Know Your
Sh*t.
Good product starts with good knowledge. Whether it’s your first time or your hundredth, we keep it straight — no fluff, no fear, just real answers.
Most Asked Questions
The stuff everyone wonders but doesn’t always ask. Start here.
What to expect your first time
Honest, no-scary rundown of what actually happens when you get high.
Indica vs. Sativa — what actually matters
Spoiler: it’s more complicated than the dispensary poster suggests.
Why edibles hit so different
Liver science, patience, and why 2.5mg is actually a legit dose.
How to not green out — and what to do if you do
It happens. Here’s the play-by-play to ride it out.
Can tourists buy cannabis in Maine?
Yes. Here’s exactly what you need to know before you visit.
What are terpenes and why do they matter?
The real reason two strains at 22% THC can feel completely different.
Cannabis is a flowering plant that produces chemical compounds called cannabinoids. The two most famous are THC (tetrahydrocannabinol) — the one that gets you high — and CBD (cannabidiol) — which doesn’t cause a high but has its own effects. There are over 100 cannabinoids in total, though most are present in tiny amounts.
The plant also produces terpenes — aromatic oils responsible for the smell and flavor of each strain. Terpenes also influence your experience, often more than THC percentage alone.
You’ll hear about indica, sativa, and hybrid classifications. These originally referred to plant structure, but in modern dispensary language they loosely indicate the expected effect profile. More on that below.
The short version: indica = body, relaxed, nighttime. Sativa = heady, energetic, daytime. Hybrid = somewhere in between. That’s the shorthand you’ll see everywhere, and it’s not useless — but it’s also not the whole picture.
The truth is, the indica/sativa distinction is more about plant genetics and growing characteristics than guaranteed effects. Modern cannabis strains are so heavily hybridized that the lines are blurry. Two “sativas” can feel completely different. What actually drives your experience is the cannabinoid and terpene profile of that specific product — not just the label.
Use indica/sativa as a starting point, not a rule. When in doubt, read the terpene breakdown or ask us.
Sativa → Energize
Hybrid → Depends
THC (Delta-9-THC) — the primary psychoactive compound. Responsible for the “high.” Also linked to pain relief, appetite stimulation, and sleep support. Higher THC = stronger intoxicating effect, but diminishing returns exist.
CBD (Cannabidiol) — non-intoxicating. Associated with anxiety reduction, anti-inflammatory effects, and relaxation without a high. Often paired with THC to temper intensity.
CBG (Cannabigerol) — the “mother cannabinoid” — THC and CBD both derive from it. Early research suggests focus, mood support, and anti-inflammatory properties. Non-intoxicating.
CBN (Cannabinol) — forms as THC ages. Often associated with sleepiness and a mild, mellow effect. Popular in sleep-focused products.
Terpenes are the aromatic compounds that give cannabis (and most plants) their smell and flavor. Linalool is the calming lavender-like terpene. Limonene is bright and citrusy. Myrcene is earthy and sedating. Pinene smells like a pine forest and can promote alertness.
But terpenes aren’t just about smell — they interact with cannabinoids to shape your high. This is called the entourage effect: cannabinoids and terpenes working together produce different effects than any compound alone.
That’s why two strains at the same THC percentage can feel completely different. The terpene lineup matters. A lot.
Limonene → Uplifting
Pinene → Alert
Linalool → Calm
Caryophyllene → Stress relief
First things first: you cannot fatally overdose on cannabis. That said, taking too much — especially with edibles — can be intensely uncomfortable. The goal is to start small and work up.
What you might feel: Relaxation, euphoria, heightened senses (food tastes better, music sounds better), laughter, mild distortion of time, sleepiness, or increased appetite. Some people feel slightly anxious, especially with high-THC products — this is normal and temporary.
Mindset matters. Being in a comfortable, familiar environment with people you trust makes a huge difference. Don’t try cannabis for the first time at a loud event or stressful situation.
Start here: A low-dose edible (2.5–5mg THC), a CBD-dominant product, or one small inhale from a low-THC flower — then wait and see how you feel before going further.
Maine requires all cannabis products to be tested by a licensed lab and carry specific label information. Here’s what to look for:
- THC % — potency of psychoactive compound. For flower, this is often listed as “Total THC.”
- CBD % — if present, it’ll show here. Higher CBD can soften the THC effect.
- Net weight — how much product you’re actually getting.
- Batch/lot number — for traceability. If you ever want to pull a Certificate of Analysis (COA), this is how.
- Harvest/production date — fresher is generally better for flower.
- Universal symbol — the Maine cannabis symbol is required on all products to identify them as regulated cannabis.
Flower is the dried, cured bud of the cannabis plant — the most classic form. It can be smoked in a pipe, bong, or rolled into a joint, or used in a dry herb vaporizer.
Quality markers to look for: Dense, well-trimmed buds with visible trichomes (the tiny crystalline structures). Should smell strong and complex — not like hay or nothing at all. Should be slightly sticky but not wet. Avoid anything that looks brown, has visible seeds or stems, or is extremely dry and crumbly.
Storage: Keep in an airtight glass jar, away from direct light and heat. Don’t refrigerate (moisture fluctuation). Properly stored flower stays fresh for 6–12 months.
Pre-rolls are pre-rolled joints, ready to light. Standard pre-rolls are just ground flower in a cone. Infused pre-rolls are coated or filled with concentrates (kief, hash, distillate, live resin) — making them significantly more potent.
What separates a good pre-roll from a bad one: The best are made from whole flower or high-quality shake — not the dusty trim and stems that some brands use to pad out cheap packs. Look for infused options from reputable producers for a noticeably elevated experience.
For beginners: Start with a standard 0.5g or 1g pre-roll, not an infused one. Infused pre-rolls are for experienced consumers who know their tolerance.
Vape carts are cartridges of cannabis oil attached to a battery — discreet, convenient, and consistent in dosing. The oil type determines the quality and character of the experience:
- Distillate — highly refined, high THC, neutral flavor. Often has terpenes added back in.
- Live resin — made from fresh-frozen flower. Preserves the full terpene profile. Richer, more complex flavor. Considered a premium option.
- Live rosin — solventless extraction from fresh-frozen flower. The cleanest, most “full-spectrum” experience. Premium tier.
- Full-spectrum — preserves a wide range of cannabinoids and terpenes, not just THC.
Watch out for: Unregulated or counterfeit carts. Only buy from licensed dispensaries (like us). If a vape cart is unusually cheap or has no lab testing, don’t use it.
When you eat cannabis, it goes through your digestive system and liver, which converts THC into 11-hydroxy-THC — a more potent compound that crosses the blood-brain barrier more easily. The result: a stronger, longer-lasting, more body-heavy effect compared to smoking or vaping.
Onset: 30 minutes to 2 hours. This is the #1 reason people overdo edibles — they don’t feel it and take more. Don’t do this. Wait the full 2 hours.
Duration: 4–8 hours, sometimes longer. Much longer than inhaled cannabis.
Beginner dose: 2.5–5mg THC. Standard “one dose” in Maine is 5mg. Start at the bottom end if you’re new.
Concentrates are exactly what they sound like: highly concentrated forms of cannabis with much higher THC percentages (often 60–90%). They’re for experienced consumers. Here’s the breakdown:
- Shatter — rigid, glass-like, made with solvents. High THC, clean but not flavor-forward.
- Wax / Budder — opaque, waxy texture. Easier to handle than shatter. Made with solvents.
- Live Resin — made from fresh-frozen flower using solvents. Preserves terpenes for a full, complex flavor and experience.
- Rosin / Live Rosin — solventless, made using heat and pressure. Cleanest extraction method. Most “whole-plant” experience. Premium pricing for good reason.
- Hash / Bubble Hash — one of the oldest cannabis products. Made by separating trichomes with ice water. Potent, traditional, and full-flavored.
Cannabis tinctures are liquid cannabis extracts suspended in alcohol or oil. They come in dropper bottles and are one of the most controllable, beginner-friendly formats available.
Sublingual (under the tongue): Drop under your tongue, hold 60–90 seconds, swallow. Onset: 15–45 minutes. This is faster than swallowing directly because some absorption happens through the blood vessels under your tongue.
Swallowed directly: Acts like an edible — 30–90 minute onset, longer duration.
Tinctures are great for precise, repeatable dosing. Look at the total volume and mg per mL to calculate your dose accurately.
Edibles: Start at 2.5mg THC. Move to 5mg once you know how that feels. Don’t exceed 10mg until you have a good handle on your tolerance. Wait 2 full hours between doses.
Flower / Pre-rolls: Take one small puff, hold briefly (you don’t need to hold forever — 2–3 seconds), exhale, and wait 10–15 minutes before taking more. Effects come on fast when inhaled.
Vape: Same principle — one small inhale, wait 10 minutes. Vapes are deceptively easy to over-consume because it feels effortless.
Tinctures: Start at 2.5–5mg sublingual. Record how you respond before adjusting up.
Concentrates: If you’re asking about beginner dosing for concentrates — wait until you have more flower experience first. A “small amount” of concentrate is genuinely tiny.
Flower: 1 puff → wait
Tinctures: 2.5mg
Microdosing means consuming very small amounts of cannabis — just enough to get the benefits (relaxation, focus, mood lift, minor pain relief) without significant intoxication. You’re going sub-perceptible on the “high” while staying functional.
A typical microdose is 1–2.5mg THC. For reference, many cannabis products in Maine are dosed at 5–10mg per serving — so a microdose is literally cutting that in half or more.
Why do it: Ideal for daytime use, work, social situations, or managing anxiety without wanting to be couch-locked. Great for people who want the benefit without impairment.
Best products for microdosing: Low-dose edibles, tinctures (precise dropper control), or CBD:THC ratio products (like 1:1 or 4:1 CBD-to-THC).
Cannabis tolerance is your body’s adaptation to THC over time. The more you use, the more your CB1 receptors downregulate — meaning you need more to get the same effect.
Signs of tolerance buildup: Products that used to hit don’t hit the same. You’re using more to achieve the same result. Effects feel flatter or shorter.
Tolerance break (T-break): The fix is simple — take a break. CB1 receptors resensitize within days to weeks of abstaining. A 48-hour break has a noticeable effect. A full 2-week break can essentially reset you to near-baseline sensitivity.
During a T-break: CBD can help manage minor withdrawal effects like sleep disruption or irritability without continuing to build THC tolerance.
“Greening out” is consuming too much cannabis. Symptoms: intense anxiety, paranoia, racing heart, nausea, dizziness, feeling overwhelmed, disconnected, or like time has stopped. It’s extremely uncomfortable — but it will pass, and it is not medically dangerous.
How to avoid it: Start low. Go slow. Don’t mix cannabis with alcohol. Don’t redose before the first dose kicks in. Eat something before using edibles.
If it happens — the play:
- Get somewhere quiet, comfortable, and familiar
- Lie down or sit, don’t fight it
- Drink water (cold), have a sugary snack
- Breathe slowly and remind yourself it will pass
- Black pepper — seriously. Sniff or chew a few whole black peppercorns. Caryophyllene (a terpene in pepper) has anecdotal evidence of calming THC-induced anxiety
- CBD can help counteract THC anxiety if you have it available
Your body has a built-in system designed to interact with cannabis — the endocannabinoid system (ECS). It regulates mood, appetite, pain, sleep, inflammation, memory, and more. It exists whether you use cannabis or not.
The ECS has receptors throughout your body: CB1 receptors (primarily in the brain and nervous system — this is where THC binds and causes psychoactive effects) and CB2 receptors (primarily in the immune system and periphery — more associated with inflammation response).
Your body naturally produces its own cannabinoids called endocannabinoids — like anandamide (sometimes called the “bliss molecule”). Cannabis cannabinoids mimic and interact with this natural system, which is why their effects are so wide-ranging.
The entourage effect is the theory (with growing research support) that cannabinoids and terpenes work synergistically — meaning the whole plant produces a more nuanced and effective experience than any single isolated compound.
This is why a full-spectrum product often feels different from pure THC distillate, even at the same milligram dose. The terpenes and minor cannabinoids modulate how THC interacts with your receptors — calming anxiety, deepening relaxation, promoting focus, or enhancing mood lift depending on the profile.
It’s also why “30% THC” is a reductive metric. A 22% flower with an exceptional terpene profile can produce a more complex, enjoyable, and functional experience than a 30% flower with no terpene character.
A COA is the full lab report for a cannabis product. In Maine, all licensed products must pass testing before sale. Here’s what a COA typically shows:
- Potency panel — THC, CBD, and other cannabinoids in exact percentages or mg
- Terpene panel — which terpenes and how much of each (if included)
- Pesticide screen — pass/fail for regulated pesticides
- Heavy metals test — pass/fail for lead, mercury, arsenic, cadmium
- Microbials — tests for mold, yeast, bacteria
- Moisture content (for flower)
- Residual solvents (for concentrates)
If a product doesn’t have a COA available, that’s a red flag. Every product at Schedule 1 is tested and compliant.
The cannabis industry has a THC arms race problem. Everyone wants the highest number on the label. The reality: THC percentage is one metric out of many, and it’s not the most important one.
Why high THC isn’t everything: Research suggests that after a certain threshold (roughly 20%), additional THC provides diminishing returns in perceived effect — but linearly increases the risk of anxiety and paranoia in susceptible people.
What actually matters: The ratio of cannabinoids, the terpene profile, the freshness of the product, and your individual biology. Your endocannabinoid system is unique — the same product affects different people differently.
Also: Lab testing for THC has documented inaccuracies. Some studies have found variance of up to 30% between reported and actual potency. The number is directionally useful, not gospel.
Cannabis is one of the most widely used natural sleep aids. The research is evolving, but here’s what’s currently understood:
THC can help you fall asleep faster and reduce the time to sleep onset. However, heavy long-term use may reduce REM sleep, which affects dreaming and memory consolidation.
CBD may help with anxiety-related insomnia — by reducing the racing thoughts that keep people awake — without significantly affecting sleep architecture.
CBN is widely associated with sedation and sleepiness, though the research is limited. Many sleep-specific products combine CBN with THC and myrcene-forward terpenes.
Best approaches for sleep: Indica-leaning flower or edibles 1–2 hours before bed, CBN tinctures, or myrcene/linalool-rich strains taken at low doses. Avoid sativa-dominant products at night.
Cannabis and anxiety have a complicated relationship — it can genuinely help with anxiety, and it can also cause or worsen it. The difference usually comes down to dose and product choice.
Low-dose THC + CBD tends to reduce anxiety. The CBD component appears to modulate THC’s effects, and low amounts of THC can activate the endocannabinoid system’s natural stress response.
High-dose THC, particularly without CBD, is the most common cause of cannabis-induced anxiety and paranoia. This is especially true for people who are already anxious, people new to cannabis, and in unfamiliar environments.
Best products for anxiety: CBD-dominant tinctures, 1:1 CBD:THC products, low-dose edibles (2.5mg or less), and strains with high linalool or caryophyllene (both associated with calming effects).
Cannabis use among adults 65+ is one of the fastest-growing segments in the industry — many are using it for pain, sleep, and anxiety after decades of avoidance or prohibition-era stigma.
Key considerations for older adults:
- Start lower than the standard low dose. Metabolism and sensitivity change with age.
- Be aware of drug interactions. Cannabis can interact with blood thinners (warfarin), some heart medications, and sedatives. Always consult your doctor if you’re on regular medications.
- Edibles and tinctures are often preferred — no smoke, easier to dose precisely.
- CBD-dominant products are a great entry point for seniors who want potential anti-inflammatory or sleep benefits without significant intoxication.
- Dizziness is a more significant concern — don’t use cannabis before standing up suddenly or driving.
Lots of people use cannabis but don’t tell their doctor. That’s a problem — especially if you’re on other medications. Here’s how to have that conversation without it being weird.
Be direct: “I’ve been using cannabis for [sleep / pain / anxiety] and wanted to flag it in case it interacts with anything I’m taking.” Most doctors appreciate the transparency.
What to bring: The product type (flower, edible, tincture), approximate dose, frequency, and the cannabinoid ratio if you know it. The more specific you are, the more useful the conversation.
If your doctor is dismissive: That’s their prerogative, but an increasing number of physicians are cannabis-informed. You can also seek out a cannabis-focused physician for a dedicated consultation.
Maine medical vs. recreational: Maine has both a medical cannabis program and recreational access. If you have a qualifying condition, a medical card gives you access to medical dispensaries, higher purchase limits, and potential tax savings. Ask us for more info.
⚖️ Maine Cannabis Laws at a Glance
Adults 21+ can possess up to 2.5 oz of cannabis flower in public. At home, you can possess up to 10 lbs (yes, really) and grow up to 3 mature plants personally. Consumption is permitted in private spaces — NOT in public, in cars, or in federal spaces including national parks.
🦞 Can Tourists Buy Cannabis in Maine?
Yes. Any adult 21+ with valid government-issued ID can purchase cannabis at a licensed recreational dispensary in Maine — regardless of residency. You don’t need a Maine ID. You just need to be 21+. We see plenty of visitors and we love them. Just note: don’t try to bring it across state lines. It’s federally illegal even between two legal states.
Maine has an exceptional craft cannabis scene — small-batch growers who prioritize quality, genetics, and technique over scale. Here’s how to tell them apart from commodity product:
Signs of quality craft cannabis: Strong, complex smell even through the packaging. Dense, trichome-coated buds. Clear cultivation info including grower name, strain, and harvest date. Terpene testing on the label or COA. Often hand-trimmed, which preserves more trichomes than machine trimming.
Mass-market signals: Minimal smell. Loose or crumbly flower. No terpene data. Harvest date months ago. Heavy reliance on high THC number to sell the product rather than quality indicators.
Maine’s outdoor cannabis season runs roughly June through October harvest — and it matters for what’s on dispensary shelves. A surge of fresh, locally-grown outdoor flower hits the market in fall. If you’re a craft and freshness enthusiast, fall and early winter are prime time to find exceptional Maine-grown flower.
Outdoor vs. indoor vs. greenhouse: Each has its place. Outdoor cannabis benefits from natural sunlight and terroir but is seasonal. Indoor allows year-round cultivation and tighter environmental control. Greenhouse is the middle ground — natural light with protection.
None is inherently better. Quality craft outdoor at harvest can rival top indoor. It’s about the grower’s craft, not just the facility.
Maine is an outdoor paradise and a lot of visitors want to enjoy cannabis while they’re out here. Here’s the practical breakdown:
- Allowed: Private property you own or rent (with host permission), certain accommodations that allow it — check before you book
- Not allowed: Public spaces, sidewalks, parks, beaches, state parks, national parks, anywhere you can be seen by the public consuming
- Vehicles: No consumption in any vehicle, even parked. No open containers in a car.
- Hiking: Gray area — you’re on public land, consumption is technically not allowed, but enforcement in remote wilderness areas is a different matter. Use discretion. Don’t consume near families or trailheads.

