Pubdate: Thu, 13 Jan 2005 Source: Mirror (CN QU) Copyright: 2005 Communications Gratte-Ciel Ltee Contact: http://www.montrealmirror.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/267 Author: Patrick Lejtenyi Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ed+Rosenthal CANNABIS FOR CONNOISSEURS Pot Guru Ed Rosenthal Releases The Second Volume Of His Big Book Of Buds Ed Rosenthal sounds kind of sleepy over the phone. Which is no big surprise, considering his career choice. For over 30 years, Rosenthal has been a dispenser of vital wisdom to marijuana consumers, growers and cultivators everywhere, with almost 20 titles under his belt and two decades' worth of experience imparting advice in his High Times magazine Ask EdT column. Last month he published the follow-up volume to his 2001 The Big Book of Buds - a guide to "marijuana varieties from the world's greatest seed breeders." It's a book rich in visuals - "pot porn," he calls it. Each of the 85 varieties profiled is given its own page, illustration and description of its parentage. As well, each page has a list of icons describing the variety's buzz (giggly, alert, sensual, wandering mind, etc.), taste and smell (caramel, piney, pungent, fruity, etc.), flowering time, yield, growing methods (indoor, outdoor or both) and strain type (sativa, indica or both). Due to the dubious legality of selling seed in countries like the U.S. and England, the book's coverage is limited to samples donated by seed distributors from South Africa, Australia, Spain, the Netherlands and Canada. Interspersed among the entries are articles on cannabis culture, from marches to festivals to the chemistry of stoner-ness. High science "The second volume continues the journey the first one began," Rosenthal says from his home in Oakland, California. "Just as there are literally thousands of strains of roses available commercially, and thousands of books out there to help people understand roses, this is the same. It tells you a lot about each variety and what you can expect." Rosenthal's background in horticulture and botany frame his approach. Take, for example, this description of the Canadian Passion Queen (available at Seedbank.com), a 60/40 indica/sativa mix: "Passion Queen can be gardened outdoors in warm climates that support a late finishing time; she can also be kept outdoors in pots. Indoors, Passion Queen will grow as a multi-branch Christmas tree sativa if given room, or she will grow as a one-cola indica if crowded in a sea of green. Either way, Her High-ness needs plenty of light and low fertilization, preferably with organics, to bring out the layers of herb and sour citrus in her palate." The specific terms and descriptions can remind a casual reader of a wine menu. To Boris St-Maurice, the leader of the federal Marijuana Party, Rosenthal - whom he calls the "the Led Zeppelin of the weed world, the granddaddy, the wise elder to whom we all turn" - is doing more than just providing a valuable guide. "What's interesting about this book is that he's trying to establish a language everyone can agree on," he says. "Right now the language is very street level. What we want is to get a kind of yardstick." Body and mind Rosenthal says he hasn't tried every variety listed in the book - "but I did sample a good number" - but won't say which is his favourite. He does, however, admit to being more of a sativa person (in the introduction, he describes the sativa high as "soaring, psychedelic, thoughtful and spacy"; indica highs are "heavy, body-oriented and lethargic"). The strain distinction is especially important in medical marijuana fields. Broadly speaking, the indica strain, because it is more of a heavy, body stone, is used to treat chronic pain. Neurological disorders, such as epilepsy or Parkinson's, are better treated with the more cerebral sativa. Volume 2 is already in its second print run, having sold out its initial 11,000 copies. As a writer, Rosenthal will be using the profits to live, agitate and pay off his lawyers. Last year he was sentenced to a day in jail (time served) and paid a $1,000 (U.S.) fine for cultivating pot, even though he was authorized by the City of Oakland as a medical marijuana distributor. Some of the jurors in the case later said they wouldn't have found him guilty had they not been instructed by the judge during the trial to disregard his intent. St-Maurice, whose Marijuana Foundation Seed Bank at 72 Rachel E. is selling the book, will be using the proceeds to continue his party's aim of pushing for full decriminalization of marijuana in Canada. "On our end, it's a political action," he says. "We see the act of growing pot as an act of civil disobedience." The Big Book of Buds, Vol. 2 by Ed Rosenthal, Quick American, pb, 192pp, $29.95 - --- MAP posted-by: Derek