production value and bulked-up facilities helped make this year’s Emerald Cup an easier, more pleasant experience, a nice touch as everyone prepares for the unknown.
SANTA ROSA, CA. – Like a harvest, the Emerald Cup is (and will always be) a work of art in progress, a living evocation of the Northern California cultivator community at the point in time in which the show is being thrown. The 2017 iteration was particularly interesting in that the layout and feel of the show was like last year, only bigger and better. Improved production value and an expansion of square footage available for vendors in the highly trafficked 215 Section resulted in a subtle but vastly improved attendee experience. Yes, the aisles became impassable at times, and water could be hard to find, but overall everything was just easier, with more places to just hang out. The new section with tables and chairs in the back of the teeming Experience Sungrown Hall was a big hit judging by the its occupancy rate.
The recent NorCal fires that devastated more cannabis farms than were reported in the media also hung over the event, even reshaping it. In the Marketplace section, about a dozen exhibitors were unable to attend because of the fires, their empty spots a reminder of what was lost. Fire Relief Fund jars on every table were another reminder. Those contributions as well as a small carveout from each contest entry fee enabled Emerald Cup founder Tim Blake to announce during the awards that $75,000 had been raised to help victims of the fires. Those funds will be add
Sadly, there was a bit of a discrepancy between the amount of money being plunked into the jars and the vastly larger amounts being spent on product. We do not currently have any hard numbers gathered by the show, but anecdotally exhibitors, who by and large set up shop at the Emerald Cup to do business, were doing brisk business. The operator of one farm noted a significant increase in sales of flower this year, no doubt the result of the imminent imposition of taxes. Who wouldn’t want to take advantage of this last, incredible opportunity?
Exhibitors also spoke about the changing face of events like the Emerald Cup because of new regulations requiring each vendor to have a retailer’s license, the imposition of track-and-trace requirements, prepackaging, no more samples, and other seemingly crippling burdens. Some people just thought the show would be a lot smaller as a result. Noted cannabis lawyer Omar Figueroa stood at the back of the hall, a huge smile on his face. “I think there may be a solution,” he said slyly. He’s working on it. That good news for anyone who likes their consumer cannabis festivals to include cannabis.
Though the uncertainty of the future was on everyone’s mind, the countervailing excitement by so many people to be able to proudly offer their products and brands to a wildly enthusiastic public more than outbalanced any fear of the unknown or heartbreak over recent loss. Major deals were in play at the show, with big plans afoot, and not all of it native-born, but even those struggling to make it into the light, into running a “legitimate” business, know that the future belongs to cannabis. We all take that as a given.
Here is the complete list of Emerald Cup winners.