Nimbin Maps



Nimbin is a small village in the Northern Rivers area of the Australian state of New South Wales, approximately 30 km north of Lismore, 33 km southeast of Kyogle, and 70 km west of Byron Bay.
The area is part of what is known as the ‘Rainbow Region’ and is culturally important to the Bundjalung Aboriginal Australians and has become a haven for Australia’s counterculture in recent decades.

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In New South Wales, the cultivation, selling and possession of cannabis is illegal. In Nimbin all three activities are part of every day hippie culture. Nimbin has a high tolerance for cannabis plant (marijuana), with the open buying, selling and consumption of locally grown cannabis on the streets and laneways.

To rally for an end to the prohibition of cannabis in Australia, Nimbin holds its annual MardiGrass festival. On the first weekend with any part of it in May, thousands descend on Nimbin for cannabis oriented fun and frivolity. Activities include: a Prohibition Protest Rally and Parade with the Ganja Faeries, the Nimbin Cannabis Cup, the Hemp Olympix, which includes the Bong “Throw’n'Yell”, Joint Rolling, and the Grower’s Iron Person event, where runners must first carry a 20kg sack of fertiliser, then a bucket of water, and finally “the crop”, as a tribute to the difficulties faced by growers in the hills, and to show that cannabis users can be fit and healthy. At night, entertainment ranges from the Harvest Ball and Picker’s Ball, rave doof parties, to poetry and jazz in local cafes.

There are a number of shops in Nimbin geared to the cannabis culture.

  • The Nimbin Hemp Embassy is a “soft entry point for drug information”, and a shop selling anything to do with Hemp, except cannabis itself.
  • Clothing & natural skin products using industrial hemp products.
  • The Nimbin HEMP Bar used to allow the patrons to smoke cannabis while enjoying fresh coffee and cake. In April 2008 police announced their intention to close the HEMP Bar and Museum. Landlords were sent letters to this effect. Rather than cause legal problems for their landlord, the HEMP Bar crew voluntarily closed the doors and moved out. The HEMP Bar is open for 2009 as a coffee and hemp information centre, but smoking is no longer encouraged.
  • The Nimbin Museum is a collection of local artefacts, local art,and alternative culture open for tour. Admission is gained by donation of a gold coin. The Museum has managed to stay open despite threat of closure. It may still be closed if too many drug offences continue to be detected on the premises.

Wikipedia content link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nimbin