Happy 4/20 Yukon now has the North's first licensed pot farm - Action News
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Happy 4/20 Yukon now has the North's first licensed pot farm

Yukon-based ArcticPharm now has a licence from Health Canada to grow cannabis on a farm north of Whitehorse.

ArcticPharm plans to start growing cannabis on property north of Whitehorse this year

An artist's rendering of ArcticPharm's cannabis farm north of Whitehorse. The company hopes to start growing as soon as it can get seeds in the ground, but it may be another year before any retail product is available. (ArcticPharm)

Chris Cornborough has a lot to celebrate this 4/20 his company, ArcticPharm, recently became the first in the North to get a licence to cultivate and process cannabis.

The plan is to start growing pot on the company's 116-acre farm north of Whitehorse this year, and eventually sell product in retail stores across the North.

"The [licensing]process itself has taken us two and a half years to work through. It's very labourious, very bureaucratic," he said.

"I guess you could equate it to getting your driver's licence for a company, I meannow we can do what we set out to do."

A federal licence issued by Health Canada is required to cultivate andprocess cannabisfor medical and non-medical use. ArcticPharm's was granted on Friday.

John Lenart, ArcticPharm's master grower, checks out some plants. The climate around Whitehorse is ideal for growing cannabis, said Chris Cornborough, ArcticPharm's president. (ArcticPharm)

Cornborough says his companywill beone of only a handful of licensedproducers of certified-organic cannabis in all of Canada.

Right now, Yukon's legal weedretailers can only sell what is available through the Yukon Liquor Corporation, which serves as the territory's sole wholesaler. Cornboroughbelieves Yukon tends to get "the last pick of the product," compared with larger markets elsewhere.

"The reality is that I think the product quality, according to most folks we talk to, isn't as good as what you get down in, say, B.C., for example," he said.

"We're hoping we can supply the North, the Yukon and the other territories, with a locally-grown, quality product.... And from there, we'll be able to kind of fill the gap and hopefully put a little bit of a dent in the black market in the North."

But that won't happen right away. Cornborough says there are still some hoops to jump through with Health Canada before any ArcticPharm product goes to market. He's hoping that happens by next spring.

The company says its property north of Whitehorse, seen here last fall, is already equipped with all the needed farming infrastructure. (ArcticPharm)

The company also alreadyhas its own retail licence in Yukon, granted more than a year ago, for a site in downtown Whitehorse. Cornboroughdescribes that licenceas "a placeholder, for now."

He's also hoping ArcticPharmcan get into the health and wellness industry as a wholesaler.

Farm visitors 'not welcome quite yet'

The plan right now, though, is to simply start growing potas soon as they can get seeds in the ground this year. The property north of Whitehorse, off the Takhini Hot Springs road, is already equipped with all the needed farming infrastructure including a state-of-the-art security perimeter around the growing plots.

A greenhouse on ArcticPharm's cannabis farm last fall. The company says it has all the infrastructure in place on its Yukon property, to begin growing this year. (ArcticPharm)

"So please don't come to the property, if at all possible. Visitors are not welcome quite yet," he said.

Cornboroughsays his plan has been met with some scepticism, especially from down south.

"We talk to people, especially in B.C. or Ontario, they think we're, you know, we're out to lunch because they think of snow andigloos and dogsledding in the North they don't think of growing," he said.

"But the climate in the Yukon, and specifically around Whitehorse, it's actually very ideal for growing a lot of things, including cannabis. There's no humidity, and with the midnight sun during the summer months, it's optimal."

Written by Paul Tukker, with files from Dave White