Credit: JULIA SUMPTER / LEAFLY

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JULIA SUMPTER / LEAFLY

Leafly is an app and website that, along with Weedmaps, should be fairly well-known to cannabis consumers, whether they be medical or recreational. Based in Seattle, Leafly is great for finding nearby dispensaries, and can show you the menus, prices, and customer reviews of individual businesses and their products. And Leaflyโ€™s super popular, receiving 13 million monthly visitors and 40 million page views on both its app and website platforms combined. Yet for many, myself included, the real value lies in Leaflyโ€™s โ€œNews,โ€ โ€œStrains,โ€ and โ€œProductsโ€ sections.

The content in the “News” section is well researched and writtenโ€”a great way to keep up with all thatโ€™s happening around the globe with cannabis. But the โ€œStrainsโ€ and โ€œProductsโ€ sections are goldmines of information. With โ€œStrains,โ€ you can sort through hundreds, if not thousands, of types of herb, and filter your search by strain name, medical conditions, โ€œmoods & activities,โ€ and nearly a hundred other filters. With user reviews and rundowns of benefits and effects, itโ€™s a comprehensive repository of information that you would otherwise need a number of different sites to compile. The โ€œProductsโ€ section is similarly useful.

Now Leafly has assembled a โ€œbook,โ€ which, for the post-millenials, is like a super analog Kindle, from which you can consume content, but it uses dead tree pulp to make โ€œpagesโ€ that you โ€œturnโ€ using your โ€œfingers.โ€ Itโ€™s kind of like swiping. Ask your parents.

Joshua Jardine Taylor is the Mercury's Senior Cannabis columnist and correspondent, and has written "Cannabuzz" since 2015.