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How to start training pets for your return to work.

TEXT NATALIE RAGLAND, DVM, GUEST CONTRIBUTOR AT HONEST PAWS

With quarantine restrictions lifted and more people getting vaccinated, many of us are returning to offi ces for work. This change aff ects not just us but our pets too.

Natalie Ragland, a veterinarian and contributor to Honest Paws, shares insights and tips to help pet owners prepare their pets for life after the pandemic, shedding light on how pets are going to react when we stop working from home and go back to the offi ce.

If you are like most of the world, sheltering in place took on a new meaning because of the COVID-19 pandemic. For pets, the extra time with you has been welcomed. But, as we begin to trickle our way back to working in our offi ces, the shock of absence may impact them more than we realize. There are a few things we can do to make the shift easier. Here are a few tips that might help the transition for your pets, as well as decrease separation anxiety and unfavorable responses brought on by the change in company.

1. Leave more often during the day as “D-day” approaches.

As departure day approaches, leave your space more frequently. If you need to run an errand or go for a walk, block out time away from the house to acclimate your pet to longer absences. If you are going back to work in person without much notice, consider using a few vacation half-days in order to build in a daily routine before implementing your original schedule.

2. Develop your routine.

If you are given ample notice before returning to work, remember that most animals, including our pets, are creatures of habit. Pets know when you are due home and what time you usually leave each day. Reestablishing your routine a few days beforehand may be necessary. You can start by: • reestablishing walk times. • reinstituting normal feeding schedules. • leaving for the day and placing a camera in the house to monitor for any signs of separation anxiety.

“If you have a pet, it’s time to prepare them for your return to normal— whatever that may look like postpandemic. And, according to some animal experts, it’s going to take time for them to adjust.”

—CNN

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3. Look for signs of stress and anxiety.

If your pet is more prone to being stressed out or anxious when you leave, watch out for such behavior as going to the bathroom in the house and destroying household items such as window blinds and furniture. Seeing these signs may warrant a call to a veterinarian or a tele-health appointment with a behavioral expert. If you are pressed for time as we are all these days, consider increasing your pet’s exercise to release stress hormones and increase endorphins, leading to longer napping times.

4. Consider in-home or daycare service.

If you can arrange for someone to come to your home to either sit with your pet or walk your animal as needed, this may be the best option to start. Some local daycare centers for animals may off er inhome services and drop off and pick up. An even better option would be to have a relative or loved one come visit; coordinate the time when you will be out of the house so that there is some company when you exit.

Pour Some Shoogies on Me

Wow a crowd with these cannabisinfused mocktails and appetizers.

TEXT JENNY WILLDEN

Craving something sweet? Pair your sugar rush with a THC buzz using Shoogies. This California-made cannabis- and THC-infused sweetener is available in cane sugar, agave nectar, and baking sugar varieties, and it transforms everything from cocktails to baked goods. It’s portable and discreet, making it easy to add to almost anything. Here we’re mixing up infused mocktails and savory snacks perfect for your next party.

Pineapple Mockarita

Serves: 8 / Recipe by Shoogies / Batch total: 200mg THC

INGREDIENTS

10 ounces Shoogies Agave (1 full box) 10 ounces limeade concentrate 10 ounces lime juice 5 ounces pineapple juice ½ ounce orange bitters 1 cup lemon sparkling water 8 cups ice Pineapple wedge for garnish

INSTRUCTIONS

• Combine the limeade, lime juice, pineapple juice, orange bitters, and Shoogies Agave in a pitcher, stirring until the agave has dissolved. • Add ice and sparkling water; stir to combine. • Fill glasses with ice. Pour drink over ice. • Top drinks with a pineapple wedge if desired.

Pink Grapefruit-White Cranberry Sparkling Punch

Serves: 8 / Recipe by Shoogies / Batch total: 50mg THC

INGREDIENTS

½ cup Shoogies Baker’s Bag Cane Sugar (approximately 50mg THC) 3 strips grapefruit zest 1 ½ cups fresh grapefruit juice, chilled 1 cup orange juice 1 ½ cups white cranberry juice (such as Ocean Spray), chilled 3 fresh bay leaves, plus more for serving 24 ounces club soda, chilled Sliced kumquats, for serving (optional)

INSTRUCTIONS

• In a punch bowl or large pitcher, stir together grapefruit juice, orange juice, cranberry juice, and three bay leaves. • Rim the cocktail glasses with Shoogies Cane Sugar if desired. • Add ice, top with club soda, and garnish with bay leaves and sliced kumquats.

Party Nuts

Serves: 2 / Batch total: 30–50mg THC depending on the number of packets used.

INGREDIENTS

4–6 packets Shoogies Agave 2–4 packets Shoogies Cane Sugar ½ pound (8 ounces) nuts such as almonds, walnuts, or pecans 1 tablespoon vegetable oil Garlic salt (to taste) 1 teaspoon thyme 1 teaspoon rosemary

INSTRUCTIONS

• Place a sheet of parchment paper on a cool surface or cold sheet pan. • Add nuts and oil to a cold pan and toss to coat thoroughly. • Turn the heat to medium and stir continuously until warmed through. • Add 4 packets of Shoogies Agave (total 20mg THC), thyme, and rosemary. • Stir vigorously and continuously to prevent burning until you notice a slight color change in the nuts. • At this point, you can add an additional 2 packets of

Shoogies Agave for more potent dosing (5mg each packet). • Stir until the agave starts to become sticky and clings to the nuts, then gradually sprinkle in 2–4 packets of Shoogies

Cane Sugar (5mg each packet). • Stir continuously. • When sugar begins to caramelize and turn sticky, remove from heat immediately. • Pour out onto the prepared parchment paper. • Let cool for at least 15 minutes before eating.

The Life and Times of Shawn Carter

A new campaign for Jay-Z’s Monogram cannabis brand reimagines the iconic photos of mid-20th-century American photographer Slim Aarons through a contemporary lens.

This is a scene from the Life and Times of Shawn Carter, Volume Two. (Volume One, if you missed it, was that hard-knock life you heard Jay-Z —Carter’s public persona—rap about in a track that samples the famous line from the 1982 Annie movie.) It’s a good life, a high life, and the people depicted living it are good and high on cannabis.

The image is the fi rst installment of a threepart campaign for Jay Z’s (also known as HOV) new Monogram cannabis line, which launched this spring in California. The campaign is a modern take on the legendary work of Slim Aarons, a midcentury photographer who built his fame by photographing “attractive people doing attractive things in attractive places,” as he famously described it.

The photographs Aarons captured during the Rat Pack era have become synonymous with midcentury luxury, beauty, and leisure. Carter’s Monogram tapped legendary hip-hop photographer/ director Hype Williams to reimagine a series of Aaron’s most notable vignettes. Shot at the stunning Frank Sinatra House in Palm Springs, the series has been cast with a diverse group of creative talents like Grammy nominee Chika, Ghetto Gastro, Curren$y, designer Aleali May, and model Slick Woods—all styled by High Snobiety fashion director Corey T. Stokes. The creatives are seen lounging on fl oats with Monogram product in hand, basking in outdoor opulence.

The resulting imagery illustrates the dynamic, expanding landscape of modern luxury, and how it intersects with a new chapter in cannabis culture. “The perception around cannabis has shifted a lot since the 20th century. If you were to ask me and my peers how we’d defi ne the good life today, weed would defi nitely be a part of it. Whether we’re smoking to inspire creativity or to celebrate an achievement, cannabis has a rightful place in modern-day culture,” says Williams. “HOV has a vision for the industry that he’s bringing to life through Monogram. His focus for this campaign was to showcase how beautifully cannabis fi ts into the good life today, and I am honored to be a part of it.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR Mona Van Joseph is a professionally licensed intuitive reader in Las Vegas since 2002. Author, radio host, and columnist, she created the Dice Wisdom app and is available for phone and in-person sessions. mona.vegas

JUNE HOROSCOPE

What do the stars hold for you?

TEXT MONA VAN JOSEPH

MAY 21–JUNE 20 GEMINI

Yes, you typically like to have a plan. However, this is the month to see what presents itself while you focus on what gives you peace and purpose. What you need will be easily found.

JUNE 21-JULY 22 CANCER

Avoid highly emotional people this month because they are just a toxic void that seeks attention. Detach from anyone who tends to dump emotional baggage on you. Ask them, “So, how are you going to handle that?”

JULY 23-AUG. 22 LEO

No one can take away what you’ve ever learned or earned. You have created your reality; you can change or recreate that reality. You are still the hero of your own story.

AUG. 23-SEPT. 22 VIRGO

The thorn is out! Past pain is no longer a re ection of your future. It’s time to act as though all things are opening up for you to have the clients, personal relationships, and good vibes you deserve.

SEPT. 23-OCT. 22 LIBRA

You will ultimately become so skilled at a creative project that other people will want to learn from you. Let nature inspire you even further. You are creating your future with your expertise.

OCT. 23-NOV. 21 SCORPIO

Be the ultimate politician this month. Recognize people around you for the skills and bene ts they present. This is the month to seek value, not to be cheap or thrifty. You are establishing your long-term goals now.

NOV. 22-DEC. 21 SAGITTARIUS

Handle high-maintenance people on your own and shield them from the people they bother. You are a leader. It’s time to step back from people you have no power to change.

GEMINI, THIS IS THE MONTH TO SEE WHAT PRESENTS ITSELF WHILE YOU FOCUS ON WHAT GIVES YOU PEACE AND PURPOSE.

DEC. 22-JAN. 19 CAPRICORN

You are being guided toward your priorities, and they may not align with what you’re doing now. It’s time to let go of anything that causes you pain. Things are lining up for the outcome you desire.

JAN. 20-FEB. 18 AQUARIUS

When you realize that no one does what you do exactly the way you do it, you are magic. It is time to enjoy what you’ve created and allow the big rewards to manifest for you later this year.

FEB. 19-MAR. 20 PISCES

Do what you love, be with the people you love, and decide your next step based on that vibration. You will be tapped for a project where your awesomeness is actually appreciated.

MAR. 21-APR. 19 ARIES

Be open and imagine some people as though they are a slot machine that doesn’t pay o . It’s di cult for you to stay still, so transfer that energy to nally tackle forgotten home projects.

APR. 20-MAY 20 TAURUS

Your actions and words represent the truth. Step onto that soapbox with the right group and keep expressing your truth. Your writer’s block is suddenly lifted, and words ow from you now.

The hottest cannabinoid to emerge since CBD, DELTA-8 THC gets you high and is being sold as a legal product made from hemp—even in nonlegal markets. But is it really legal? That’s complicated.

TEXT ROBYN GRIGGS LAWRENCE

DELTA- DAWNING

he deeper Flip Croft-Caderao and his sister-in-law, Kayla Croft, delved into writing their business plan, the more apparent it became: they would never have enough capital to establish and maintain a licensed cannabis business in California. Disappointed but determined, they refused to pivot from their dream. Instead, they sidestepped into hemp, a much more accessible commodity. They fi gured selling CBD and other nonpsychoactive cannabinoids would give them a good understanding of the plant and the cannabis business, and might even generate the capital they needed to migrate over to THC down the road.

In early 2020, Croft and CroftCaderao launched Goodekind (goodekind.com) and sold a decent amount of The Notorious CBG Crumble and Hawaiian Haze hemp fl ower online. Then, last December, they added delta-8 THC gummies and vapes to the menu, and their business exploded.

“Delta-8 freaking took off ,” Croft-Caderao says. “Oh, gosh, it is crazy. It is defi nitely our top-selling product by a ridiculous amount.”

Chances are good you’ve heard of delta-8 by now. Derived from hemp, it’s the hottest cannabinoid to hit the market since CBD, and its appeal lies in what it does that CBD doesn’t. Like its kissing cousin, delta-9 THC, delta-8 will get you high—just not nearly as high as you get from delta-9. And—for now, anyway—it’s legal (or legal enough) under the 2018 U.S. Farm Bill that allows hemp cultivation and production of hemp-based products.

Entrepreneurs like Croft-Caderao saw a loophole in the Farm Bill’s defi nition of hemp-based products as having less than .3 percent delta-9 THC. The bill doesn’t address delta-8 THC, which is essentially degraded delta-9, because hemp has miniscule amounts of it—not nearly enough for commercial production. What lawmakers didn’t see coming was innovation born of desperation. Hemp entrepreneurs with a lot of product on their hands found a way to chemically synthesize delta-8 from CBD distillate, creating a new gray market that the feds are ignoring—for now—and states are just starting to address.

Croft-Caderao sees delta-8 as a perfect blend of the hemp and cannabis industries. “It gets you high, but it’s also unregulated, so you can ship it to people and have an entire e-commerce platform,” he says. “It’s an entrepreneur’s dream.”

“IT’S NOT AN INCREDIBLE HIGH OR ANYTHING, BUT IF I’M OUT AND ACTIVE AND JUST WANT SOMETHING TO GIVE ME A BIT OF A LIFT, I’LL PUFF ON A CART AND GET TO A NICE SPOT.”

—One Reddit user describing their experience with delta-8

THE NEW “IT” CANNABINOID

By all accounts, delta-8 is fulfi lling consumers’ dreams as well. It’s the fastest-growing segment of the hemp-derived product market, New Leaf Data Services reports, with U.S. sales of around $10 million last year. It’s getting a lot of attention—and that’s a little bit worrying for Erica Stark, executive director of the National Hemp Association, which is having a tough time coming up with a position on delta-8.

“On the one hand, we’re still of the mindset that we literally spent years convincing legislators that hemp is not about getting high— and this is really undermining that message and, I think, providing some skepticism about what LANGUAGE LESSON

“Delta” is a term used to describe a chemical reaction that requires heat as a catalyst in a process known as decarboxylation. The numbers that follow that designation show where the cannabinoids bond to the carbon chain.

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we say,” Stark says. “On the other hand, the CBD market has suffered with oversaturation. This is a way for farmers to fi nd outlets for their biomass and hopefully recoup some of their losses, which might be a nice bridge until some of the markets even themselves out. We don’t want to shut the door on it or demonize it, but we don’t necessarily want to endorse some of the practices we’ve seen with products that are wildly unregulated and potentially harmful.”

In June, the Hemp Industries Association announced its support for delta-8 based on legal advice that it was not a controlled substance under federal law. “Businesses, farmers, and consumers all deserve regulations that support the exploration of the hemp plant’s full potential,” says HIA Executive Director Jody McGinness.

And of course, delta-8 has plenty of critics, both inside and outside the industry. The U.S. Hemp Authority, a third-party auditor for hemp and CBD businesses, refuses to certify delta-8 products. The U.S. Hemp Roundtable called marketing hemp products with any intoxicating value or euphoric eff ect “irresponsible.” The Roundtable is calling for delta-8 to be regulated like adult-use cannabis.

Individual states are taking radically diff erent and sometimes unpredictable approaches to delta-8, just as they have with CBD and delta-9. A random consortium of states that are as far apart as could be on legalizing delta-9—Alaska, Arkansas, Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Mississippi, Montana, New York, North Dakota, Rhode Island, Utah, and Vermont—have banned delta-8, and several more are threatening to. Florida, being Florida, is moving in the opposite direction, toward establishing a legal delta-8 marketplace. Texas legislators struck down a provision to make delta-8 illegal earlier this summer.

U.S. Hemp Authority president Michelle Weintraub has not been WILL I FAIL A DRUG TEST?

When it comes down to it, THC is THC. Anything with THC in the name will show up as THC in a drug test and cause you to fail. Don’t say we didn’t warn you.

shy about how angry she is that delta-8 is muddying the waters of her “won’t get you high” industry. Stark, for her part, is annoyed because she never gets to talk about fi ber and grain hemp, her passion, because delta-8 takes up everyone’s time and attention. “I love seeing farmers have opportunities,” she says. “But it does just suck all the oxygen out of the room.”

OFF TO A NICE SPOT

Delta-8 delivers about half to three-quarters the high that delta-9 does, a space somewhere between THC and CBD, more body than head. It’s like drinking a Bud Light instead of a Long Island iced tea. Croft-Caderao says you get about 50 to 60 percent of what you’d get when you vape delta-9, but people are reporting they they’re not getting anxious or paranoid with the less-potent cannabinoid. “They’re saying, ‘I can smoke sativas again. I can enjoy myself without getting too high,’” he says.

Reddit users describe delta-8 as a “productive buzz”—great for when you need help with anxiety or pain but can’t be intoxicated, and “like weed without the anxiety or introspective thoughts.” An occasional delta-8 smoker wrote: “It’s not an incredible high or anything, but if I’m out and active and just want something to give me a bit of a lift, I’ll puff on a cart and get to a nice spot.”

That’s all good for users who have built up a little tolerance, but people trying THC of any kind for the fi rst time (or the fi rst time in a long time) generally have no idea how much to ingest. Because delta-8 is completely

“…THE CBD MARKET HAS SUFFERED WITH OVERSATURATION. THIS IS A WAY FOR FARMERS TO FIND OUTLETS FOR THEIR BIOMASS AND HOPEFULLY RECOUP SOME OF THEIR LOSSES, WHICH MIGHT BE A NICE BRIDGE UNTIL SOME OF THE MARKETS EVEN THEMSELVES OUT.”

—Erica Stark, Executive Director of the National Hemp Association

Here Comes Delta-10

In the new THC numbers game, delta-10 is up next.

Another cannabinoid found only in trace amounts in hemp and cannabis, delta-10 THC is often mistaken for minor cannabinoids CBC and CBL. Like delta-8, it can be synthesized from CBD.

Delta-10 has mild psychoactive e ects but is said to be more uplifting and energizing than delta-8. Users say it’s more like a sativa, while delta-8 leans more indica.

unregulated, dosage is pretty much up to each user. Overdose stories are surfacing, surprisingly common among heavy delta-9 users who underestimate delta-8’s potency (or overestimate their own tolerance). This can be especially dangerous when it comes to edibles. Our bodies metabolize delta-8 the same way they metabolize delta-9, by turning it into 11-hydroxy THC, a compound that can be up to 10 times more potent than delta-8.

SO, HOW IS THIS LEGAL?

It’s not entirely clear that it is. The DEA released an Interim Final Rule, open for review until October, that states, “all synthetically derived tetrahydrocannabinols remain Schedule I controlled substances.” That appears to make delta-8, which is chemically synthesized, illegal. But the DEA hasn’t taken any action against companies selling delta-8, and a lot of companies are betting it never will.

Stark says she asked Sean Mitchell, chief of intergovernmental aff airs at the Drug Enforcement Administration, about delta-8 during a panel discussion, and he confi rmed that any hemp product that is delta-9 compliant is federally legal. That’s just one guy from the DEA, though, and not a fi nal ruling. In the end, Stark is as uncertain as everyone else about legality. “What’s our position?” she says. “I don’t know.”

Croft-Caderao, for his part, expects the market to be regulated—if not outlawed—eventually, and he’s determined to make the most of this window of opportunity while it remains open. “This is the golden era right now,” he says. “This is something that gets you high that is unregulated and that is kind of unfettered.”

He’s already plotting how to keep his business thriving if and when the feds crack down on delta-8. “Business owners like myself have to be thinking, OK, if this gets regulated, this is how I will be able to pivot and use the skills I’ve learned to enter the cannabis market,” he says. “That’s what I’m thinking about, because who knows how much time we have?”

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