Khalifa Kush, or Wiz Khalifa OG, is a hybrid that was bred specifically for the rap artist Wiz Khalifa. In-store only. Khalifa kush by Top. Top Cut Farms $ 30. Starbuds - Kirkland. Wiz Khalifa December 9, 2016. Store.wizkhalifa.com Image may contain: 2 people 9.8K9.8K 83 Comments108 Shares.
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To be the greatest, you gotta learn from the greatest. In the post-prohibition green frontier, elevated entrepreneur Wiz Khalifa shows you how to plant, grow, and harvest the finest herb on earth in this epic new idle game.
Follow in Wiz Khalifaâs footsteps as you grow your own empire from the ground up.
- Tap to plant and grow quality strains for your clients
- Swipe to get your plant to market and get your paper up
- Invest your profits to expand your grow operation
- Boost your harvest with hydroponics and LED grow lights
- Find friends on Facebook and grow the best buds with your best buds
- Level up to unlock accessories and rare mystery strains
Please note that Wiz Khalifaâs Weed Farm is free to download and play. Some in-game items are available for purchase using real money.
Follow in Wiz Khalifaâs footsteps as you grow your own empire from the ground up.
- Tap to plant and grow quality strains for your clients
- Swipe to get your plant to market and get your paper up
- Invest your profits to expand your grow operation
- Boost your harvest with hydroponics and LED grow lights
- Find friends on Facebook and grow the best buds with your best buds
- Level up to unlock accessories and rare mystery strains
Please note that Wiz Khalifaâs Weed Farm is free to download and play. Some in-game items are available for purchase using real money.
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Over the past few years, states like California have blazed new trails with their lenient laws on marijuana use. That was particularly evident on Friday (Oct. 21), when Wiz Khalifa made headlines by cavalierly offering handfuls of Khalifa Kushâa new marijuana strain endorsed by the rapperâto West Hollywood paparazzi posted up outside a restaurant. With the election merely days away, Wiz may soon be able to perform similar acts of charity in Las Vegas as well, without fear of breaking the law.
This November, Nevadaâalong with four other statesâwill vote to legalize marijuana for recreational use. Itâs currently legalized for medicinal use in the state, but if this referendum passes, Nevada will join just four other states (Alaska, Oregon, Colorado, Washington), along with the District of Columbia, where marijuana can be enjoyed recreationally without penalty. Tourists and convention-goers already descend upon Nevada to indulge in some of the stateâs other freedoms, namely gambling and prostitution, and they may soon be able to add smoking weed to that list.
Highly anticipating the vote is Matthew Morgan, founder of Tryke Companies, which does business in Las Vegas as Reef Dispensaries, one of the countryâs largest marijuana growth and distribution facilities. Located next door to the Spearmint Rhino gentlemanâs club, the 165,000 square foot compound is larger than a Costco or Samâs Club, showcasing an incredibly streamlined operation that includes the cultivation, production, extraction, and sale of marijuana products. Uniquely, in Nevada, there is not a limit to how many marijuana plants can be housed under one roof, so Reef is one of the few establishments in the country where all of these processes happen at the same location.
Tryke also happens to be the exclusive manufacturer of the news-making Khalifa Kush, a strain of ganja also known as K.K, which caused a bit of a stir at the top of the year when Wiz name-dropped it on Twitter.â
âHit this kk and become yourself,' the Pittsburgh rapper tweeted, accidentally firing the first shot in a heated 24-hour beef with Kanye West, who assumed Wiz was talking about his wife, Kim Kardashian. After the dust settled, it was made clear that Wiz was only promoting his brand. Still, he couldnât have asked for better publicity.
âThe Kanye shit, it kind of helped it a little bit, but itâs been popping in the sense that [Khalifa Kush] has been floating around Northern and Southern California for a while. All that did was solidify it,â says Berner, a member of Wizâs Taylor Gang crew who has partnered with Reef as a brand ambassador and product curator.
âI have a lot of knowledge of strains that perform well, that grow well, branded strains and what would be considered comparable to whatâs on the market now,â Berner adds, explaining his role with the company. âI came in and looked at a bunch of the strains they had in Las Vegas and just put together a nice menu.â
That menu is the extent of what most of the public sees when they enter the storefront side of Reef Dispensaries: a quaint, wooden-table-filled room no bigger than a studio apartment, featuring everything from edibles to the exclusive dispensary sale of Bernerâs Cookies clothing line. The shopâs design asthetic takes a page from the Apple Store, of which owner Morgan says heâs a âbig fan.â But beyond a key-carded door is what the public does not see: millions of dollars of untouched product, what the United States government still refers to as contraband.
Matthew Morgan, 31, got his start in the bud business after spiraling out of the real estate game following the 2008 financial crisis. Having grown up on a Montana farm, he started âmessing aroundâ in his garage, and within 10 months âhad a pretty sizable cultivation.â Unfortunately, the state reversed its lax marijuana laws in 2012, forcing him to shut the business down prematurely. That same year, he then started a similar company, Bloom Dispensaries, in Arizona, which remains one of the largest weed dispensaries in the country. Soon he was approached by a private investor from Florida (who wishes to remain anonymous) leading to the creation of Tryke Companies and Reef Dispensaries. They currently have five retail locations throughout Nevada and Arizona.
The last eight years of trial and error are what ultimately led to the massive Reef Dispensaries building in Vegas, a structure filled with several security checkpoints and, at any given time, a handful of the companyâs 60 employees dressed in surgical garments, gloves, masks, and hairnets.
âEmployees have to change into scrubs and shower before and after they come into workâpest control,â says Morgan. These measures are taken to keep out everything from common insects, like crickets and grasshoppers, to more ominous conditions, such as leaf septoria and tobacco mosaic virus.
![Store Wiz Khalifa Store Wiz Khalifa](/uploads/1/2/3/7/123751616/158409935.jpg)
Past the security checkpoints is what Morgan calls the âlife-cycle of a plant,â beginning in the propagation room, where tiny sprouts sit in fertilizer, much like youâd see at a nursery. Because it is still illegal to transport marijuana seeds or plants across state lines, in-house cloning is how Tryke reproduces the product, with over four to six thousand clones on site at any given time.
âWe have a large mother plant. We scrape some of the stigmata wall off it, put in a rooting hormone, and put it in ideal conditions,â Morgan explains. âSeven-to-12 days later it pops roots out and you have an identical clone from the plant you took it from. Takes the guess work out of it. You know exactly what product you are going to get every single time.â
After that, thereâs a large yellow-lit room filled with marijuana plants as far as the eye can seeâa surreal sight no matter how much Narcos youâve watched. Walking though that room, Morgan explains the growth process: âThese buds will get so big that they start snapping the branches off. So you put a netting in here to hold these up as they mature and get larger,â he says. âThey would never get that large in Mother Nature, but weâve created a perfect environment.â
'They would never get that large in Mother Nature, but weâve created a perfect environment.' â Matthew Morgan, founder of Tryke Companies
Other intricacies are revealed deeper into the compound. For example, the plants only use 10 percent of the water they are fed, so there is a water reclaiming system that recaptures the unused liquid and feeds it back to them later. The site uses four-and-half megawatts of powerâabout a quarter of what a typical casino usesâso thereâs no air conditioning. Instead, a centralized cooling system maintains a cool temperature. Finally, giant gas tanks inject each room with CO2 to enhance the environment, giving the plants the best possible conditions to grow.
The engineering brilliance of the operation is reminiscent of Walter Whiteâs underground car wash lab in Breaking Bad. Morgan says he gets the comparison a lot, but he and his team designed the facility from scratch.
âThereâs really no one else to mimic or emulate. We had to kind of fit all of these pieces of the puzzle together that nobody has really ever put together before,â he says. âIf I wanted to start a casino, for example, I have a lot of examples to go off of. For this, I didnât really have anyone to look to. I have specialists in almost every area in-house, and then we brought in architects, engineers, and stuff like that. Scientists or horticulturalists say what they need, then we have engineers, architects, or whoever try to make those needs happen.â
In the deepest part of the facility is the cure room, where a few hundred bins line a series of shelves. Inside each of those bins is about a thousand nuggets of weed, or at least enough to fill the average gumball machine.
Given that much desirable product in-house, Reef Dispensariesâ home base has alarm buttons for fire, police, and paramedics on each door. Additionally, thereâs round-the-clock security and a K9 unit.
âIâve never had a security issue in eight years now. We take a lot of security protocols and measures to keep our employees safe, as well as make sure there is no product running outside the front door,â Morgan says bluntly.
Safety isnât his only concern, though. Thereâs also the law. Marijuana has been legal in Nevada for the past decade for medicinal use, but recreational isnâtâyet. Nonetheless, dispensaries like Reef, Euphoria Wellness, and Medizin have sprouted up across the state in hopes that the Election Day referendum will open up a new market for them.
âThey put a law into effect 10 years ago to help patients gain access to medical cannabis, but there was no legal outlet necessarily to gain access to it,â Morgan explains. âI think Nevada looked around the country at all of the other programs and how well they were doing and felt that they could implement something similar using the regulations of the gaming model.â
'Now, over 50 percent of Americans would like to see marijuana legalized.' â Matthew Morgan, founder of Tryke Companies
'I'm excited Nevada has jumped on board with the new laws. Everyone who lives in or visits Vegas with a medical card can now enjoy KK,' Wiz Khalifa tells Complex.
Yet at the top of August, the federal government re-declared marijuana as a Schedule I controlled substance, leaving it in the same class as heroin and cocaine. Despite this moment of reefer madness, Morgan is confident that cannabis will be legalized for recreational use on a state level in Nevada after Novemberâs vote, with a recent Las Vegas Sun poll showing that 57% of likely voters are in favor of the idea.
âYou have to remember the shift in public perception. Now, over 50 percent of Americans would like to see marijuana legalized. Thatâs going to play a huge role in how law enforcement and others act. To throw someone in jail over a plant is pretty crazy in my opinion,â he says, pointing out theracial disparity in the enforcement of marijuana laws. âI think the arrest rate is 4 to 1 for marijuana sales, black people to white people. Itâs racial profiling for sure. Itâs very unfortunate. We need to get away from that.â
âTo everybody in Nevada that thinks with open minds, recreational weed needs to happen,â says Berner. âItâs going to bring a lot of money for a lot of things that are lacking in funding right now. Nevada needs to free the weed.â
Indeed, the state ranks dead last in education, which makes sense, considering some of the highest paying jobs in the city donât require anything more than a G.E.D.âjust ask any cocktail waitress, DJ, stripper, nightlife host, or accidental nightclub mogul. Surely some of the money spent on possession arrests and imprisonment could be funneled into improving the school system.
If the law passes in November, both Morgan and Berner imagine a new chapter of nightlife. Yes, thatâs right: weed in the club.
âI donât know exactly what that will look like, but something with a nightclub-like feel with a cannabis theme. Similar to a coffee shop in Amsterdam,â says Morgan.
âVegas has a lot of potential for that because itâs a destination,â adds Berner. âI think comedy shows with weed, restaurants with weed, lounges with weed would make a lot of sense in Vegas if it was done right. Everyone goes to Vegas to get drunk, play cards, and wild out. But the next day when youâre hungover, go to a spot and smoke something. Get your back rubbed while you take a bong hit.â
Perhaps next year youâll be able to do just that.