Pubdate: Mon, 23 Jun 2014 Source: Metro (Calgary, CN AB) Copyright: 2014 Metro Canada Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/Calgary Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4471 Author: Jeremy Nolais Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) USERS SAY FEDS BLOWING SMOKE WITH NEW MARIJUANA SYSTEM Order Marijuana, Don't Grow It: Health Canada Few suppliers, shipping dangers and a lack of willing doctors are among the concerns being listed off by Calgary marijuana users who say they're being greatly pained by holes in a new federal system for supplying the controversial drug. Health Canada aimed to criminalize home marijuana grows by April 1, but a court injunction has prevented such measures from being fully implemented for the time being. Even still, many Calgary marijuana users say they've trashed their plants and a handful of entrepreneurs have pressed ahead with plans to establish commercial growing facilities in rural Alberta areas. The federal health body does maintain a list of approved marijuana suppliers, but none have successfully opened in Alberta to date. As a result, 20-year-old south Calgary resident Bob, whom Metro agreed not to formally identify, is forced to order 8-9 grams per month from Vancouver-based supplier Med Pot Now and then buy an additional supply off the street. He suffered a stroke last September and spent 10 months just trying to find a doctor that would approve a marijuana prescription. "They were prescribing me OxyContin, Percocet and all these other drugs so quick," he said. "Then, when it comes to marijuana, they're all beating around the bush." Critics fear it may become even more difficult to find a pot-friendly doctor after Health Canada announced earlier this month it hopes to gather records from marijuana distributors so it can actively track where users are getting approval to enter the drug program. Bob also conceded there's "something fishy" about ordering in marijuana from the west coast to his Calgary abode. He said Alberta dispensaries would certainly make the process smoother. But some users say the commercial product lacks a certain quality and personal touch. "It's kind of a joke," said cancer survivor and Calgary resident John, who routinely smokes marijuana. John had hoped to erect a greenhouse to grow his previously approved marijuana allotment in the backyard of his northwest Calgary home, but abandoned those plans - and his plants - ahead of anticipated April 1 changes. Now, he keeps one meagre pot plant on a window sill at home and buys the drug off the street for $200 an ounce. "It's killing me," he said of the cost. "I'm an old man. I don't know how much longer I have left on this planet, but I don't need to be fighting just to not be in pain." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom