Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

UK: A tea, a coffee and two joints, please...

Ian Herbert

The Independent

Tuesday 20 Nov 2001

---


Business is on a high at Britain's first cannabis cafe, Dutch Experience
in Stockport. Ian Herbert joins the crowds and discovers that the
proprietor Colin Davies already has ambitious plans for the future


The first hint that something mildly taboo lies near Marge's Tarot
Studio and the Uniline gymnasium, in backstreet Stockport, comes from
schoolboys skulking around the corner in Bridgefield Street. "Go in and
get some for us, mate. I've got the tenner," pleads Dave, whose
complexion and companions - three uniformed fourth formers - do little
to advance his brave claim to be 18.

"Get what?"

"What they're selling in there."

He means the weed. Every self-respecting Stockport schoolboy knows that
Dutch Experience, Britain's first Amsterdam-style coffee shop, is
downstairs from Marge's place, though they're learning from painful
experience that they won't get their hands on so much as one of its Mars
bars, let alone a £15 packet of Lebanese gold resin or skunk grass.

There's already a designated graveyard for forged ID cards behind the
coffee bar - testimony to the rigour with which an over-18s rule is
policed. Dave's ID lies within it: he'd evidently gone it alone some
time earlier. Amid animated chatter and a delicious, late afternoon fug
of marijuana smoke, 44-year-old Colin Davies, the proprietor, looks like
a man who could use a joint. The under-age teenagers have been trying it
on since lunchtime; someone's jammed the table football and the
relentless call on his 40p teas and 50p coffees has taken its toll on
his milk supply, with a full six hours to closing. "We started out
asking the milkman for four litres a day," he says, watching one of his
coffee bar-staff stagger in with bottles of semi-skimmed. "We put it up
to 12 and it's still way off."

Davies stumbled on a goldmine when he set up the café in partnership
with Nol van Scheik, the creator of Amsterdam's founding cannabis cafe,
two months ago. He's currently attracting 500 patrons a week and there
were never fewer than 50 between noon and 10pm (closing time) last
Friday. A second Dutch Experience opened in Worthing last Wednesday, and
outlets are planned for Dundee, Preston, and neighbouring Manchester.

A report published today by the scientific journal Drug and Alcohol
Findings for the home affairs select committee will do no harm either,
calling for more such establishments to solve many of the drug-related
deaths and health problems traditionally associated with cannabis use.
For Davies, this is all a long way from the patients' smoking room at
the Sheffield spinal injuries unit where, on Christmas Eve 1995, he was
lying flat on his back, dosed up with morphine and temporarily paralysed
by breaks to three vertebrae, caused by a fall. There, he met a
paraplegic car crash victim who first told him to try cannabis for the
pain. He shared her joint and was beginning to appreciate the benefits
when his father arrived to wheel him back to the ward.

He could have used more cannabis immediately but since the accident had
done for his promising career in carpentry and state benefits were
providing him with just £65 a week to live off, he started growing his
own. Within a year, Davies had encountered four patients in the same
predicament and each started chipping in for seed which he grew in a
back room and shipped out by secure mail order. He established the
Medical Marijuana Co-operative, the kind of venture he'd read was
working in the US. Davies was already attracting the attention of the
medical fraternity when a police raid resulted in him being tried at
Manchester Crown Court, charged with intent to supply, in 1996. His
spectacular acquittal on the testimony of patients from Edinburgh and
Leeds was a turning point - "one of those things that life deals you,"
he says.

It meant word was out about his co-operative and dozens suffering the
pain of multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis realised that the
embarrassment of their covert trips to street dealers was no longer
necessary: 200 signed up with the necessary authorisation certificates,
signed by their GPs. Many of them would still rather receive their
cannabis in brown envelopes than step into the bohemian cafe, with its
external faux Victorian lamps, salmon pink roller blinds and pea green
tables, which were shipped in from Amsterdam, but the sight of
wheelchairs being pulled from vehicles is now familiar in Bridgefield
Street.

They belong to people such as Jane - Davies's "resident miracle" from
north Manchester, who was registered blind in 1986 when MS took hold. A
note from her GP remarks on the "remarkable improvement" of her health
since she began taking Davies's high quality cannabis 12 months ago.
"It's the quality of the stuff - much better quality than what you get
on the street," she says. "I've been sold Oxo cubes so many times but
this stuff is free and it reaches my bones better - the pain relief's
better than anything the doctor gives me. I couldn't afford to buy it."

Other customers include Kate Bradley, a former drugs squad officer with
the West Midlands police force, who has smoked cannabis since her MS was
diagnosed in 1991 and supports his project. And there is Laurence
Brearley, a 57-year-old former lorry driver currently in care 15 miles
away, who makes weekly visits by taxi at Davies's expense and regales
the house with stories of his long-distance days.

"It's the MHS - the Marijuana Health Service," laughs Davies, pleased
with the joke, the eclectic bunch he has gathered and the fulfilment of
his café's purpose - to use the money made from social users of cannabis
to provide it free or at cost price for medicinal users. Co-operative
members now just get a note, asking for a contribution to funds if they
feel able. "People in wheelchairs shouldn't have to pay for their
medicine, they should get it free, and that's what we're doing," said
Davies.

The cafe's number of recreational users increased sharply to around 300
a week after the Home Secretary, David Blunkett, announced that cannabis
possession will no longer be an arrestable offence.

"They're feeling great because they can walk around with weed in their
pocket," says Davies, puffing away in front of a coffee bar adorned with
his cannabis memorabilia, including a framed photograph of the moment he
handed the Queen a bunch of flowers with reefers inside, last year.

Local police seem resigned to Mr Blunkett's effective decriminalisation
of cannabis, too. Their attempts to arrest Davies on the morning the
cafe opened in September, ended in scuffles and loud chants of "We want
to smoke weed", sung to the tune of Queen's "I Want to Break Free". But
though an estimated 500 joints a week are now exchanging hands, officers
have since visited just twice: once to assist after a burglary, once to
hand back property seized in the raid. "We recognise there is ongoing
debate and research into the medical benefits or otherwise of cannabis,"
said Greater Manchester Police, in a statement. "The police, in
appropriate cases, exercise discretion and judgement."

Stockport council seems equally relaxed. It didn't reply to a letter
from Davies, which set out his plans two weeks before opening, but sent
him a rates bill instead. The establishment is not being disturbed
because it simply does not attract trouble. "No alcohol, or drunk and
disorderly persons on the premises," states a sign inside. "Alcohol is
not a part of the mature cannabis culture and the cafe is giving us the
chance to educate people about that," says Davies. To date, he has not
goaded drugs squad officers by selling cannabis openly through a booth
with a menu, though this is in his plans.

Dutch Experience won't become a franchise operation but individuals who
seem committed to the cause - such as MS sufferer Chris Baldwin in
Worthing - will be given the knowledge and back-up to open other
outlets, with a "10 per cent override" to Stockport. At least one North
West commercial developer has also approached Davies to point out the
value of the upper-middle class market in the south Manchester suburbs
five miles away.

"He said I could be selling cappuccinos for £3 instead of 50p Nescafe
instants and flog £15 bags of weed for £30," Davies reveals. "But it's
not my thing, really. I'm just desperate to get Dundee up and running in
the New Year. We've got patients on our co-operative list from the
Orkneys and it means we can transfer them up there."



 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!