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Legacy multi-generational farmers from Amaranth Farms in Ettersberg (Tommy (left), Liam, Maeve Dimock and Karen Hessler) shared some of the farm products that they’ve been growing since 1971. -
Ted Blair, of Canna Country Farms in Briceland, showed off his first-place trophy for his winning Top Flower entry in the Cannifest Bowl Headstash Championship. -
Chris Griffith, of Eureka, demonstrated a single joint-rolling method for sale as well as his Humboldt Filling Machines for mass production of joints. -
Julie Chiariello, editor and publisher of cannabis-related Skunk magazine, greeted visitors to her vendor booth. -
While rolling papers were widely available, most joints offered by vendors were the mass-produced kind. -
Terpenes are naturally occurring compounds found in the trichomes of female cannabis plants, and many vendors offered attendees a chance to smell the various strains in containers. -
The large tent of the Cannabis Marketplace and Lounge offered a calm retreat option for attendees. -
Keshai Hymon, of Memphis, took advantage of a potting soil-branded cornhole game on Saturday. -
Justin Lehman, a fifth-generation farmer from Southern Illinois, took a dance break from his vendor duties with the live music at the Community Stage. -
For over 50 years, Richard Jergenson, curator at the Humboldt Area People’s Archive tent, has been collecting more than 5,000 pieces of cannabis memorabilia, including his poster for his recently closed Emerald City Museum in Willits. -
An extremely wide-angle lens was used to capture this glass-blowing display by One World Gallery of McKinleyville. -
Multiple artists demonstrated their glass-blowing skills throughout Saturday. -
Ink People’s Living Art Wall project, organized by Phyllis Barba, of Eureka, invited graffiti artists to again repaint on this wall as a visual side show next to Cannifest 2023 in Halvorsen Park. -
Jazzy Jayne, one of six musical artists on the Community Stage on Saturday, performed a lively show with the Samoa bridge in the background. -
The local Object Heavy band was one of five headliner performers on the Main Stage at Cannifest 2023 on Saturday. -
Participants in Sunday morning’s Yes We Cann and Hullabaloo parade gathered at the Wharfinger Building parking lot before marching to the party underneath the Samoa Bridge. Opponents of the recently renamed-for-the-ballot (Measure A) Humboldt Cannabis Reform Initiative organized their signs before the parade. -
Casandra Taliafero, of Eureka, prepped her vehicle’s protest signs before the start of Sunday morning’s Yes We Cann and Hullabaloo at the Wharfinger Building parking lot. -
Opponents of Measure A in Sunday morning’s Yes We Cann and Hullabaloo parade marched through Eureka’s Old Town and on to the party underneath the Samoa Bridge. -
This opponent of Measure A in Sunday morning’s Yes We Cann and Hullabaloo parade pushed her emoji through Eureka’s Old Town and on to the party underneath the Samoa Bridge. -
Participants in Sunday morning’s parade passed by Cannifest 2023 in Halvorsen Park on to their way to the party underneath the Samoa Bridge. -
After arriving under the Samoa Bridge, the lively Hulllabaloo party ensued with dancing in a mini-blizzard of bubbles.
