
It wasn’t a cannabis competition. It wasn’t a weed expo. It was a traditional, old-school horticulture trade fair. Think geraniums, tomatoes, ornamental breeding programs, and irrigation systems. And still, a cannabis plant came out on top.
At this year’s edition of IPM Essen, the world’s leading horticulture trade show held annually in Germany, a strain of cannabis not only made it into the official plant showcase for the first time ever: it won the Publikumspreis, the public award voted on by visiting professionals.
The winner: BCN Critical XXL Autoflower, developed by Spanish-based seed company Seedstockers.

The Crowd Favorite, Among People Who Don’t Usually Vote for Cannabis
According to organizers, the cannabis entry received a clear majority of the votes from attendees. These were people who typically work in floriculture, agriculture, landscaping, and greenhouse tech. Not the usual suspects when it comes to cannabis awards.
This wasn’t a cannabis-themed event squeezed into a corner of a garden fair. IPM is an industry staple. It’s where producers of lavender hybrids, seedless peppers, bonsai pine trees, and new tomato crosses go to show off the results of years of research and selective breeding. That a weed strain outperformed 41 other plants from 27 companies is, at minimum, surprising. At best, it’s a signal.
From Prohibited to Preferred
Cannabis had never been part of the official IPM novelty showcase before. Just getting accepted was already a shift. But being voted as the most interesting new plant by hundreds of industry insiders? That’s something else.
BCN Critical XXL is an autoflowering strain, bred for simplicity and accessibility. It doesn’t require light-cycle control, making it easy to grow on balconies or in small urban spaces. Seedstockers didn’t just present it as a seed. They offered it as a concept: seeds, clones, or full grow kits, packaged for beginner growers or home cultivators looking for something low-key.
Still, this wasn’t a marketing win. It was a vote. Visitors stopped. Looked. Smelled. Voted.
Normalization Doesn’t Ask for Permission
There’s no single moment when something once criminal becomes normal. It doesn’t happen all at once. But there are signs. This one feels like one of them.
The image alone says it all. A sticky, resin-rich cannabis plant, covered in trichomes, sharing floor space and outperforming potted roses, designer tulips, and edible herbs. And it happened in front of a crowd of plant scientists, commercial nursery operators, and retail buyers.
It wasn’t framed as radical. It didn’t have to be. It just stood there, visible, judged like the rest, and liked more than the rest.
Beyond the Trophy
The award was handed out by the president of Germany’s Central Horticultural Association and the CEO of Messe Essen. That’s not fringe. That’s institutional.
And while the quote from Seedstockers’ CEO Jouke Piepenbrink — about it being “a big victory for the cannabis plant” — is expected, the real statement was made by the people holding the ballots. They didn’t vote out of advocacy. They voted for what they liked. And what they liked most was weed.
What This Means
Cannabis didn’t win for being rebellious. It won for being a strong plant, with good structure, visible resin, pleasant aroma, and simplicity of use. All the things growers — whether cannabis-focused or not — tend to value.
That’s not just a trophy. That’s cultural repositioning.
The most stigmatized plant of the last century just won over the most conservative corner of the horticulture world. And nobody flinched.
<p>The post Cannabis Just Beat the Roses: A Weed Strain Won Europe’s Top Garden Award first appeared on High Times.</p>
About The Author
Discover more from MEK Enterprises Blog - Breaking News, SEO, Information, and Making Money Online!
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
