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'We're not Amsterdam': Is Colorado pot tourism a myth?
'We're not Amsterdam': Is Colorado pot tourism a myth?

America's most mammoth party this weekend may well be Denver's 420 rally on Sunday, but Colorado's legal pot law, so far, has not lured a sustained surge of out-of-state weed lovers, say trade advocates for the state's hotels and restaurants.

"Marijuana tourism," as some media members have dubbed it, may prove to be an urban myth or just an overblown concept, experts say.

"We're not Amsterdam," said Deborah Park, spokeswoman for Visit Denver, the city's tourism office. "This law was (passed) because the people who live here wanted it for their own use. The thought process behind the law wasn't really for tourists.

"So that's our question: Where is this marijuana tourism?" Park added. "In Denver, you can't smoke in public. You can't smoke in a hotel. You can't smoke in parks. We don't have cafes. So there's just not a location for anyone who's coming in for that as tourists."

But that on-the-ground reality has not curbed some outsiders or some locals from maintaining that weed is indeed feeding the Mile High City tourism machine.

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That rhetoric reached new volume ahead of Denver's annual 420 festival-previously held to generate support for marijuana legalization but billed this year as "a celebration of legal status for its use in Colorado."

Hotels.com, a room-booking site, reports Denver is likely to see a deluge of 420-minded visitors based on a 73 percent spike in online hotel searches for stays April 18-20 this year as compared to similar searches conducted at the site for those dates last year.

Searches for Denver hotels also were 25 percent higher during the first three months of 2014 as compared to the first three months of 2013, according to Hotels.com

"The search increase could be attributed to a number of factors, but the data does suggest that more people are planning to visit Denver this coming weekend due to the number of festivities and events that are planned," said Taylor Cole, who handles public relations for Hotels.com North America.

In Denver, FOX affiliate KDVR cited those metrics, reporting on its website: "The evidence is anecdotal, but strong: Legal pot seems to be attracting tourists' attention to the Centennial State, especially during the 4/20 weekend."

For that event, held at Civic Center park downtown, organizers say they are anticipating huge crowds although Denver officials have mandated that rally leaders broadcast to all attendees that marijuana consumption at the site is illegal.