WALKER, MINN. - Tribal reservations in northern Minnesota are dominating the state’s budding recreational marijuana industry. Three dispensaries are now operational in the region, with the most recent welcoming customers at a grand opening Thursday.
The Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe is the first tribe to open a dispensary this year, but more are on the horizon. Two tribes last year blazed the trail for recreational marijuana sales: NativeCare on the Red Lake Nation’s reservation and Waabigwan Mashkiki (”medicine flower” in Ojibwe) in Mahnomen on the White Earth Nation’s reservation. Both tribes previously sold medical cannabis.
But in Walker, the Sweetest Grass Dispensary by Leech Lake Cannabis Co. is new for the community. “Everyone says, ‘We can’t believe we’re purchasing marijuana in Walker, Minnesota!’” business consultant Madison Marzario said.
Originally from Prior Lake, Marzario spent a decade in Colorado becoming an expert in the cannabis industry before bringing that expertise home to work with the Sweetest Grass.
A stone’s throw from Northern Lights Casino, the new dispensary is located at the busy junction of highways 371 and 200. It’s a well-placed pit stop for those visiting Walker, which boasts Leech Lake — the third-largest lake in the state, with over 600 miles of shoreline — and a population of 1,000 that mushrooms in the summer tourism months.
“We know that the amount of traffic through here in summer is incredible, and we just want to capture some of that traffic that’s coming from the south since we are the closest dispensary to Minneapolis right now,” said Michael Michaud, board chair for Leech Lake Cannabis Co. and CEO of Leech Lake Gaming.
Michaud said the company set its own regulations to be a licensed dispensary and cannabis supplier. They aren’t growing pot yet, but intend to down the road; for now, they’re partnering with the White Earth Band of Chippewa, which has a growth operation.
“This is a great opportunity for the reservations in the state of Minnesota because the state really put the guidelines into their regulation that allowed us to pretty much do what we want … within the boundaries of a reservation,” he said.