Cannitrol – Cannabis Control Agent

Marijuana news from around the world

Santa Rosa Hydroponics sold to Colorado retail chain GrowGeneration

During the Gold Rush, it was the merchants selling sifting pans who struck it rich and not the legions of 19th century fortune seekers looking for wealth in California’s rivers.

Santa Rosa brothers Rick and Jason Barretta applied that wisdom to the nascent marijuana industry about 10 years ago when they opened Santa Rosa Hydroponics and Grower Supply in a dilapidated old flower shop on Highway 12 in Rincon Valley. The industry boomed, and so did their business, expanding to a 3-acre property and warehouse in southwest Santa Rosa and reaching annual revenues north of $10 million.

This month, the Barrettas sold Santa Rosa Hydroponics for $1.75 million in cash and $3.5 million in company stock to GrowGeneration, a Colorado-based hydroponic gardening store chain. Jason Barretta said it was a logical next step as California’s new recreational cannabis market brings corporate competition and consolidation to all facets of the industry.

“We can’t go against big corporate guys. We stand no chance,” said Jason Barretta, 34, who’ll stay on as vice president of sales. “I see a lot of businesses with ‘going out of business’ signs on their doors. We didn’t want to have to hang those signs.”

Hydroponic farming is a method using liquid nutrients to grow plants in water instead of soil. The word “hydroponic” has become shorthand for stores specializing in marijuana cultivation, both indoors and out.

In Sonoma County, where marijuana has largely been grown indoors compared to Mendocino and Humboldt counties, small hydroponic storefronts began proliferating more than 10 years ago. At one point, the county had several dozen shops.