Cannabis Conferences sits inside MyCannabis.com, a US and Canada online publication covering cannabis news, education, and product guidance for consumers, patients, and industry workers. The Cannabis Conferences section is a curated list of cannabis and marijuana trade shows and events. What gives it an edge over a generic event aggregator is the admission filter: the list is restricted to events with real cannabis-related programming, things like edibles, grow operations, CBD, hemp, agriculture, investment, and regulation. A general business expo with a token cannabis panel would not make the cut. That kind of discipline is worth noting, because conference listings online tend to be padded with anything that mentions the plant in passing.
Editorial context and named writers
Cannabis Conferences does not stand alone. It sits inside a publication doing a lot of other things, and the surrounding material is what gives the event listings their context. The news operation runs original articles across Cannabis Science, Alternative Medicine, Hemp, Business, Culture, Health and Wellness, Regulation, and Technology. Those pieces carry named bylines: Sarah Schwefel, Maya Ellison, Marcus Lin, and Ava Morales among them. Named writers matter for a topic this prone to anonymous content farms. Articles were going up within days of this review being written, which tells you the site is actively maintained and not a parked domain coasting on old posts.
Education is where the site puts real work in. The Learn area is structured and organized, walking through consumption methods including smoking, vaping, dabbing, edibles, tinctures, and topicals, and going deep on terpene profiles: myrcene, limonene, linalool, pinene, humulene, and others are named and explained. There are CBD guides and what the site calls a cannabidiol masterclass. For someone attending one of the events listed under Cannabis Conferences without much background, that material doubles as preparation. Walking into a trade show floor already knowing the vocabulary the exhibitors will use is genuinely useful, and the site gives you a way to get there.
The interactive tools push past the usual blog format. There are calculators for edible timing, infusion dosage, joint potency, and a tolerance reset planner. These are practical enough that a reader returns to them rather than reads them once. A dosage calculator for infusions in particular takes work to build and shows the publishers are thinking about utility over page views. It is a stronger draw than another listicle would be.
Commerce is handled through a Buy CBD section that runs curated best-of lists broken out by product type: brands, gummies, oils and tinctures, pet supplements, skin and hair products, and sleep products. Usefully, these are split between the US and Canada, because availability and rules differ across the border and a single combined list would mislead readers on one side of it. There are also Thought Leader interviews and a recipe collection covering cannabis-infused appetizers, breakfasts, desserts, drinks, and entrees, plus regulatory coverage organized by state. The breadth is wide. Whether that breadth dilutes Cannabis Conferences or strengthens it depends on what you came for. A reader hunting purely for an event calendar may find the surrounding sprawl distracting; someone trying to get oriented in the space will appreciate having everything in one place.
On the credibility side, the picture is mixed. No third-party reviews or ratings turned up for mycannabis.com itself. There are Trustpilot and similar listings for a mycannabis name, but those belong to mycannabis.de, a German e-commerce retailer that is a completely separate business, so they say nothing about this US media site. That absence of outside ratings is not damning for a publication, since editorial sites rarely accumulate review-platform scores the way sellers do. It does mean a visitor has to judge the site on its own output.
Contact is the thinner spot. There is a Contact link in the navigation so reaching the team is possible, but the homepage does not surface a phone number or a physical address. For a media outlet that is fairly normal, and the named contributors plus a working contact route give it more transparency than a faceless aggregator would have. Someone wanting to pitch an event for Cannabis Conferences to include, or to verify who is behind the editorial decisions, gets a contact form and not much else. An editorial address or a stated location would improve that picture.
What Cannabis Conferences and its parent site do consistently well is staying on subject. Everything points back at one topic, treated seriously, with current writing and tools that show ongoing investment. The vetting criteria on the events directory are spelled out, which is more discipline than most cannabis event roundups bother with, and the US and Canada split runs through the whole site rather than being an afterthought. The named editorial team and the recent publishing cadence are the two facts that most separate this from the disposable content crowding the niche.
The caveats are proportionate. Outside validation is absent, contact transparency stops at a form, and the number of sections means Cannabis Conferences shares attention with calculators, recipes, and shopping guides. None of that undermines the event listings themselves, which are the cleanest, most clearly governed part of the operation. Cannabis Conferences leans positive on the evidence: as a starting point for finding credible industry events, backed by genuine educational depth, it is a reasonable resource. Verifying the specifics of individual organizers is still worth doing, because Cannabis Conferences points toward events well but does not substitute for due diligence on each one. Used for what it is, an actively maintained, named, single-topic publication with a screened event directory, Cannabis Conferences delivers what it claims.