[Video] Corporate Weed Has a Problem. This Maine Field Might Be the Answer

A 15-minute film follows one season of sun-grown cannabis in Maine and a partnership built to survive outside the corporate model.

In King’s Field, the story begins with a simple problem. King Bishop cannot grow enough cannabis to keep his shop stocked. The solution does not arrive through expansion capital or industrial infrastructure. It arrives through trust, experience, and a shared understanding of the land.

Directed by Joe Carter, King’s Field – A Maine Cannabis Story is a 15-minute short documentary that follows one full outdoor season of sun-grown cannabis in Maine. It is observational, unhurried, and grounded in the daily realities of cultivation. There is no narration guiding the viewer. The people involved speak for themselves, and the plants do the rest.

Bishop introduces himself, standing just outside Belfast, where his dispensary sits on the city dock. He traces his cannabis life from early caregiver days, when plant counts were tightly capped, through the transition to a dispensary model that finally allowed him to grow without artificial limits. Even then, demand outpaced supply.

“I ran out of cannabis every year,” he says plainly.

The film follows his partnership with Matt of Northern Sol, a sun-grown farmer who has spent years acclimating genetics to Maine’s specific climate. That process is explained not as branding but as survival. Humidity, mold pressure, cold weather, and short seasons demand plants that belong where they are grown. Genetics bred for California or Colorado do not automatically thrive in New England.

Over the last decade, Matt refined Maine-adapted genetics built to handle local pressures like humidity, mold risk, and the realities of a short outdoor season. The result is a densely planted field without traditional walking rows, designed to be planted and largely left alone until harvest. It is a shift from hands-on horticulture toward a more agricultural approach.

The scale is striking without feeling inflated. King argues a single person can manage an acre planted with roughly 12,000 to 15,000 plants. Harvest moves fast with a small crew, measured in days, not weeks, and the crop is processed into biomass that he says will show up in edibles and vape pens within about three weeks.

What gives the film weight is not scale, but restraint.

Carter’s camera captures moments that feel almost accidental. Jokes about surfing trips timed around early harvests. Quiet walks through the field. A pool beside the greenhouse, where the view is nothing but cannabis plants stretching to the horizon. There is humor, pride, and disbelief, especially when Bishop reflects on how, not long ago, this same field could have meant prison time.

“If this was my last grow,” Bishop says near the end, looking out over the colas, “I could retire on this note.”

That line lands because the film has earned it. King’s Field is not framed as nostalgia or resistance. It is presented as a working model for how small operators might survive a future dominated by corporate cultivation. Dense planting, region-specific genetics, low labor overhead, and deep familiarity with the plant.

There is a moment when Matt explains his philosophy simply. The path forward is found by working with present circumstances, not fighting them. Focus on the plant in front of you. Trust the genetics you have bred. Accept the scale of the task without being overwhelmed by it.

For High Times readers, King’s Field feels like a reminder of something essential. Cannabis did not start as a corporate product. It started as a plant shaped by place, people, and patience. This film does not argue that this way is the only way. It simply shows that it is still possible.

Sometimes the most radical thing a cannabis story can do is slow down, watch the season unfold, and let the field speak for itself.

<p>The post [Video] Corporate Weed Has a Problem. This Maine Field Might Be the Answer first appeared on High Times.</p>

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