Dana's Green Depot is a recreational retail dispensary located in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
Dana’s Green Depot has a straightforward identity in Oklahoma City’s medical cannabis scene: it is the “lake stop shop” by Lake Hefner for patients who want quick access, familiar faces, and a consistent menu in ZIP Code 73132. Weedmaps and social posts place it directly in the Lake Hefner orbit, which matters in this part of northwest Oklahoma City because the lake drives the rhythm of local traffic, recreation, and retail. The store is listed as medical patients only, and the emphasis in its own description is on serving patients and prioritizing quality. That patient-first approach is reinforced in small but telling ways—from operating hours commonly shown as 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. to curbside pickup and online ordering options—so people can plan a visit around a commute, a lap on the lake trail, or a quick lunch-hour errand without losing time.
Understanding Dana’s Green Depot starts with where it sits in the city. Lake Hefner divides northwest Oklahoma City into a set of familiar driving routes. On the south side of the lake, Northwest Expressway (often just called “NW Expressway”) carries shoppers and commuters between Penn Square and the suburbs west of Council Road, while Lake Hefner Parkway (OK-74) links that corridor north–south. Dana’s calls itself a lake stop shop because it’s positioned for people who move through that daily loop—residents of 73132 and nearby ZIP Codes who run errands along NW Expressway, and the walkers, runners, and cyclists who flow toward the parks and trails around the water. That community context helps explain why the store leans into speed and convenience. Weedmaps entries for Dana’s Green Depot repeatedly show Pickup and Order Now, and several regional pages list it as offering curbside pickup, so the experience can be as simple as ordering online, swinging off a main artery, and getting back on the road.
The dispensary’s rhythm during the week also reflects the neighborhood’s habits. Dana’s Green Depot promotes a midweek deal day called Wheel Wednesday on its Facebook page. On that day, visitors spin a wheel for a discount between 5% and 20% off all day. It’s the kind of promotion that fits this part of Oklahoma City; locals who commute past the lake in both directions often plan a single midweek dispensary stop for their monthly or biweekly cannabis purchase, and a predictable Wednesday discount makes that decision easier. Social posts also show consistent holiday messaging—closed on Thanksgiving, open at 9 a.m. on Black Friday—which is consistent with the store’s broader pattern of keeping hours that are easy to remember, then communicating exceptions clearly.
For patients who care most about reliability, reviews and inventory details are a helpful signal. Brand pages on Weedmaps show Dana’s Green Depot with a 5.0-star average from hundreds of reviews, a number that appears across multiple Weedmaps views and suggests a consistent customer experience. Product listings show the store carrying full-spectrum cannabis oil such as FECO/RSO from Bee Elevated, with a 1-gram oral syringe at an accessible price point. For many Oklahoma City medical cannabis patients, FECO/RSO is a core product category—often purchased alongside flower or cartridges—so its presence on Dana’s menu supports the store’s patient-forward positioning. The store’s regional footprint on Weedmaps also appears in surrounding communities’ deal pages, which list Dana’s Green Depot as a Pickup option for people in places like The Village and Yukon who often shop the NW Expressway corridor.
A patient-centered identity is as much about process as it is about products. Locals in Oklahoma City buy legal cannabis under the OMMA medical program, and the process is familiar to anyone who has visited dispensaries across the metro. Patients arrive with a valid OMMA card and a government-issued ID, check in at the front desk, and consult with a budtender if they want guidance or head directly to pick up an online order if they already know what they want. Because the city has a dense network of dispensaries, shoppers here often browse menus on Weedmaps before leaving home or work. Dana’s Green Depot leans into that habit with clear menu listings and the ability to place a Pickup order. For people who prefer to stay in the car, curbside is a practical option; they can call upon arrival or follow posted curbside instructions and complete the transaction outside. Cash is still common, though many shops offer in-store ATM options or cashless terminals that function like debit. Patients keep an eye on daily deals and weekly themes—like Wheel Wednesday—because the market is competitive and discounts are part of the local culture. It’s typical for Oklahoma City patients to buy in modest batches that align with their routines: a mix of flower and one concentrate or edible brand for the week, then a restock two weeks later when a favorite item goes on promotion. That cadence suits a dispensary in 73132 where workday traffic ebbs and flows along NW Expressway, and where a quick curbside pickup can be done on the way home.
Driving logistics to Dana’s Green Depot are easier to understand when you think about how northwest Oklahoma City actually moves. If you are approaching from the central city or near the fairgrounds, the simplest route is often I-44 to Lake Hefner Parkway (OK-74), then exit onto NW Expressway and head west toward the lake. That interchange is one of the most familiar in town, and while it gets busy at the peak of the evening rush, the signal timing and multiple lanes keep cars moving. From the north, many drivers use Lake Hefner Parkway southbound and exit at NW Expressway, again bending toward the lake-side retail corridor where the dispensary is situated. From Yukon and the far west side, the John Kilpatrick Turnpike gives two practical options: exit at N MacArthur Boulevard and head south toward NW Expressway, or exit at Rockwell Avenue and cut south to the same corridor. Both MacArthur and Rockwell feed directly into the 73132 grid, and both intersect NW Expressway with full signals, which matter if you are trying to make a left turn during peak hours. From Piedmont, the Kilpatrick Turnpike is again the most direct way to link into this part of town; eastbound to MacArthur, then south to NW Expressway creates a relatively stress-free approach with fewer lights than the slower, older surface routes.
Traffic around Lake Hefner follows predictable patterns. Weekday mornings between about 7:30 and 9 a.m. will slow on NW Expressway eastbound as people head toward the I-44 interchange and major office clusters, while westbound remains steady. The reverse is true from about 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. on weekdays, when westbound NW Expressway fills up between Lake Hefner Parkway and the stretches past N Rockwell Avenue and N Council Road. Weekends bring a different rhythm. Saturday late mornings and early afternoons are active as lake users, shoppers, and restaurant-goers converge, especially when the weather is mild. Traffic remains manageable because lanes are wide, speeds are steady, and signals are frequent, though planning a right-in/right-out approach near major intersections will save time. The advantage of Dana’s Green Depot’s lake-side positioning is how simple it is to slide off the main road, pick up an order, and rejoin traffic either back toward Lake Hefner Parkway or west toward the neighborhoods and suburbs that define 73132.
The convenience extends to hours and contact, which matter when you are coordinating a medical purchase with a busy day. Area listings for Dana’s Green Depot show a 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. schedule and list a phone line at +1 (405) 506-0494. Those touch points are helpful if you plan to place a curbside order and want to call ahead. A Saturday schedule that mirrors weekday hours makes the dispensary viable for weekend errands before or after time at the lake. Facebook posts confirm the store communicates holiday schedules clearly; on Thanksgiving, for example, the store is closed and then returns to a 9 a.m. opening on Black Friday. For regulars, that predictability is its own kind of community feature.
Community features around Lake Hefner shape how people use the dispensary every week. The lake path and surrounding parks draw a steady stream of residents who prioritize health and daily routines. Dana’s Green Depot speaks directly to that group by calling itself the lake stop shop and by focusing on medical patients. It’s not a generic suburban outlet; it is oriented to the physical place where it operates. The store’s Wheel Wednesday promotion functions as a recurring local event, giving patients a reason to time a visit midweek. The store’s presence on brand pages and deals results across nearby communities shows it is part of a broader regional ecosystem of dispensaries, but its immediate neighborhood is what defines the day-to-day experience—parking lots are close to entrances, side streets reconnect easily to the main arteries, and a lunch-hour stop does not require a long detour.
When it comes to products, the store’s Weedmaps presence tells a story of patient-oriented inventory. Full-spectrum cannabis oil like FECO/RSO from Bee Elevated appears prominently and at a price that invites trial or regular use. For patients, FECO/RSO is a form factor that aligns with consistent dosing and discrete, non-combustion consumption at home, which is part of why Oklahoma City’s medical market keeps it in steady rotation. The store also appears on brand pages such as Zenoa, which list Dana’s Green Depot with high marks. That doesn’t mean every product will fit every patient, but it suggests a curation that resonates with the neighborhood’s needs.
Buying patterns among locals are predictable because the environment creates them. In 73132 and the surrounding neighborhoods, many medical cannabis patients plan purchases around a work and family calendar that already includes the Lake Hefner corridor for groceries, home goods, and dining. They often check Weedmaps before leaving home to confirm hours and inventory, and they place an online order if the day is tight. At the dispensary, check-in is fast with an OMMA card and matching ID, and repeat visitors typically know what they want. For new patients, or when trying something different, budtenders fill the role of guide, translating THC and CBD numbers and terpenes into practical language. Payment is straightforward; cash is common, with in-store ATM access typical across the corridor, and some people prefer to use curbside for speed or accessibility. Because Oklahoma is a medical-only market, patients observe the state’s purchase and possession rules, and dispensaries log sales in the state’s seed-to-sale system. That regulated structure gives confidence to patients who value consistency and compliance as part of their healthcare routine.
Driving back out after a visit is usually simple. If you are heading downtown or toward the Asian District and Uptown, Lake Hefner Parkway southbound to I-44 is the quickest path, and you can choose between I-44 and surface streets depending on time of day. If you are going home to The Village, Nichols Hills, or north toward Quail Springs, Lake Hefner Parkway northbound keeps you off surface streets until you need to exit. For those in Yukon or along the west side, NW Expressway carries steady speeds past MacArthur, Rockwell, and Council, and the Kilpatrick Turnpike offers a quick hop home once you reach the interchanges at MacArthur or Council. Each of these routes is direct and familiar, which is part of why a dispensary near the lake works for so many people: you are rarely more than one or two turns from a major road with predictable signals and clear lane markings.
If you are thinking about timing, two windows tend to be the most efficient. Mid-morning on weekdays, after the inbound commute has dissipated, traffic along NW Expressway thins and parking lots around the lake-side retail nodes are quiet. Late afternoon on weekends—especially during football season or after the lunch rush—can also be surprisingly easy, because many visitors to the lake arrive earlier in the day. These patterns can shift with weather and events, but they hold often enough to plan around. When in doubt, online ordering and curbside give you a fallback; you can place an order when traffic is heavy and pick it up during a lighter window, or you can drive straight in and out when you catch a gap.
Patients who are new to Oklahoma City’s dispensaries sometimes ask what sets one shop apart in a market with so many choices. For Dana’s Green Depot, the answer is less about a single signature product and more about matching method to place. A dispensary near Lake Hefner that is open throughout the day, that supports quick pickup and curbside, and that communicates deals and hours clearly aligns with how the area actually lives. The Wednesday discount wheel creates a familiar habit loop. The presence of patient-oriented concentrates like FECO/RSO sends a signal about inventory priorities. The reviews on brand pages and the consistent hours shown across listings make it easy to trust that an online menu reflects what you will see at the counter. The store’s appearance in deals and pickup results for nearby communities like The Village, Yukon, and Piedmont shows it serves more than the immediate block without losing its lake-forward identity.
For a patient planning a first visit, the practical steps are uncomplicated. Check the current menu on Weedmaps to confirm the items you want are in stock, and note the hours for the day you plan to go. Decide whether you prefer in-store or curbside, and place a Pickup order if you want to save time. Bring your OMMA card and a valid ID. If you are heading in from central Oklahoma City or the north side, use Lake Hefner Parkway and exit at NW Expressway. If you are driving in from the west or from Yukon and Piedmont, the Kilpatrick Turnpike to MacArthur or Rockwell is a straightforward path into 73132. Expect traffic to flow steadily, with brief slowdowns near major intersections at peak times, and give yourself a few extra minutes during weekend lunch hours if the weather is good and the lake is busy.
Contact details are easy to keep on hand if you prefer to call. Area listings show Dana’s Green Depot at +1 (405) 506-0494, with hours commonly posted as 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. The store’s social channel is active enough to announce special hours around holidays, so a quick check there can confirm any schedule changes. Between that phone number, clear menu pages, and straightforward driving routes, the mechanics of a visit are simple.
Ultimately, Dana’s Green Depot slots into Oklahoma City’s northwest fabric by doing the basics well for medical cannabis patients. It operates in the flow of Lake Hefner life, where people combine errands with exercise and family plans, and where the big roads make short work of a cross-town drive. It shows up on Weedmaps with the functions patients actually use—Pickup, curbside, order now—and it supports a patient population that values FECO/RSO, consistent hours, and a predictable weekly discount like Wheel Wednesday. In a ZIP Code defined by NW Expressway, Lake Hefner Parkway, and the outer loop of the Kilpatrick Turnpike, the ease of getting to and from the dispensary matters as much as what is on the shelf. By building around the lake and its traffic patterns, Dana’s Green Depot makes a case for itself as a dependable stop for medical cannabis in 73132.
| Sunday | 11:00 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 |
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