Across the country, hemp producers and retailers have found remarkable success by churning out tons of Delta-8 rich products
Americans have long found ways to circumvent state and federal law in order to get high, but Delta-8 THC presents a loophole of another magnitude. While the 2018 Farm Bill legalized widespread hemp production, it also left an opening for budding entrepreneurs: since the bill specified that Delta-9 THC, the popular compound in cannabis that gets you high, was the sole illegal component of the plant, producers believed they were in the clear to synthesize and sell its close cousin, Delta 8. Cue the explosion of an overnight industry.
Across the country, hemp producers and retailers have found remarkable success by churning out tons of Delta-8 rich products – from gummies to vape carts to tinctures. And there is more all the time. Last week, for instance, the Canadian rapper and singer Tory Lanez announced his own line of Delta-8 products, Black Leprechaun.
Politico recently reported that customers have purchased roughly $10 million of Delta-8 products in the past six months. Being so new, however, many questions remain surrounding the safety of generating the compound, as well as its legality. As Delta-8’s popularity continues to grow, some states are starting to restrict it; Oregon’s Liquor Control Commission – which also oversees the state’s cannabis program – recently green-lit a plan to “limit unchecked use” of Delta-8, and the Michigan Cannabis Manufacturers Association called on the state to begin regulating it. Others may not be far behind.
Potential customers may also be wondering whether Delta-8 is a comparable substitute for conventional THC. It has been called “marijuana light,” while others have described its effects as being “half as strong and twice as long” as THC.
To get to the bottom of the Delta-8 craze, I had to see, and puff, for myself.
Wait…What is Delta 8?
Before we go too far down the Delta-8 rabbit hole, let’s take a minute to back up and clarify what the heck we’re talking about. As Wikileaf has reported, Delta-8 is an extremely close cousin of Delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (known typically as THC). The latter is also much more molecularly “stable,” and thus Delta-8 is prone to break down and become Delta-9 THC.
Delta-8 binds to the same receptors found throughout the central nervous system as Delta-9: Cannabinoid Type 1 and 2, or CB1 and CB2. Yet it has also been shown to counter the psychotropic effects of THC (just like CBD) and is noted to be more effective at combating nausea. Unlike Delta-9 THC, however, Delta-8 rarely appears naturally. Most Delta-8 is produced by adding an acidic catalyst to hemp extracts; while this process is an effective way to generate, it also creates Delta-9 THC as a byproduct.
According to Erik Paulson, the manager of Infinite Chemical Analysis Labs, however, “that’s where a lot of variability comes in.” Paulson estimates that his lab tested roughly 400 products last year, but only six contained less than 0.3% THC, the legal limit.
A Different Kind of High
In the past few weeks, a couple of Delta-8 producers have offered to send me their products (you can currently legally mail to 42 states), but only one followed through the Miami-based company D8 Holdings, who sent me a package of “Blue x Razz” gummies and an “Açai x Gelato” vape cart.
Packages for both products sported QR codes that took me to lab results on the company’s website. According to tests conducted by the Florida-based ACS Laboratory, both products were THC-free (and additionally free of other potential concerns, like heavy metals and pesticides). I tried the gummies first. Since I didn’t really know what I was in for, so I started small, with half of a 25mg gummy.
About 45 minutes later, however, I was catching up with a friend on the phone when I found myself, abruptly, unable to complete my sentences. My brain was toast. I made up an excuse about needing to get some chores done (sorry, Sam!) and got off the phone, a bit woozy. The gummy didn’t quite offer the spritely Sativa high of, say, Jack Herer.
Nor was it a “sink into the couch until the end of time” Indica experience, either. I got over that initial dizziness, and while I felt pretty spaced out, I still had some energy to bop around the house (to clarify, if this wasn’t already clear: I’m a cannabis lightweight). There was something else I really liked about the gummy: the anxiety that I associate with most cannabis didn’t rear its head.
I felt calm and cheery throughout the experience, which didn’t seem to last much longer, if any, than a conventional cannabis edible. The “Açai x Gelato” vape cart was flavorful (perhaps, honestly, a bit too much) and had similar effects. I’ve taken a puff or two most evenings over the past week.