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Why I Judge Cannabis Competition Judging

Imagine sampling 45 different strains of marijuana in just a few hours. Most people – even veteran cannabis users – won’t be able to do much critical thinking after the first 7-8 strains. 20 strains in and even the toughest stoner will be in a coma, incapable of evaluating anything but the back of their eyelids.

But somehow, judges at cannabis cups and competitions all around the world want you to believe they are doing precisely this, all while formulating fair and even-handed decisions. It’s time to call bullshit on this nonsense, because no objective person in their right mind thinks that it’s reasonable to sample so much weed in such a short time and know what the fuck they’re talking about.

As a cannabis reviewer, I can’t imagine attempting to evaluate more than 2 strains per day. That is, of course, unless you take a page from the play book of “Slick Willy,” former U.S. President Bill Clinton, who famously claimed that he smoked marijuana in college, but didn’t inhale. Only by not inhaling cannabis could you possibly evaluate so many different samples.

Think about it – during wine tastings and competitions, beer competitions, etc., the judges don’t swallow the entries they sample. They swish the alcohol around and then spit that shit out, otherwise they’d be incapable of differentiating between piss or Pinot.

But that won’t work when it comes to judging weed, will it?

After all, you can’t fairly evaluate cannabis without consuming it. Some of the most important aspects of cannabis include things that you can’t authenticate without direct ingestion or consumption. The high or “stone” and related psychotropic effects are critical – this is what most people are seeking when they use cannabis. But the type of high, the specific physical and mental effects of the high, the duration of the high and more cannot be evaluated without, well, getting high.

In other words, you can’t spit the weed out.

Wine will get you drunk in a way that is consistent and predictable regardless of the type of grape it’s made from. Cannabis is not at all similar in this regard. The high produced by a landrace indica will be insanely different than that produced by a landrace sativa. The high produced by a 50/50 hybrid will be much different than a sativa haze. The high produced by a tried-and-true Kush variety will be nothing like the high produced by classic Amnesia. Even the high produced by Afghan Kush and that produced by Zombie Kush won’t be similar.

Therefore, you’re being a fucking twit if you think you can accurately and comprehensively judge more than just a couple of strains in a day with the “high” as part of the evaluation. 2 strains per day is reasonable for a professional. But that’s one strain in the morning, then a healthy lunch and some exercise to “flush” your system before sampling the second strain. A window of 4-6 hours per strain should be maintained to ensure that all residual effects have dissipated and don’t taint the following strain sample’s effects.

Even still, that’s rushed in my opinion. For my reviews, I work with a single strain for one week, sampling it at different times of day, before eating, after eating, before and after exercise, sex, etc. I get to know the strain like I’m courting a new girlfriend. I want to know what this girl is like first thing in the morning just as much as I want to know what she’s like in the middle of the day. Cannabis is subjective and its effects are dependent on so many variables that it’s vital to explore as many of those variables as possible to form a just evaluation.

Judges at many cannabis competitions supposedly sample dozens of strains in a day or two and in some cases within just a few hours. But the cold truth of the matter is that most of these judges directly consume or ingest just 25-30% or less of the entries they are tasked with evaluating. This means that many companies, organizations, collectives, growers and geneticists who enter their products in cannabis competitions will never have their entry properly evaluated by the judges.

So how exactly are cannabis competitions judged?

The general way that judging is carried out at many competitions is that there is an immediate and seemingly straightforward process of elimination. Judges first simply eliminate the most visually unappealing entries, without consuming the sample to judge potency, duration, terpene/flavor/aroma profile. They then move on to another round of eliminations based on multiple variables that are undoubtedly tainted with individual preference and include touch/texture, behavior of the burn, quality of ash and finally, effects of the high for those samples that make the later cuts.

But here already we have a serious problem. I’ve had lots of weed that looked and even smelled amazing but was underwhelming when smoked; the taste was rubbish or the high was too weak, etc. I’ve also had plenty of weed that looked lackluster at first but then blew me away when I smoked it.

Shishkaberry Haze X White Widow Sample
Shishkaberry Haze, Exterior. Gourmet Ganja, Passeig Picasso, El Born, Barcelona, Spain.

As an example, consider this photograph of Shishkaberry Haze X White Widow buds grown in the Spanish sun. This weed looked like a dirty butthole but was some of the best marijuana I have ever smoked. The only reason I bought it is because I wanted to find out what 4 Euro per gram cannabis was like, and I was happily surprised. This weed was so good I smoked it all in a day and then went back to buy all the club had the next day, only to find out that others had already purchased most of the available stock. I got what was left and was thankful for it.

The point is that if this weed had been entered in the average cannabis competition, it would most likely be eliminated in the first round based on appearance alone. This would be a travesty of cannabis justice, because if the strain was properly sampled over time and with care, it would almost certainly become a last round finisher and perhaps even a winner.

As one example of a competition that rushes to judgement, at the 2016 Dabadoo cannabis extracts competition in Barcelona, Spain, judges were provided with entry samples at the door, with most arriving at around 19:00. Judges scored the samples and scores were tallied at midnight, so that gave the average judge about 5 hours to evaluate the sample packs. Overall there were 37 official entries, but I sat with several judges and we counted approximately 45 samples in their packets. I remember seeing all those samples, glancing at my watch and thinking;

“What the fuck?”

I don’t give a shit what elimination system you use; it is impossible to impartially and completely judge that many samples in such a short time. It also doesn’t make sense to have judges whose sole qualifications were that they bought a judge’s ticket and packet. Unfortunately, publicly sourcing judges is something even High Times has been criticized for.

High Times Cannabis Cup panel
Officials prepare for the awards ceremony at the 2014 High Times Cannabis Cup in Denver.

Nevertheless, the big dogs at the High Times Cannabis Cup have developed the best system for judging so far, but even their system is far from perfect. At the High Times SoCal Medical Cannabis Cup in 2016, there were 34 entries for sativa flower. According to entry and judging documentation issued by High Times, there are 5 to 9 judges per category. This means that a handful of people were provided with 34 samples and given about 8 days to evaluate them at a rate of 4 per day most days and then 2 days with 5 strains per day. That’s a heavy load, but it’s vastly better than judging at lesser cannabis cups.

To their credit, HT also blends the judge’s scores with lab results from 2 or more independent labs, which is more than can be said for other competitions.

Although High Times has done a much better job at creating judging rules that make more sense than most other cannabis competitions, it’s still hard to imagine how anyone could suck their way through 4-5 strains in a day and have an opinion of the entries that is worth more than that of a teenager in his mom’s basement writing a strain review on Leafly.

The Solution?

I’m not going to sit here and bitch without offering a solution, and I encourage you to add your thoughts and solutions in the comments section below. In my professional and personal opinion, the solution is to provide judges with the samples much earlier and require them to review far fewer entries. High Times provides their judges with sample packets more than a week beforehand, but even this industry-generous timing forces judges to evaluate as many as 5 samples per day, which I argue cannot be done objectively. The best judging platform should be something like this:

  • Entries are limited to 28 per category after several rounds of “weeding out” by organizers
  • Entrants must supply their samples at around 21 days before the competition.
  • Competition organizers have 2 days to catalog the samples and get them to the lab/s
  • Laboratory results must be returned within 4 days
  • Organizers make eliminations and reorganize based on lab results – 1 day
  • Approved samples are provided to judges 14 days prior to the competition
  • Judges are tasked with evaluating 2 strains per day for 14 days

Assuming organizers and judges properly store the entries, the above timeline shouldn’t be a problem. 2 Strains per day is realistic. 5 is not. 37 per night is spectacularly fucked up.

So far this article has only covered the fact that the actual method of judging cannabis during competition is amateur at best and outright stupid at worst. Add to this the sad reality that some competitions have been repeatedly accused of “stacking the deck” and fraudulently issuing awards to their buddies and cohorts in the industry, and it’s easy to see why I judge cannabis competition judging. But that’s a new asshole that I’ll tear in a future post when I continue calling the cannabis industry out on its crap.

Got something to say about this? Do it in the comments; I guarantee a response.

 

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CannaBastard

After 29 years I'm calling the cannabis industry out on its crap.

7 thoughts on “Why I Judge Cannabis Competition Judging”

  1. I’d like to see some Sadhu flown in from India to judge or even Buddhist monks familiar with temple balls. The lab testing has really brought another dimension to cannabis contests, guess the rest is always going to be somewhat subjective. Again a great point a view I enjoyed reading.

    1. Thanks, Jesse. Lab testing as part of cannabis competitions should be a requirement, indeed. And vetting of judges needs to be more critical as well; when competitions amount to nothing more than a boy’s club inner-circle-only spectacle, we know we’ve got problems, and that, unfortunately, is exactly what many competitions were in the past. It’s getting better now, but we still have a long way to go! Love your comments, thank you!

  2. I appreciate your idea to use lab results for the first round of a competition, I think we have all had a surprising experience at least once with a diamond in the rough at some point. I think that its important to be honest when judging a strain but in some cases you can call a strain like Durban Poison great and a strong competitor because it’s powerful and unique as it is completely unpleasant to taste while smoking. I don’t think we should be disqualifying strains in the judging process based on a single category or be cutting corners rushing the time frame of the judging process. What do you think about judges as paid professionals who spend a month or so per competition creating detailed write ups on the strains they judge to be archived for the general publics use instead of whatever person with a judges ticket fee in their bank account?

    1. Bryan I agree with you 100%; judges who are only judges because they paid to be so are not unbiased, credible judges. Even if your idea – which I love – of detailed writeups for the public interest is not possible or accepted, then perhaps at the very least the public can have access to the judges scoring sheets and notes. That will add another level of credibility and won’t take any extra effort, really.

    1. Hi Kathy; I’m not sure on this yet. It’s a sensitive issue and I think there are merits on both sides. Overall from what I have seen at the chemical level, strains are extremely similar. Terpene profiles are different, but even in stabilized strains, there is so much variety that producing an identical terp fingerprint; even with with careful cloning, might be hard. So moral arguments about intellectual property aside, it just might not really be possible… What do you think?

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