Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Thursday, March 23
    • Home
    • Affiliate Disclosure
    • FTC Statement
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
    Cannabis illumination
    Green 85
    • Home
    • Cannabis Media

      Grow Vlog – How to FLUSH Your Cannabis Plant Before Harvest

      March 23, 2023

      CRC documentary teaser with Remo – Cannabis in Canada

      March 22, 2023

      Cowen CEO Solomon Optimistic About Biotech, Cannabis and 5G

      March 21, 2023

      Phoenix Hotel Offers Cannabis, North Macedonia Advances Legislation & Pre-Rolls Recalled In Ontario

      March 20, 2023

      Cannabis Industry Power Players: Meet Eddie Brennan, President of Beak & Skiff

      March 19, 2023
    • Cannabis News

      Buds & Duds: Cannabis stocks a mixed bag as big names report results; Weekend rises on hemp license

      March 23, 2023

      Pardoned cannabis charges may still affect travel to the USA

      March 22, 2023

      Have marijuana studies been tainted by industry funding?

      March 21, 2023

      Criminalization of Cannabis: The Human Toll

      March 20, 2023

      Harvest One: Ready for Cannabis Extracts and the US Hemp Market

      March 19, 2023
    • Cannabis Products

      Burn & Learn: Session w/Cannabis Training Canada Session

      March 23, 2023

      How $1.3 Billion Of Counterfeit Goods Are Seized At JFK Airport | Big Business

      March 22, 2023

      Tom Whettem – Trust Canna, Cannabis Product Certification to Protect the Cannabis Industry

      March 21, 2023

      How to safely buy Cannabis online

      March 20, 2023

      Gelato Dream 3.5G Flower by Grump Weed | Sativa | Canadian Cannabis Product | Review | Manitoba

      March 19, 2023
    • Shop
    Cannabis illumination
    You are at:Home»Blog»Cannabis suppositories: Would you try kush for your tush?

    Cannabis suppositories: Would you try kush for your tush?

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Green 85


    After much anticipation, Canada finally has not just one, but two product options for cannabis suppositories. Classified as cannabis extracts, suppositories were technically allowed to be manufactured when legalization 2.0 rolled in October 2019. However, we didn’t see any on the shelves until October 2021. 

    And here they are. Bud for your butt (or beaver), kush for your tush (or taco)—the jokes write themselves. 

    The question now is, are Canadian consumers ready for suppositories?

    The topic can be a bashful one. Suppositories are inserted vaginally or rectally, which can be a highly personal endeavour. 

    Even as a medical cannabis patient and overall weed enthusiast, I felt hesitant when it came to trying out my homemade suppositories. When I was finally able to buy ready-made pods, they sat in my medicine cabinet for weeks before I finally gave them a go. 

    It can be a real head trip putting things in personal places. But shyness didn’t stop me and if consumers are curious about suppositories, or any new format of weed product, they should feel empowered to do so. 

    Here’s the deal with cannabis suppositories in Canada (and no, they are absolutely not called weed tampons).

    Canada’s first legal cannabis suppository

    Founders and sisters Rebecca Thomson and Olivia Penner grew up practicing regenerative and sustainable agriculture on their family farm spanning four generations. Now they are growing a new kind of crop—CBD-enriched cannabis and hemp.

    The sisters founded Prairie Grass, which produces cannabis flower, as well as Canada’s very first legal suppositories. “Pods for the people” come in two formulations: the Relief Pod, which has 10mg THC (Bruce Banner), and Eve Pod, which has 40mg CBD and 1.33mg THC (hemp-derived).

    “Suppositories have been on the legacy market for decades, it’s a well-known format that a lot of people find effective,” says Penner. ”We both have healthcare backgrounds and so for us, it was really exciting to start formulating different types of cannabis products.”

    Penner is a registered nurse and Thompson is a pharmacist, which is probably why they prioritized their medical launch over the adult-use market. It isn’t very often that a producer chooses a patient launch, which is a much smaller market than retail. 

    You don’t have to be a medical patient to access these pods though, they are also on the adult-use market, increasing accessibility and affordability for all kinds of cannabis consumers.

    What’s in the bullet?

    At the time of publication, there was only one brand offering legal suppositories (though another brand plans to launch its own suppository line soon).

    Prairie Grass suppositories are made with the cannabis cultivated on their family farm and combined with a pharmaceutical base to make pods. They’re shaped like little bullets for easy insertion and kind of look like tiny pods.

    “The base is both fat-soluble and water-soluble so it blends and dissolves really nicely together with the cannabis extract,” says Thompson, explaining that the cannabis extract needs a fat-soluble formula, while vaginas and rectums prefer water-soluble.

    “There’s no oily film left behind that you can get from bases like cocoa butter, which can be irritating on more sensitive areas,” says Penner. “Pods were designed to be amicable with those sensitive environments and can be used vaginally or rectally.”

    “Start low and go slow, even down below. That’s going to be the motto for 2022.”

    Ashleigh Brown, CEO of SheCann.

    The suppositories themselves are packaged individually in a plastic shell to keep them from getting crushed or contaminated. There is no applicator, to use them simply insert them into the desired area with your (clean) finger.

    “Cannabis doesn’t achieve its full potential unless it’s cultivated with care, attention, and love,” explains Penner. “We have the agricultural experience and an understanding of science and physiology needed [to create the first legal suppository].”

    The sisters saw a need that wasn’t being served in the legal space and they were inspired to “create something that can be easily and discreetly incorporated into daily life, when or if needed.”

    Medical cannabis patients have been waiting forever

    Is Canada ready for suppositories? Maybe not, but patients are.

    “We’re ready for suppositories now because we’ve been waiting forever,” says Ashleigh Brown, CEO of SheCann and medical cannabis advocate. 

    “The majority of patients have tried and failed many different methods and formats and combinations over the years. So if nothing else has worked, are you going to be open to something that is foreign to you? Absolutely.”

    Have you ever been in so much discomfort that you’d put an entire syringe of cannabis oil into your vagina? Or a tube of cortisone cream? Many patients have. These might seem like hilarious anecdotes but try and wrap your mind around the kind of desperation it takes. I assure you, this is never the first resort.

    Brown shares that she’s heard from SheCann members that suppositories have brought relief for their conditions like spinal stenosis and nerve pain, Crohn’s and colitis, IBS, chronic pelvic pain, hernia pain, anything related to that area. 

    These are the lived experience of patients and they are invaluable to the industry. However, they by no means take the place of randomized clinical trials. Existing research shows that cannabinoids like THC and CBD might be helpful in treating female and male sexual health issues.

    “The availability of legal cannabis suppositories signals to me that people are still listening to patients,” says Brown. “For years there have been many people who would have been happy to try suppositories but do not have the energy or understanding or intent to make them.”

    If you are thinking about using cannabis suppositories for medicinal purposes, always be sure to talk to your healthcare professional or cannabinoid doctor prior to use.

    There’s no need to shy, it’s just a suppository

    There is still a large group of people who don’t understand suppositories as a delivery method. Brown shares that she held a poll to SheCann members asking about their willingness to try suppositories. 58% said yes, and 28% said maybe. That’s 28% who simply do not understand why or how to use suppositories. 

    Brown explains that the mindset that cannabis needs to be smoked is a prevalent stigma in cannabinoid therapy. It’s an evolution of experimenting from there to trying vaporizers, edibles, concentrates etc. Suppositories are another step in the evolution of how we think about, and how we use, cannabis as a therapeutic substance.

    Pods for the people! (Courtesy of Prairie Grass)

    “The last thing in the world I want is for anyone to feel shame and have that shame cause them not to try suppositories. If they wanted to, of course,” says Brown. “We have to get over the idea that this is something taboo, or it belongs to a certain gender or even a certain category of issues.”

    Will I get high from suppositories?

    Suppositories offer a targeted dose of cannabinoids to a localized area that can help facilitate higher absorption rates in the body. Does that mean they will make you high? Probably not.

    “The most appropriate and responsible answer to ‘will I get high from this’ is that we don’t know.,” shares Brown. “There is science to support how a baclofen (a pharmaceutical muscle relaxer) suppository works, but we don’t have the understanding of the mechanism of action for cannabis suppositories specifically.”

    According to the folks at Prairie Grass, “each person’s endocannabinoid system is unique; while many don’t feel intoxicating effects from insertion, both localized and systemic effects are possible.”

    So when using cannabis suppositories for the first time, it is important to do so in a safe environment with no commitments in order to safely gauge how you will react to the product. The old adage is true for suppositories, just like all cannabis products—start low and go slow. 

    “We can’t greenwash cannabis. You can’t pretend that any format is benign,” says Brown. “Start low and go slow, even down below. That’s our motto for 2022 when it comes to suppositories.” 

    Ashley Keenan's Bio Image

    Ashley Keenan

    Ashley Keenan is the Canada editor at Leafly, as well as a freelance journalist, consultant, and patient advocate in the cannabis industry. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram @askcannaqueen for hot takes on cannabis and chronic illness.

    View Ashley Keenan’s articles

    By submitting this form, you will be subscribed to news and promotional emails from Leafly and you agree to Leafly’s Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe from Leafly email messages anytime.

    Green 85
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleSeries 2: Cannabis Law in Canada Webinar
    Next Article Midas Letter RAW 82 Afternoon: Happy Canadian Cannabis Legalization Day!

    Related Posts

    How to think about cannabis and cardiac health

    March 22, 2023

    7 trends coming to your cannabis from Spannabis

    March 21, 2023

    Best St. Patrick’s Day 2023 cannabis strains and edibles

    March 17, 2023
    Green 85
    Recent Posts
    • Buds & Duds: Cannabis stocks a mixed bag as big names report results; Weekend rises on hemp license
    • Grow Vlog – How to FLUSH Your Cannabis Plant Before Harvest
    • Burn & Learn: Session w/Cannabis Training Canada Session
    • How to think about cannabis and cardiac health
    • Pardoned cannabis charges may still affect travel to the USA
    Green 85
    Don't Miss

    Buds & Duds: Cannabis stocks a mixed bag as big names report results; Weekend rises on hemp license

    Grow Vlog – How to FLUSH Your Cannabis Plant Before Harvest

    Burn & Learn: Session w/Cannabis Training Canada Session

    How to think about cannabis and cardiac health

    Popular Posts

    Buds & Duds: Cannabis stocks a mixed bag as big names report results; Weekend rises on hemp license

    March 23, 2023

    Grow Vlog – How to FLUSH Your Cannabis Plant Before Harvest

    March 23, 2023

    Burn & Learn: Session w/Cannabis Training Canada Session

    March 23, 2023
    Recent Posts
    • Buds & Duds: Cannabis stocks a mixed bag as big names report results; Weekend rises on hemp license
    • Grow Vlog – How to FLUSH Your Cannabis Plant Before Harvest
    • Burn & Learn: Session w/Cannabis Training Canada Session
    • How to think about cannabis and cardiac health
    • Pardoned cannabis charges may still affect travel to the USA
    Latest Posts

    New York Marijuana Legalization Bill Signed By Governor Cuomo

    April 1, 2021

    As 4/20 Passes, The Inequalities In Cannabis Policy Are Still Evident

    April 21, 2021

    NFL Marijuana Testing Drastically Scaled Back Under New CBA

    April 30, 2021
    Copyright © 2023. FOR SALE: This Domain & Website is For Sale. Please Call 360 256-1117 or Email thewaymarketing88@gmail.com For All the Details.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.