by James Bridges
Herbage Magazine
No rankings. No scores. No pretending that I’m the final authority on anything.
Just paying attention. When it’s good, it’s good…
My local dispensary was out of my usual Super Boof, a very personally sad moment of heartbreak. The kind that forces me to stand there longer than I meant to, scanning packs like maybe one of them will apologize.
That’s when I noticed a small bag smiling at me from the shelf.
Not yelling. Not flexing. Just… there.
Like Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
I must choose.
But choose wisely.
I hadn’t smoked DC Premier flower in years. No beef. No story. Just time passing and habits forming. But something about Papaya Mosa felt like a quiet dare. So I grabbed it.
First smell told me I didn’t make a mistake.
First grind told truth.
Sweet and tropical, but not candy. There’s a ripe fruit thing going on, papaya for sure, but it’s grounded by something floral and funky underneath. Not sharp. Not loud. More like a warm, fuzzy stank that creeps up on you and makes you lean back in for another pull. The kind of smell that feels like it belongs inside my body.
Breaking it up made it better. Louder, but in the right way. Citrus pops out, thanks to the Mimosa, lifting everything just enough so it doesn’t get heavy. It smells alive. Honest. Like it knows what it is. It knows that I’m enjoying this and it wants me to ride the wave.
The smoke followed through. Smooth. Thick, but polite. No throat punch. No theatrics. Flavor stayed present the whole time, tropical fruit up front, a little earthy backbone underneath, citrus hanging around on the exhale like it knows it’s welcome.
Then it settled in. And I had plenty of room for it to stay awhile.
The headspace stayed clear, but softer around the edges. Thoughts slowed down without shutting off. My body loosened up, but I didn’t melt into the furniture. It’s relaxed without being lazy. Uplifting without being jittery. Balanced in a way that feels intentional, not accidental. As if the canna-gods blessed this specific plant inside of my paper.
Balanced in a way that feels intentional. Head clear enough to think. Body loose enough to stop caring. The mental noise fades, not all at once, but like someone slowly turning down a bad song that clearly no one wants to hear.
It’s like discovering a new type of cheese that somehow tastes perfect on top of cheese. You know it sounds wrong. You don’t care. You’re already reaching for another bite.
This didn’t feel trendy.
It felt proper.
Tip O’ The Hat to Papaya Mosa by DC Premier for showing up quietly and reminding me what happens when cannabis does exactly what it’s supposed to do.
No hype.
Just respect.
