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Acapulco gold noun golden-leafed marijuana from southwest Mexico US, 1965 A popular, well-known strain of cannabis. The song “Acapulco Gold” by the Rainy Daze was released in 1967 and had just begun its climb on the pop charts when programme directors figured out what it was about and pulled it off play lists.- “Gold. It’s Acapulco Gold,” White Rabbit corrected the doctor, who was mixing up the slang names for different kinds of marijuana. — Nicholas Von Hoffman, We Are The People Our Parents Warned Us Against, p. 23, 1967
- The kilo of high grade (poetically named Acapulco Gold) sells for $500 and upward, depending on who’s selling and who’s buying. — San Francisco Examiner, p. 35, 13 March 1967
- We are free to go, but have to be very sneaky and ditch Bruce somewhere inside the Pentagon maze so he won’t find the Acapulco Gold in the car. — Abbie Hoffman, Revolution for the Hell of It, p. 44, 1968
- I don’t know how he finds out these things, but Chase Webb discovers that the term “Acapulco Gold” has been registered in Washington – in anticipation of the day marijuana is legalized. — San Francisco Chronicle, p. 25, 25 April 1968
- Is that Acapulco gold or Bangkok gold? — Hunter S. Thompson, Fear and Loathing in America, p. 40, 20 February 1968: Letter from Oscar Acosta
- But he did find several ounces of Acapulco gold, a smokable delicacy for which Plucky had acquired a taste while south of the border. — Tom Robbins, Another Roadside Attraction, pp. 54–55, 1971
- About midnite she came to me and asked would I like some Acupulco gold, I said yes. — Babs Gonzales, Movin’ On Down De Line, p. 115, 1975
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