The world's BIGGEST BONG
A high-art museum centering around marijuana is opening on Thursday in Las Vegas complete with a two-stories high, fully smokable glass bong dubbed 'Bongzilla', which is likely to be the largest in the world.To get more news about rick and morty bongs, you can visit sharebongs.com official website.
The Cannabition exhibition starts where it all began, with the seed. This seed exhibit is unlike something you'd find at your botanical gardens, this is sexy seed stuff, complete with a bed encased in weed's earliest stages.
While Vegas is notorious for a number of pleasures, one thing the city still holds back on is public consumption. Recreational dispensaries line the strip, but smoking and vaping ganja in public is still illegal despite its various medicinal uses including stress, anxiety, pain and inflammation reduction, as well as appetite stimulation and mood elevation. The Cannabition's founder, J.J. Walker, says he hopes the exhibit gets enough attention that it eventually grows into the first museum in the world that you can light up in.
Speaking of lighting, the 12 interactive installations are lit with the social media crowd in mind, so you can share your photo-ops with all your buds on social.There are also several large scale replicas of edibles like a big, laughing Buddha and a giant jelly pot leaf.
Another high-point along the journey through the museum is a pool filled with fluffy foam pot nuggets that you can toss yourself into.
There is a space with taller-than-you faux buds representing different strains and another room with journalist and cannabis connoisseur, Hunter S. Thompson's famous 'Red Shark' Chevrolet Caprice.This museum in Las Vegas' downtown entertainment district is not the Smithsonian of marijuana, but it has some educational components.
Guests get an introduction from museum guides and some graphics on walls explain how concentrates are made and the differences between indica and sativa cannabis strains.
Museums always evolve with the times to remain relevant, and audience engagement is an important goal for the facilities today, said Gwen Chanzit, director of museum studies in art history at the University of Denver.
For those who remember very traditional, no-photography-allowed museums, she said, 'that ship has sailed.''Once cellphones became ubiquitous, the culture of museum visiting changed,' Chanzit said.
Many of the facility's exhibits are sponsored by cannabis companies, with their logos prominently displayed. It is common for museums to receive the support of corporations and to place their logo on a wall.
The Wall