Anonymous ID: 9fc786 July 22, 2022, 7:29 a.m. No.16780640   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0645 >>0649 >>0653 >>0682 >>0694 >>0698 >>0741 >>0765 >>0790 >>0901

Mysterious pink glow in sky over Australian town revealed to be from local cannabis facility

Thu 21 Jul 2022 01.04 EDT

 

‘Bizarre’ pink lights seen in the sky above Victorian town of Mildura were not an alien invasion after all

 

An alien invasion? Season five of Stranger Things? A portal to the timespace continuum?

 

Residents in the northern Victorian town of Mildura were left pleasantly dumbfounded on Wednesday evening when the night sky was set ablaze with an eerie pink glow.

 

“It was very bizarre,” said Tammy Szumowski.

 

“I was on the phone to my mum, and my dad was saying the world was ending.”

 

But the explanation was far more mundane. Pharmaceutical company Cann Group confirmed the lights were coming from its local medicinal cannabis facility, where the blackout blinds had been left open.

 

“Cannabis plants require different spectrums of light in order to encourage their growth,” said Rhys Cohen, senior communications manager at Cann Group Ltd.

 

“A red spectrum light is often used. Normally the facility would have blackout blinds that come down at night, and will in the future block that glow.”

 

The federal member for Mallee, Dr Anne Webster, was driving home in the dark when she noticed the smouldering pink light.

 

“I thought that is weird. There is no city out there … What is it?” she said.

 

“When I understood the Cann processing site is there – but it still was the first time I’ve seen that pink glow. It was quite strange.”

 

Cann Group Ltd was the first Australian company to secure licences for cannabis cultivation for medicinal and research purposes.

 

On 7 July, its Mildura facility received its GMP licence to cultivate and supply a wide range of medicinal cannabis products in-house after acquiring the site in 2019. It gathered its first commercial harvest of crops in June.

 

Webster said it was “quite an exciting site”. Due to the nature of its business, however, it has a secret location and isn’t open to the public.

 

“Propagation of cannabis is really interesting and the way they use lights … to increase the growth cycle and speed up the whole process is quite amazing,” she said.

 

“I look forward to many other innovative producers coming to the region and bringing their glows with them.”

 

Across Mildura and surrounding towns, people flocked to their backyards and front porches to photograph the spectral glow.

 

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2022/jul/21/pink-sky-mildura-victoria-australia-medicinal-cannabis-marijuana-plant

https://twitter.com/sarah_tomlinson/status/1549381096587964416?