Cindy Pokey was first in line at Hobo Recreational Cannabis Store Monday morning.
âIâm here to buy pot,â said Pokey, 59. âItâs so clean, no garbage in it, no fentanyl. Itâs absolutely wonderful.â
Half a dozen people were lined up outside to wait for the 10 a.m opening.
Itâs one of the first three legal pot stores opening in Ottawa Monday morning and only a handful across the province.
In fact, Ottawa is now the cannabis-shop hotspot of Ontario â for a few days or weeks, anyway.
Ottawa has more stores ready to go than any other city, including Toronto.
The province wanted 25 of the privately-run stores to open on April 1. However, only 10 stores have received approval so far, the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario said in a posting Sunday night.
That includes only one store in Toronto, The Hunny Pot Cannabis Company. In addition to the three in Ottawa, the other stores are in St. Catharines, London, Brampton, Burlington, and two in Kingston.
And while 10 stores are approved, itâs up to the owners to decide when to open them.
A spokesperson for one of the Kingston stores, Brock Street Cannabis, said they didnât expect to be ready to open the doors until April 5.
Hobo is a brand created by the Donnelly Group, which owns pubs, cocktail bars and barbershops in Vancouver and Toronto. The Hobo store on Bank Street near Gladstone is the first in the companyâs plan to create a chain of cannabis stores in B.C. and Ontario.
The other Ottawa cannabis stores are Superette on Wellington Street West, which features decor resembling a diner; and Fire & Flower York Street Cannabis in the ByWard Market, in a renovated brick heritage building.
There were lineups at all three stores on Monday, but not huge ones. About 40 people were outside Hobo by 9:45 a.m., 15 minutes before opening.
Cannabis may be legal, but itâs clear there is still a stigma surrounding it.
Most of those in the line declined to give their name.
âI wish I could be proud,â said Joe, 24, who lives in Centretown.
He said he was glad to be able to buy his weed legally and support a local business.
At Fire & Flower York Street Cannabis, eight people were in line as of 9 a.m., with an even split between Ontario customers and those from Quebec.Â
Carmel Berlinguett, 38, said he was waiting to buy cannabis for his glaucoma, which has left him blind in one eye. According to him, marijuana has helped with his migraines and appetite, as well as reducing the strain on his eyes.Â
His mother, Laura, came along to support him. She said she initially did not support cannabis, but now believes in its use on a medicinal basis.
Construction and design teams at all three Ottawa stores worked feverishly to get them ready for opening on Monday.
The Ottawa stores all promised bright, trendy designs aimed at making customers feel comfortable shopping for a drug that still carries a lot of stigma.
The Hobo store, for instance, features light wood, Japanese-style slatted wooden blinds and pre-rolled joints and cannabis oil nestled in display cases that look like terrariums.
The previous tenant at the storefront was Cannabis Culture, a popular illegal dispensary that was a franchise of the brand created by pot activists Marc and Jodi Emery.
The arrival of bricks-and-mortar stores is expected to boost sales of cannabis in the province.
Ontario residents can buy online at the Ontario Cannabis Store. However, may people prefer shopping in a store, where they can talk to a clerk and also have the option of paying in cash.
Canada legalized recreational marijuana on Oct. 17, but Ontario is the last province to roll out brick-and-mortar stores.
The stores were delayed when the new Conservative government changed course to allow them to be run by private operators rather than a branch of the LCBO.
A lottery was held in January to decide who could apply for the coveted first wave of licences.
The province temporarily limited the number of licences because of a shortage of cannabis.
Politicians have said they are committed to opening up more licences when the supply increases.
Initially the government announced it would not limit the number of licences that could be awarded, and officials estimate Ontario would end up with 1,000 or more cannabis stores.
The lottery winners are supposed to own and maintain control of their stores â at least until the lottery period is over on Dec. 13.
Some winners have teamed up with retail cannabis chains to help create and operate their stores, though. Some of the chains had already rented storefronts before the lottery was announced and all of them are eager to get a foothold in the retail trade.
As a result of deals made with lottery winners, some stores will operate under the brand names of chains: Fire & Flower, Canna Cabana, Choom, Nova Cannabis, Tweed, Tokyo Smoke, Spiritleaf and Hobo.
In Ottawa, the lottery winners who own Superette and Hobo have declined to speak to this newspaper. The companies hired to help them say the lottery winners are not comfortable talking to the media.
Fire & Flower York Street Cannabis is owned by Michael Patterson and Eric Lavoie, who are brothers-in laws. They had been planning to open a cannabis store, and were elated when they won the lottery, said Lavoie in an interview.
Lavoie, a sales rep for a heating, ventilation and air conditioning wholesaler, said both he and Patterson, an accountant, will work at the store.
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