SACRAMENTO, Calif. 鈥 Every day, Anna Denny encounters people who know their way around a joint.
Denny owns Elevated 916, a smoke shop in north Sacramento that sells tobacco products and smoking accessories. But many of her customers don鈥檛 limit their smoking to tobacco.
Because they鈥檝e been there, done that, Denny just can鈥檛 imagine them using a new state website that offers resources 鈥 and plenty of warnings 鈥 about the use of marijuana now that lighting up recreationally is legal in California.
鈥淪ome of this, I can see it being useful for a grandma who might be interested [in marijuana] and is getting her information from her grandson,鈥 Denny said. 鈥淚n that case, this website is probably a better source.鈥
Grandmas and all other Californians can now visit the 鈥溾 website launched last month by the state Department of Public Health. The site is the first step in the department鈥檚 public education campaign to inform state residents about the drug as it becomes more widely used and available.
Last November, voters approved Proposition 64, , making California one of eight states 鈥 plus the District of Columbia 鈥 to legalize the drug for recreational use. California鈥檚 recreational measure immediately made it legal for adults 21 and over to possess up to 1 ounce or 28.5 grams of cannabis, although the state delayed sales by licensed retailers until the beginning of next year. Colorado and Washington were the first to approve recreational use, passing referendums 聽in 2012.
California’s website is not a user guide. Instead, it is geared to youth, parents and drivers, mostly focusing on weed鈥檚 potential risks and harms. Research on its effects has been mixed, but potential cognitive impairments and driving accidents; it may be hazardous for developing fetuses. Today鈥檚 dope is also two to seven times stronger than it was in the 1970s, according to researchers at the .
For novices, the state also 聽the many synonyms for pot, including 聽鈥渨eed, grass, ganga, dope, herb, chronic, bud, trees, broccoli, nuggets, skunk, kief, sticky icky, Mary Jane.鈥
But聽in general, California is no stranger to Mary Jane.
The state was the first to in 1913. In the 1930s and 1940s, anti-weed cultural references were far-reaching and even graced movie posters that warned against the 鈥,鈥 linking reefer to crime and 鈥渨eird orgies.鈥
Since then, illegal use has been widespread. Dope experienced a renaissance in the 1960s when gleeful hippies 鈥渢urned on鈥 by smoking grass. Now, California鈥檚 pot industry, legal and illegal, is worth .
Back in 1996, with the passage of , the Golden State became the first of , to allow use of marijuana for medical purposes, with authorization from a doctor.
In 2004, the state began issuing medical marijuana ID cards, which allow patients to purchase pot from dispensaries. About 95,000 have been issued so far.
鈥淕etting a card is not that hard,鈥 said Denny, whose clients have received medical marijuana cards for ailments including menstrual cramps, difficulty sleeping and depression.
Devonte Legaspi, 20, a student at Sacramento City College, agrees. 鈥淭here are even apps that let you FaceTime a doctor for your consultation,鈥 he said.

Devonte Legaspi said he doubts young people will make much use of the website, but Aatiqah Murdoc argues they might, especially to answer questions about what鈥檚 legal and what鈥檚 not. (Ana B. Ibarra/California Healthline)
Many of his friends have used websites and phone apps to get theirs. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so easy,鈥 he said.
Legaspi hasn鈥檛 gotten around to getting his own card. But he turns 21 in February, he said, about a month after licensed retailers will be allowed to sell to the public.
鈥淩ight on time,鈥 he said.
California鈥檚 medical marijuana ballot measure didn鈥檛 require a public education campaign, but this broader law does.
鈥淲e are committed to providing Californians with science-based information to ensure safe and informed choices,鈥 said Karen Smith, director of the Department of Public Health, in a prepared statement.
The new website about what鈥檚 legal to buy, sell and give to others.
It鈥檚 not overtly anti-drug like the from the 1980s that warned youth that their brains would get fried like eggs if they got high.
The site, however, that if they get stoned, their babies may be born underweight 鈥 putting them at risk for all sorts of medical problems. Pet owners are cautioned that Fido might freak 鈥 and in rare cases, suffer potentially deadly poisoning 鈥 if he accidentally gobbles a pot brownie.
And parents who find out their teen is getting baked 鈥 which remains illegal 鈥 are urged to 鈥. Overreacting may lead youth to rebel, feel resentment or take greater risks,鈥 the state advises.
The website has a resource page specifically for youth, but Legaspi doesn鈥檛 think it will be the first stop for curious teens and young adults.
鈥淵ou ask your friends first, then Google,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think we鈥檝e been exposed to it for a while. 鈥 We know almost everything there is to know about it.鈥
Still, there are things that some young adults want to see on the website. Aatiqah Murdoc, 22, is Legaspi鈥檚 friend. She wants information about possible ingredients in marijuana products, such as brownies and candies.
The site doesn鈥檛 offer that. But it does warn that 鈥渆dibles may have higher concentrations of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). If you eat too much, too fast you are at higher risk for poisoning.鈥
is the chemical responsible for providing marijuana鈥檚 high.
Tamara Cross, who works at Broham Smoke Shop in Sacramento, said she might share the website link with customers who walk in with questions, mostly around legality.
鈥淚 have a lot of questions myself, so it鈥檚 good to know this exists,鈥 Cross, 24, said. Some customers already ask her when they鈥檒l be able to buy marijuana for recreational use, or whether their access to medical pot will change with the new law.

Sharon Duplechan says education about the risks of cannabis should have been more widespread when the measure to legalize recreational marijuana was on the ballot last year. (Ana B. Ibarra/California Healthline)
Sharon Duplechan, 65, who helps care for four of her grandchildren, voted against legalization last year, she said.
As she watched her grandchildren play at a Sacramento park, she said she wishes that the precautions offered on the state website had been more widely available when Californians were deciding how to vote. Now she worries that her grandchildren are growing up in an era when pot is more available and accepted.
鈥淭he warnings are a little late,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 put the cart before the horse.”
This story was produced by , which publishes , an editorially independent service of the .