Here’s a new way to tell when college kids are back in Boston: shelves at the Joint — a new Comm Ave head shop near Packard’s Corner — resemble electronic-store aisles during the Los Angeles riots.“They cleaned us out,” says salesman Luke Marut about the past month’s rush. (Marut took this semester off from Harvard Extension to educate folks on the merits of glass-on-glass apparatuses.) “The reaction has been insane and completely unexpected. We’ve had artists in here blowing glass who have been all around the world saying that they’ve never seen a place so busy.”
In most cities, knowledge of a new paraphernalia spot is hardly headline-worthy. But the choices are limited in Boston; other than variety stores that might stock a small selection of pipes, smokers have been restricted locally to the Hempest on Newbury Street and Sugar Daddy’s in Kenmore Square. Reliable as those stand-bys might be, they were the only serious shows in town until Boston University grad D.J. Lawton quietly set up head shop this past April.
Unlike its not-so-far-away competitors, the Joint feels like an underground operation. Perhaps that’s because it literally is — squeezed in a tight rented basement (that gets dangerously loud when customers ring the in-house gong), the corner fills quickly, and last week had several dozen students queuing to cop pieces by such elite custom manufacturers as Wicked Sands, Illadelph, and ZOB.
“We try and find out what customers are looking for,” says Marut. “We want people to buy the right thing. Students like our mentality; they see themselves behind the counter instead of just some greedy old people trying to make some money.”
“Our motivation was simple,” adds Lawton. “We believe that people should be able to enjoy their freedom without anybody giving them a hard time.”
For more information, go to thejointboston.com.
Related:
Pot Edward Island, Boston's Best City Life 2009, Boston's Best Food and Drink 2009, More
- Pot Edward Island
It seems modern-day islanders have discovered another way to smile through the summer and avoid the blues during the bleak local winters.
- Boston's Best City Life 2009
There’s so much to love about Boston, it’s hard sometimes to know where to start. Traffic? Obnoxious Sox fans? Irritating students? Norway rats? Inflated rents? An inferiority complex unlike any on the Eastern seaboard?
- Boston's Best Food and Drink 2009
The danger of doing an annual Best issue is that readers could well screw up the whole thing, especially when it comes to eating out. It would suck if they voted for the too-familiar national-chain eateries. Best Hamburger: McDonalds?!
- Boston's Best Arts and Entertainment 2009
We are a culture-rich city — a veritable cauldron of talent and fun, and have been so since Anne Bradstreet inscribed the gates of Harvard. In Boston, the arts never stand still.
- Legalize pot now
The Obama administration, already overtaxed with two foreign campaigns, made headlines this past week when the White House's newly minted director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy called for an end to the "War on Drugs."
- Weed picking up speed?
When the Phoenix published a cover story about the potential tipping point in the fight to end marijuana prohibition, we smelled something in the air: it seemed more than ever that such a resolution might be possible.
- An old dog teaches his tricks
"You can call me a pothead," slow-talking Harry Brown tells me, roughly 15 minutes into my visit to his 80-acre farm in Starks, Maine.
- Hemp — the law, the musical
When liberal congressmen like Barney Frank begin co-sponsoring bills with libertarians like Ron Paul, there must be something funny in the air.
- Art appreciation
The recent Phoenix editorial on state-government funding for arts and culture highlighted many of the challenges we face as we try to meet our aspirations as a community amidst a very difficult economic environment.
- Question 2 backlash heats up
Since Question 2 was activated on January 2, it's been difficult to walk the streets of Massachusetts without encountering red-eyed hordes of marijuana-blazing vagrants.
- Power puffs
Regarding “ Weed Picking Up Speed ”: if health outcomes determined drug laws instead of cultural norms, marijuana would be legal. Unlike alcohol, marijuana has never been shown to cause an overdose death, nor does it share the addictive properties of tobacco.
- Less
Topics:
Lifestyle Features
, Boston University, Boston University, Marijuana