The journal
Dispensary spotlights, strain reviews, guides, and local cannabis culture.
Cambridge's Harvard Square college-town rhythm runs on coffee shops, bookstores, and a different kind of weekday energy. Cannabis fits the slow version of that day.
Cambridge's gallery and theatre nights run on a different rhythm from Boston proper. Slower, more concentrated, more rewarding to a deliberate pace.
Allston and Brighton run on a DIY music economy. Smaller venues, house shows, and a different evening pace than the Lansdowne corridor.
The Fenway and Kenmore concert corridor runs House of Blues, MGM Music Hall, Lansdowne. Pacing matters, and so does where you consume.
Castle Island and Pleasure Bay anchor the longest urban harbor walk in Boston. South Boston's neighborhood pace fills the rest of the day.
Charlestown's Navy Yard offers a quieter, slower harbor day than the Seaport. Bunker Hill anchors the climb above.
The Seaport-anchored harborwalk and ferry corridor make a cannabis-aware Boston Harbor day work without ever consuming in public.
Chinatown stays open later than almost anywhere else in Boston. Pair the late-night with a deliberate cannabis pace and a Theatre District show.
The North End's Italian restaurant scene works on a tight, deliberate pace. Cannabis fits at the edges, never at the table itself.
The Seaport's waterfront restaurant corridor pairs naturally with a low-key cannabis-aware approach to dinner.
Jamaica Plain, Roslindale, and Dorchester make up Boston's quieter southside. Slower pace, more porches, and a different cannabis rhythm.
The South End restaurant corridor and Roxbury's cultural anchors share a rhythm that pairs well with a slow cannabis-aware evening.