Can you smoke weed in eindhoven
Martijn Van Veen Martijn is a filmmaker and curious mind fascinated with the ever changing world around him. He loves to overshare and to mingle in debates surrounding feminism, LGBT rights, ethnicity, immigration, copyright, new media and the war on drugs.
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Comment: Please enter your comment! Related posts. Latest posts. By now, you've likely heard that the Netherlands will be going into lockdown tomorrow.
But you're also likely a bit confused. Is it really It seems like half the Netherlands is holding its breath, waiting for Rutte and De Jonge to explain the partial lockdown at the press We've all experienced it. You're innocently cycling along when all of a sudden, up ahead, a monstrous spectacle emerges.
An obstacle. A display of It's happening. The latest Dutch news. In your inbox. Email address. First name Optional. Last name Optional. Woah, you look pretty good here! Prices and Quality of Cannabis The prices and even the quality of cannabis differ from spot to spot, dealer to dealer. Where can you get cannabis in Eindhoven? Frequently Asked Questions Is it safe to get weed in parks?
Can you smoke hash on the streets? What happens if you are caught with marijuana? Is it easy to get weed in Eindhoven? Is Cannabis legal in Eindhoven? We crowdsource the street value of marijuana and other drugs from the most accurate source possible: you, the consumer.
Help by anonymously submitting data on the latest transaction you've made. Juan L. Frederick FTW!! I e-mailed Frederick meetups gmail.
Frederick e-mailed me back ASAP, had a great way of getting me what I needed and even threw in some roll papers and a blunt for good business! So what did I do?? Went through the sack another 1 oz time haha typical and needed more, so he pulled through yet again.
I was both impressed and amazed at how Good Frederick made my Stay here. This guy hooked me up with some High-Grade Quality Weed. Thank you very much Juan Turner for recommending Frederick to me and I did all what he required before my stuff was delivered within a short period of time. Street dealing still exists on a small scale, despite being illegal. Buying from street dealers is illegal, but you are not likely to get into much trouble for doing it.
Selling outside of a cofeeshop is however illegal and could land you in prison. With the presence of coffee shops, there is no reason to buy from the street-dealers in Eindhoven. They will sell you lower quantity, more expensive weed and there is a big chance you will get ripped off. Aragon Verhaaren — who managed the coffeeshop Toermalijn in Tilburg, in the southern province of Brabant, at the time — says: "We had to implement a scanning system, which involved taking pictures of customers.
People didn't want that at all — some stayed away completely, others started buying on the street. Within a day, I went from hundreds of customers to only three. Lisa Lankes, who owns the coffeeshop Pink in Eindhoven, in North Brabant, is still angry about it: "About 8 to 9 percent of our customer base came from Belgium; there were no big problems here, but we were still forced to implement the pass.
It didn't take long to conclude that the weed pass was a complete bust. Both locals and tourists were avoiding coffeeshops, which opened up a new market for drug dealers. Before long, hash, cocaine, weed and pills were available on street corners in Brabant and Limburg. On a national level, the project to combat "public nuisance and criminal behaviour" had so much political prestige attached to it that Ivo Opstelten, then-Secretary of Security and Justice, headed to Maastricht with cameras in tow to get a firsthand look at how the weed pass was functioning.
When he arrived, he saw that his new rules had created a mess, so decided to do away with the weed pass and introduce the "inhabitant criterium" — allowing only those who can prove they're residents of the Netherlands to buy weed.
Locals, international students and expats were welcome, while tourists would be banned. A trial run of this new idea would start in towns along the border, and afterwards the new policy was to be rolled out nationwide.
Meanwhile, international media reported that Amsterdam would soon be shutting the doors of its famous coffeeshops to tourists — just like the government had planned.
However, it never got to that point, because Eberhard van der Laan, then-mayor of Amsterdam, made a deal with the Secretary of Justice. In return, dozens of coffeeshops near schools were closed, to prove the mayor was taking issues around drugs seriously. Belgian Mayor Vos was very happy with the outcome. The policy of tolerance has failed. Cities in the Netherlands' border provinces that have the i-criterium for "coffee shops" in red, and some examples of towns where tourists are welcome to buy weed in green.
Illustration by Dymphie Huijssen. These days, Dutch municipalities can decide for themselves if they want to uphold the ingezetenencriterium — or "i-criterium" — and bar tourists from their coffeeshops.
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