OG KUSH (MED) - Oklahoma City, Oklahoma - JointCommerce
OG KUSH (MED) logo

OG KUSH (MED)

Medical Retail

Address: 103 South Sooner Road Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73110

Average Rating: 0.00 / 5 Stars

0 Reviews

About

OG KUSH (MED) is a medical retail dispensary located in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

Amenities

  • Cash
  • Accepts debit cards

Languages

  • English

Description of OG KUSH (MED)

In Oklahoma City’s east side, the ZIP Code 73110 centers on Midwest City, an everyday hub of military families, college students, and long-time locals who know their routes as well as their favorite dispensary. OG KUSH (MED) is part of that steady rhythm. Patients in this part of the metro rely on practical access, straightforward service, and consistency in their cannabis. They also pay close attention to traffic patterns, shift changes at Tinker Air Force Base, and the cadence of community health initiatives that make life a bit easier in 73110.

The neighborhood around OG KUSH (MED) has a particular cadence shaped by Tinker Air Force Base, Rose State College, and the long commercial corridors that run east–west and north–south. SE 29th Street, Reno Avenue, NE 10th Street, and SE 15th Street tie together shopping centers, small businesses, and neighborhoods, while Sooner Road, Air Depot Boulevard, Midwest Boulevard, and Douglas Boulevard carry most of the north–south traffic. The interstate spine is I-40, just south of where most people shop. Those links make it easy to plot different approaches to a dispensary visit depending on the time of day and where you’re coming from in the Oklahoma City metro.

Getting there from downtown Oklahoma City or Bricktown is straightforward. Most patients hop on I-40 east and continue past the I-235/I-35 systems interchange. From there, you can exit at Sooner Road, Air Depot Boulevard, Douglas Boulevard, or sooner if you prefer to approach on Reno Avenue or SE 15th Street. Midday on weekdays the west-to-east run is typically smooth, about 12 to 18 minutes from Bricktown to the 73110 corridor when traffic is average. During morning rush, westbound I-40 toward downtown compresses as commuters converge from eastern suburbs, while eastbound lanes tend to flow better. The pattern reverses in the late afternoon. If you prefer to bypass interstate congestion entirely, Reno Avenue offers a slower but often predictable surface-street option from the east side of downtown through Del City and into Midwest City.

From Edmond, a common route is I-35 south to I-40 east, which usually takes about 25 to 35 minutes depending on the interchange at I-44 and the I-35 merge. Some drivers cut over earlier on NE 23rd Street (US-62) to Sooner Road and then head south, especially if they want to avoid interstate bottlenecks or there’s construction near the junctions. From Norman, I-35 north to I-240 east and then up Sooner Road or Air Depot works well. That loop keeps you out of the I-40/I-35 merge during peak times and drops you into 73110 via familiar arterials. From Choctaw, Harrah, and Nicoma Park, NE 10th Street, Reno Avenue, or SE 15th Street westbound are consistent; you can also set up an easy right-hand turn into shopping areas by using Douglas Boulevard or Midwest Boulevard as your north–south options. From Del City, Sunnylane Road to SE 15th or Reno is a quick local hop without touching the freeway.

Traffic near OG KUSH (MED) reflects the base’s shift schedule. Around dawn and mid-afternoon, expect heavier activity on Air Depot Boulevard, Sooner Road, and Douglas Boulevard as personnel cycle in and out of Tinker Air Force Base. Those peaks also nudge traffic at I-40 exit ramps; the Sooner Road and Air Depot ramps can back up briefly, especially when weather reduces visibility or during lane work. If you want to avoid those mini-snarls, slip in via Midwest Boulevard, which often operates as a pressure-release valve, or choose SE 15th Street as your east–west connector rather than SE 29th Street. On Saturdays, traffic ebbs and flows around big box retail clusters and weekend sports at Joe B. Barnes Regional Park, but mid-morning and late afternoon are generally manageable windows for a dispensary run without much delay.

Weather matters. In heavy downpours, the I-40 corridor between I-35 and Douglas Boulevard slows dramatically; visibility drops and lane changes become cautious. High winds common to the Oklahoma City area can also slow surface streets lined with wide commercial driveways, so use patience around midblock left turns on Reno Avenue and SE 29th Street. During construction season, watch the dynamic message signs on I-40; the state tends to schedule night and off-peak lane closures, but intermittent daytime work near interchanges can cause unpredictable slowdowns. If you know you’ll be shopping around a base shift change, consider setting a course via NE 10th Street or Reno Avenue where signal timing often moves traffic more predictably than SE 29th.

Parking is rarely a problem in 73110’s retail corridors. Many dispensaries, including OG KUSH (MED), sit within low-slung commercial centers with surface lots. The bigger constraints tend to be driveway design and cross traffic; once parked, the walk to the door is short, and ADA stalls are usually close to entrances. For quick in-and-out trips—say a preorder pickup—choose the entrance that aligns with a protected left turn at the nearest signal, so you’re not stuck waiting for a long break in midday traffic.

The legal cannabis experience in Oklahoma City’s 73110 is built around the state’s medical program. Locals carry an OMMA patient card and a standard government-issued ID. At check-in, dispensary staff verify the patient license and confirm it’s valid in the OMMA system. Budtenders then guide patients through flower, edibles, cartridges, concentrates, tinctures, and topicals, with attention to potency, terpene profiles, and budget. Many patients in the Midwest City area shop on their lunch break or after work, so speed and clarity matter. Menus are typically posted on in-store screens and online; preordering through a dispensary’s website or a marketplace page is common. Patients place an order, wait for a text when it is ready, and then walk in for checkout. Oklahoma maintained curbside pickup flexibilities for much of the medical program’s life; availability can vary by shop and season, so locals often check a dispensary’s policy in advance.

Cash is still the most common way to pay. Given periodic industry-wide changes to cashless ATM systems, many shops maintain on-site ATMs or accept app-based ACH services. It’s prudent to bring cash to avoid delays, especially if you’re shopping during rush hour or before a base shift. At checkout, patients see the state’s 7% medical marijuana excise tax plus applicable sales tax. Budtenders package products in child-resistant exit bags, and patients keep everything sealed during transport. Given the proximity to Tinker, locals are careful about federal property rules: cannabis remains illegal on base and on federal land. Patients plan errands accordingly, avoid carrying cannabis through gates, and store purchases in the trunk or rear hatch so there’s no open-container concern while driving home.

Product preferences in this part of Oklahoma City reflect a practical mix of price and quality. Classic strains with recognizable genetics continue to sell well because patients know what to expect. OG Kush remains one of those staples. Reviewers have long noted that OG Kush can present as a dense, resinous flower with tight bud structure, and when patients intend to roll, a good grinder helps achieve an even texture and a clean, consistent burn. That kind of small but useful detail travels by word of mouth and through strain write-ups, and it’s the kind of advice budtenders in 73110 pass along when they know a patient is a joint or blunt smoker who likes an even draw without canoeing. In parallel, full-spectrum CBD and CBD-forward “designer” cultivars are common parts of a Midwest City patient’s regimen. Patients who want the entourage effect or a THC-to-CBD balance often ask for full-spectrum options to complement their high-THC flower or concentrate. In conversations about sleep, stress, or general wellness, the community tends to keep things grounded and personal: budtenders can describe cannabinoid and terpene profiles, while patients link those profiles to their lived experience. That approach respects the fact that mental health is individual and that cannabis is not a cure-all; it can be part of a toolbox that includes professional care from local providers.

Local health and wellness in 73110 is shaped by a strong network of clinics and community resources. Rose State College hosts community events that often include wellness themes. Large health systems maintain clinics along SE 29th Street and in adjacent Del City, making primary care and counseling accessible to area residents. Community groups and local agencies distribute information on harm reduction, naloxone access, and safe storage at county health events. Patients who shop at OG KUSH (MED) know that the medical cannabis system in Oklahoma emphasizes lab testing; labels disclose potency and contaminants, and reputable dispensaries provide COAs or at least scanable links. In neighborhoods around Tinker, safe storage is a frequent conversation topic, particularly in multi-generational households. Lockable stash boxes and child-resistant storage are an easy add-on, and budtenders in 73110 are used to pointing patients toward storage options that keep products secure and discreet.

A typical first-time patient visit in 73110 includes a short dialogue at the counter. Budtenders ask about intended use—daytime focus, nighttime rest, relief after a long shift, or something gentle enough to pair with daily tasks. For OG Kush fans, the guidance is usually about potency, terpene balance, and use-case. If you plan to roll, you might be reminded of the practical grinder tip. If you prefer flower in a glass piece, the conversation may turn to moisture content and grind size to avoid a too-tight pack. For those curious about CBD-forward options, the staff can share how a full-spectrum CBD product may round out a THC-rich selection. In a market like Oklahoma’s, where medical patients have significant freedom to choose among forms and strengths, that kind of tailored guidance is part of why people stay loyal to a particular dispensary.

Edibles and beverages have a steady following in Midwest City. Patients who don’t want to inhale prefer consistent, tested milligram doses, and they often keep a 1:1 ratio edible on hand if they’re sensitive to THC. Because Oklahoma’s medical rules allow for up to 72 ounces of edibles in possession, patients sometimes stock up during weekly promotions. Still, locals plan ahead to avoid long checkout lines on Friday afternoons; the late morning window on weekdays and early afternoon on Sundays are often the calmest times to shop. Vape cartridges and all-in-one disposables serve those who want discretion and convenience between work, classes at Rose State, and family obligations. Live rosin and solventless options are present in the market, but shoppers in 73110 keep a close eye on price-per-gram and tend to chase value drops as much as the latest small-batch release.

Driving etiquette and route choice can smooth the whole experience. If you need to cross from north of NE 10th Street down to SE 29th in the late afternoon, it’s often quicker to use Midwest Boulevard than Air Depot Boulevard when the base is releasing a shift. If you’re coming from the west via Del City and NE 4th Street, cutting to Sunnylane and then across on Reno helps you avoid the densest cluster of left-turn conflicts near the busiest shopping entrances. On I-40, pick your exit based on your next errand. If you need groceries afterward, Sooner Road or Air Depot puts you into larger retail zones. If you’re headed home to Choctaw or Nicoma Park, exiting at Douglas Boulevard and working east on NE 10th Street can reduce the highway time and keep you out of interchange congestion. During OU football home games, the I-35/I-240 corridor’s traffic ebbs and flows, so the I-40-only route from Norman might be steadier.

Because OG KUSH (MED) sits within a community that includes a major military installation, federal rules are a constant backdrop. Patients who work on base routinely plan their dispensary visits on days off or at times when they won’t need to access federal property afterward. They keep their OMMA patient card and ID handy, store products sealed and away from the driver’s seat, and avoid consumption in vehicles or public spaces. Staff at area dispensaries are used to those practical questions and can explain how purchase limits work. A patient can have up to three ounces of marijuana on their person, up to eight ounces at home, up to one ounce of concentrate, and up to 72 ounces of edibles. Those limits make shopping straightforward: buy what you need for the week or month and keep an eye on what’s already at home.

Community connections are visible in low-key ways. Midwest City hosts seasonal health fairs and neighborhood events where local businesses—dispensaries included—focus on patient education, safe consumption, and wellness. The east side’s nonprofit network provides mental health services and family support, and many patients share information about support groups and counseling options just as readily as they trade dispensary deal calendars. On the arts and culture side, the Hudiburg Chevrolet Center at Rose State pulls in shows and community programs, so it’s not unusual to see patients plan a dispensary visit and a performance in the same afternoon, with a quick stop on SE 15th Street or Air Depot for dinner on the way.

What distinguishes 73110’s cannabis scene is the way daily life and access logistics meet. OG KUSH (MED) benefits from the grid that makes Midwest City easy to traverse, and patients benefit from staff who know how to meet them where they are: busy, budget-conscious, and motivated to keep things simple. A budtender might talk you through the difference between a gassy, high-THC batch of OG Kush flower and a slightly more sedate hybrid better suited to late evening, then show you a grinder that keeps your rolls consistent. They might point you toward a CBD tincture you can use alongside your flower, noting what other patients say about balance and clarity without pitching it as a cure. They’ll remind you to keep your products sealed when you leave, and if you mention you need to be on base later, they’ll tactfully suggest saving your pickup for tomorrow.

The 73110 area is also a practical staging ground for patients coming from every direction in the metro. From Yukon and Mustang, I-40 east is the quickest route. From Moore, it’s often smarter to keep to I-240 east and come up Sooner Road to avoid the I-35/I-40 knot. From Spencer and northeast neighborhoods, NE 36th Street to Midwest Boulevard southbound is a surprisingly relaxed stretch with fewer lights and less commercial congestion than comparable alternatives. These are the patterns that locals refine over time, and they are part of why patients stick with a dispensary that sits right in the flow of where they already drive.

In-store, the conversation around quality is more transparent than ever. Oklahoma’s testing requirements give patients concrete numbers on THC, CBD, and terpene content. In a market that appreciates the classic punch of OG Kush, those terp profiles—myrcene, limonene, caryophyllene—give patients a way to anchor what they feel to what’s on the label. For those curious about balance, the same transparency helps them identify full-spectrum CBD products and tune ratios to their comfort level. That blend of pragmatic data and practical advice defines the patient experience in this part of Oklahoma City. You can ask direct questions, get a straightforward answer, and leave with something you understand how to use, whether that means a tightly rolled joint that burns evenly or a measured 5 mg edible to accompany a quiet evening.

OG KUSH (MED) exists in a neighborhood that values the basics: clear routes, simple parking, quick service, and product knowledge that matches how people really live. Patients here don’t need hype to navigate a menu. They need a budtender who can translate test results into plain language, suggest a grinder if their favorite flower tends to clump, and offer a CBD option that makes sense next to a heavy-hitting eighth. They need someone who understands that a trip down I-40 looks very different at 4:30 p.m. than it does at 10:30 a.m., and who can help them time a pickup

Recent Reviews

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Opening Hours

All times are Pacific Standard Time (PST)

Sunday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Monday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Tuesday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Wednesday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Thursday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Friday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM
Saturday 09:00 AM - 05:00 PM

Follow your dispensary!

Contact

Call: (405) 600 - 5700
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