FILE - In this Oct. 5, 2016 file photo, Bryant Thorp poses with plans for his marijuana retail store, Arctic Herbery, in Anchorage, Alaska. The first retail marijuana store in Alaska's largest city is set to open Thursday, Dec. 15, 2016, and so many people are expected at the small store that shuttle buses will ferry customers in. Owner Bryant Thorp has set the opening for high noon at Arctic Herbery, a small nondescript shop in a busy industrial and residential area of midtown Anchorage. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 5, 2016 file photo, Bryant Thorp poses with plans for his marijuana retail store, Arctic Herbery, in Anchorage, Alaska. The first retail marijuana store in Alaska's largest city is set to open Thursday, Dec. 15, 2016, and so many people are expected at the small store that shuttle buses will ferry customers in. Owner Bryant Thorp has set the opening for high noon at Arctic Herbery, a small nondescript shop in a busy industrial and residential area of midtown Anchorage. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen, File)

Anchorage gets first hit of retail pot

ANCHORAGE — Possibly the unlikeliest customer of all became the first person to legally buy marijuana in Alaska’s largest city.

Anna Ercoli, 81, pulled into Arctic Herbery’s small parking lot at 8:30 a.m., 3 ½ hours before the store was to open and become the first legal retail marijuana store in Anchorage.

She was waiting at the store when owner Bryan Thorp pulled in Thursday morning. He gave her a red ticket stamped with No. 1601, indicating she would be the first in line. He told her she didn’t have to wait around for hours in the 15-degree weather and could come back closer to the noon opening.

“I need this medication for me because it works better than taking anti-pain or sleeping pills, and not really solving anything,” said Ercoli, a native of Italy who has lived in Anchorage for 45 years.

Just before noon, she was escorted into the cramped retail location located in an industrial and residential area of midtown Anchorage.

A clerk helped her pick out a 2.5 gram vial of Afghan Kush flour to mix with an ointment to provide pain relief. She paid the $52.50 bill ($50 vial, $2.50 tax) in cash after being told she could only buy one vial on this trip. She then scurried out the store, trying to avoid a crush of reporters.

“This is really the only thing that when I put it on my skin, I can go to sleep and I can sleep because I have no pain,” she said before boarding a shuttle bus to get back to her car.

“Wasn’t she cute?” Thorp asked reporters. “That was the perfect first customer I could ask for.”

It was a muted yet festive atmosphere for the store’s opening. The store has limited parking, and state law says only eight people — including employees — can be inside the cramped store at any given point. Parking was a problem, with business neighbors complaining to Thorp that his customers were using their spaces.

Thorp reminded about 50 people standing in line that they would be towed if they parked in the neighboring strip mall, and he reminded them he had arranged a shuttle service from a shopping area about three miles away so this wouldn’t happen. Plus, those who took the shuttle would be entered into a drawing for a large Double Perk Water Bong, valued at $200.

Thorp has arranged to sell three different strains of marijuana from Black Rapids LLC, a cultivation facility located in North Pole. “One of them is some of the best that AK has seen at 22% THC,” Thorp wrote in a text to The Associated Press earlier this week.

While this is Anchorage’s first legal retail store, others have opened in cities across the state. The first was Herbal Outfitters in Valdez, on Oct. 29.

Since then, fewer than 10 other stores have opened in Alaska, but more are planned.

“We got more stores opening in town, they’re coming,” Thorp said. “We got more cultivators that are coming. We got manufacturers that will be making edibles at some time in the future. It will happen, it’s starting to happen right here, so it’s a good day.”

Alaskans in November 2014 approved the recreational use of marijuana for those 21 and older. State regulators have spent the time since setting up the new industry.

The Alaska Marijuana Control Board is still wrestling with proposed rules that would allow onsite consumption of marijuana or marijuana products in authorized retails stores. The board is taking public comment until Jan. 13.

Donavan Brown, 31, was among the first in line Thursday at Arctic Herbery. He said it was “pretty exciting” to see Anchorage’s first dispensary open, a day he said he never thought he’d see.

“It’s a piece of history, however small it may be,” he said. “I just kind of wanted to be here.”

Plus, it was a good chance to stock up.

“I got some friends coming back into town, they’re going to be here for Christmas,” he said. “We’re going to have a great taco night.”

Anna Ercoli, 81, a native of Italy who has lived in Alaska for 45 years, was the first person to legally buy marijuana n Anchorage when the first pot retail store opened Thursday. Ercoli said she uses a marijuana extract to help her sleep pain-free at night.

Anna Ercoli, 81, a native of Italy who has lived in Alaska for 45 years, was the first person to legally buy marijuana n Anchorage when the first pot retail store opened Thursday. Ercoli said she uses a marijuana extract to help her sleep pain-free at night.

More in News

The Norwegian Sun in port on Oct. 25, 2023. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Ships in port for t​​he week of May 4

Here’s what to expect this week.

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Friday, May 3, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Thursday, May 2, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

An airplane equipped with instruments to allow for flight in cloudy conditions is ready for passengers at the Haines airport on Thursday. (Claire Stremple/Alaska Beacon)
Local air carrier adopts new tech with aim to make travel in Southeast Alaska safer, more reliable

More precise GPS, FAA OK for new routes expected to lead to fewer cancellations, increased safety.

The University of Alaska Southeast class of 2024 receive their degrees during a commencement ceremony Sunday at the UAS Recreation Center. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
New University of Alaska Southeast graduates cherish the moment and the challenges yet to come

More than 300 degree recipients honored during Sunday’s commencement ceremony.

Walter Soboleff Jr. leads a traditional Alaska Native dance during the beginning of the Juneau Maritime Festival at Elizabeth Peratrovich Plaza on Saturday morning. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
A strong show of seamanship at 14th annual Juneau Maritime Festival

U.S. Navy and Coast Guard get into tug-of-war after destroyer arrives during record-size gathering.

Pastor Tari Stage-Harvey offers an invocation during the annual Blessing of the Fleet and Reading of Names at the Alaska Commercial Fishermen’s Memorial on Saturday morning. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Loved ones gather for reading of 264 names on Fishermen’s Memorial and the Blessing of the Fleet

Six names to be engraved this summer join tribute to others at sea and in fishing industry who died.

Lisa Pearce (center), newly hired as the chief financial officer for the Juneau School District, discusses the district’s financial crisis in her role as an analyst during a work session Feb. 17 at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé. Seated next to Pearce are Superintendent Frank Hauser (left) and school board member Britteny Cioni-Haywood. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Lisa Pearce, analyst who unveiled Juneau School District’s crisis, hired as new chief financial officer

Consultant for numerous districts in recent years begins new job when consolidation starts July 1.

Visitors on Sept. 4, 2021, stroll by the historic chapel and buildings used for classrooms and dormitories that remain standing at Pilgrim Hot Springs. The site was used as an orphanage for Bering Strait-area children who lost their parents to the 1918-19 influenza epidemic. Pilgrim Hot Springs is among the state’s 11 most endangered historic properties, according to an annual list released by Preservation Alaska. (Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon)
Boats, a lighthouse, churches among sites named as Alaska’s most at-risk historic properties

Wolf Creek Boatworks near Hollis tops Preservation Alaska’s list of 11 sites facing threats.

Most Read