Pubdate: Thu, 31 Jul 2003 Source: See Magazine (CN AB) Copyright: 2003 SEE Magazine Contact: http://www.seemagazine.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2367 Author: Fish Griwkowsky HEADMONTON Confirmed Hippies Recount Drug Tales From City's Past Long before the jackboots stomped down, Edmonton was a pretty groovy little town. Not everyone who lived through the love years recalls them perfectly, but most everyone agrees that marijuana, hash, acid, mushrooms, MDA, psilocybin, mescaline and peyote were used in the name of expanding consciousness and making things shine, rather than just for the sake of getting wasted. Tom Doran, co-owner of the Jupiter Cannabis Culture on Whyte was, and still arguably is, a hippie. His wife managed one of the city's first head shops, the Hippogriff. Meanwhile, Doran, with his band Django, left Edmonton to pursue greater things in Vancouver. It was there that he ran into another Edmontonian, as crucial to the continuation of drug culture as Freak Brothers comics. Says Doran: "Poppa Chong, Tommy's dad, used to own this hippie club called the Parlour. I used to work with them, before they became Cheech and Chong. Cheech was a draft dodger or something, an actor from L.A. He just kind of latched on to everybody. Well, they decided they were going to do little skits for the club next door, called the Smilin' Buddha." Having witnessed the birth of the underground legends, Doran thinks of those times as having tremendous innocence, and he said the police were rarely interested in what people were doing in their spare time. "It wasn't a very heavy time. I had a little house right on the corner of 67 Ave. and 109 St., in full view of the street. I was a single guy and always had lots of friends partying there, always doing some mind-altering things. We had some pretty wild parties, but I was never bothered by the police. Maybe it was just the time; there truly was a lot of peace and love in the air. There wasn't that sort of sense of possible violence back then. I think because we didn't cause much trouble, the police didn't care about what we did. Although," Doran laughs, "when I left to go to Vancouver in '69, they raided the place two weeks later." Peter Montgomery, who lived in Edmonton until the '70s and now teaches English at a community college in Victoria, agrees with Doran in that it was largely musicians, actors and artists who were into drugs. "You had to know the right people," he says over the phone. "It was pretty big, but it was also private and secret. There weren't a lot of grow operations, I think a lot of it was imported. Everybody had it, so it couldn't have been too expensive. Drugs weren't a really bothersome item for the police. Being an alcoholic was. There was a lot of marijuana floating around the Yardbird, where Tommy Banks and his jazz band played. People would have big parties when the new Beatles or Rolling Stones came out. Culture was a lot more centralized at the time; everyone knew what was happening with the big bands, everyone got excited about the same things at the same time. I was skeptical of movements. Being a war baby, I was suspicious of Nazis, of any time too many people got together and thought the same things." Gordon Drever, currently a professor of Anthropology at Athabasca University and Northern Lakes College, was a self-described Marxist in university and says politics also influenced his experimentation, "Marxists have a very puritanical attitude so it was a big thing to make the jump to indulgence with drugs." From his home just outside Edmonton, Drever explains that drugs didn't really hit the city until '67, when they exploded onto the scene, and he points out that the psychedelically-decked out hippies you might expect were an exception rather than the rule. "In the late '60s what we saw was a movement from formal dressing to casual-scruffy dressing," he explains. "The arrival of drugs was part of that same transition." The most exposure to the State side brand of flower children he remembers came in the form of some kids from Indiana who made their way through town "in a Volkswagen van painted with cosmic symbols and genitalia." They sold bags of marijuana out of the van to fund their Western Canadian tour. Drever recalls most of his acid trips involving going to movies. Almost three decades after he'd seen The Beatles' Yellow Submarine, he was rummaging through the aisles in a local bookstore when he heard a long-forgotten woman's laugh. After getting a closer look at the cackle's origin, he realized she had been the young woman sitting a row ahead of him in the theatre ("talk about an acid flashback!" he says). Whether it was acid, mushrooms or pot, Drever says he could get them from acquaintances at the university housing co-op where he lived. It was, apparently, possible to get all three and more from the same guy. The cops weren't a big issue if you were discreet, he adds. They didn't stop the "cock and cunt" van from selling weed at the U of A, after all. Of course, rumours that people are still experimenting with drugs in and around the university are, of course, entirely anecdotal. But suffice it to say that the paranoid war on drugs, complete with salary-paying marijuana tickets issued by the modern fuzz, is still a source of great amusement and eye-rolling for those involved. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk