Things to Do in Miami While High: A Local’s Guide | Gramz 305

Things to Do in Miami While High: A Local’s Guide

A Gramz 305 guide — premium cannabis delivered across Miami, open 10:00 AM – 3:00 AM, 7 days a week.

Yes, There Are Real Things to Do in Miami While High — Here's the Short List

The best things to do in Miami while high are the ones that reward slowing down: a sunset walk at Matheson Hammock, the boardwalk stretch from 21st to 46th on the beach, the banyan tunnel on Old Cutler Road, a paleta from Azucar on Calle Ocho, and the Rickenbacker Causeway around golden hour. Miami is a sensory city — the light, the humidity, the smell of cut grass and salt — and the right amount of THC turns that into something closer to a film. The wrong amount turns it into a two-hour negotiation with a parking garage. This guide is about staying on the right side of that line.

One practical note before anything else: sort out what you're bringing before you leave the house. Nothing kills an afternoon faster than realizing at 6:45 PM that you're empty and everything worth doing starts at sunset. Gramz 305 is open 10:00 AM to 3:00 AM, seven days a week, and the delivery run goes out at 7:00 PM daily — so if you want it same-day, the order needs to be in by 7PM. Plan the smoke, then plan the day around it, not the other way around.

Know What's Actually Legal in Florida Before You Go Anywhere

This matters more here than in a lot of cities, and the internet is full of people getting it wrong.

  • Recreational marijuana is not legal in Florida. Not decriminalized statewide, not "basically fine," not legal. Anyone telling you otherwise is repeating something they heard about a different state.
  • Medical marijuana is legal for patients with a Florida medical marijuana card, obtained through a state-qualified physician. That's a real program with real requirements.
  • Hemp-derived THC products — the category defined by the federal Farm Bill — are sold to adults 21+ without a medical card. This is what Gramz 305 carries: flower, vapes, and pre-rolls. No card, no doctor's visit, no registry.

These are three different legal lanes and blurring them is how people get into trouble. Hemp-derived being available to 21+ adults does not mean you can spark up on the sand at South Beach. Public consumption is a bad idea everywhere in Miami-Dade — beaches, parks, sidewalks, the Metromover. Consume at home or somewhere private, then go out. And the obvious one that shouldn't need saying but does: don't drive. Rideshare in Miami is cheap relative to what a DUI costs, and traffic on the 836 is not something you want to experience with an altered sense of time.

The Water: Beaches, Causeways, and the Sunset Problem

Everyone says "go to the beach." Fine — but which beach, and when, is the entire question, because South Beach at 2 PM on a Saturday is a stress test, not a vibe.

Matheson Hammock Park in Coral Gables is the answer most locals give and most tourists never hear. It's an atoll pool — a man-made tidal lagoon fed by Biscayne Bay — ringed by sand and shaded by Australian pines, with the downtown skyline sitting across the water like a postcard someone left out. It's calm, shallow, and the light at sunset comes in sideways and gold. Bring a towel and low expectations about doing anything productive.

Crandon Park on Key Biscayne is the wide, quiet, family-leaning option — long flat sand, calm water, room to walk for a mile without navigating anyone's photo shoot. Hobie Beach on the Rickenbacker is where people bring dogs and kiteboards; it's not for swimming, it's for sitting on the seawall and watching.

The Rickenbacker Causeway itself is the underrated move. Get dropped somewhere along it before sunset and just walk. You're on a strip of road over open bay with the skyline behind you and Key Biscayne ahead, and the sun goes down over the water in a way that makes people who've lived here fifteen years stop and take a picture anyway.

If you want beach without the beach, South Pointe Park at the very southern tip of Miami Beach has a pier, a lawn, and a front-row seat to cruise ships and cargo ships sliding through Government Cut. There's something genuinely hypnotic about watching a container ship the size of a building move at walking speed.

Walks and Green Space: Where Miami Gets Quiet

Miami rewards walking more than its reputation suggests, if you pick the right corridor.

  • Old Cutler Road — the banyan tunnel south of Coral Gables. Enormous trees arching over the road, roots hanging down, filtered green light. There's a paved path alongside it. It looks nothing like the rest of South Florida.
  • The Miami Beach Boardwalk — the stretch from roughly 21st Street up to 46th is the good part. Wooden and concrete path, dunes and sea grape on one side, Art Deco and mid-century hotels on the other, ocean noise the entire time. It's flat, it's long, and you can walk it for an hour without deciding anything.
  • The Kampong in Coconut Grove — a botanical garden that was David Fairchild's home, full of tropical fruit trees most people have never seen. Small, quiet, requires checking hours ahead.
  • Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden — the bigger, more famous version. 83 acres, palms and cycads and a butterfly conservatory. Worth the admission on a weekday morning when it's nearly empty.
  • Coconut Grove and Central Grove — just wander. Peacocks, old Bahamian shotgun houses, tree canopy, marina at the bottom of the hill.
  • Wynwood — the walls are the point, and looking at large-scale color while pleasantly elevated is a legitimate use of an afternoon. Go on a weekday. Weekends turn into a crowd.

Food: The Only Category Miami Never Loses

This is where the city genuinely separates from everywhere else, because the good stuff is cheap, fast, and open late.

Ventanitas. The walk-up window at any Cuban bakery or cafeteria. Order a cortadito, a croqueta preparada (a ham croqueta pressed inside a Cuban sandwich — an actual thing, not a joke), a pastelito de guayaba. Versailles and La Carreta on Calle Ocho are the famous ones and they're open absurdly late. The neighborhood spot two blocks from wherever you are is usually just as good.

Azucar Ice Cream in Little Havana. Get the Abuela Maria — vanilla, guava, cream cheese, Maria cookies. It is engineered, seemingly on purpose, for exactly this state of mind.

Arepas and empanadas. Doral and Kendall are full of Venezuelan and Colombian counters where twelve dollars gets you more food than you can finish. An arepa reina pepiada is chicken salad and avocado inside a corn cake and it is the correct thing to eat at 11 PM.

Miami-specific things to try at least once: a mamey or trigo batido, chicharrón de pollo from a Dominican spot, pan con lechón, a guarapo (raw sugarcane juice, pressed in front of you), Haitian griot in Little Haiti.

The common mistake: making a reservation somewhere fancy. A tasting menu is the wrong format when you're high — too much sitting, too much talking to a server, too much time between courses. Go where you order at a counter and eat with your hands.

Low-Key Indoor Spots for When It's 94 Degrees or Raining Sideways

Summer in Miami means afternoon thunderstorms that arrive in ten minutes and leave in twenty. Have a backup.

  • Frost Science Museum — the planetarium is the reason to go. A dome show while elevated is a well-documented use of a Tuesday. The aquarium's Gulf Stream tank is a three-story cylinder you can watch from below.
  • Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) — the hanging gardens on the terrace overlook the bay, and the building itself is more interesting than half the art in it. Free-ish nights happen; check the calendar.
  • Vizcaya — a 1916 Italian villa with formal gardens on the water in Coconut Grove. Absurd, ornate, and completely absorbing.
  • The Bass, ICA Miami, Rubell Museum — small enough to see in an hour, which is about the right attention span.
  • Coral Castle in Homestead, if you're willing to drive — one man carved 1,100 tons of coral rock by himself and never explained how. It's a genuinely strange place to think about.

Common Mistakes People Make

  • Overdoing it before you leave. Start lower than you think, especially with concentrated vapes. You can always add. Miami heat plus a heavy dose plus a parking hunt in Brickell is how a good day ends early.
  • Ignoring the sun and the water. Dehydration and cannabis stack badly. Drink more water than feels necessary.
  • Building the day around a place that requires a decision every ten minutes. Pick a lane — water day, food day, museum day — and don't try to do all three.
  • Consuming in public. Covered above, but it's the single most common way a good afternoon becomes a bad one.
  • Forgetting the traffic is real. A drive that Maps says is 18 minutes is 45 at 6 PM. Build in the buffer.
  • Waiting until you're already out to figure out supply. This is why the 7PM cutoff matters.

Getting Set Up Before You Go

The logistics, briefly, because they shape the timing of everything above.

Gramz 305 is based in Coral Gables and delivers across Miami-Dade, Broward, and the Upper Keys — roughly a 40-mile radius. Delivery is a $20 flat fee with a $75 minimum, and the driver goes out at 7:00 PM daily, so orders placed by 7PM go out same day. Anything later rolls to the next run. Premium eighths start at $30, quarters at $40, half-ounce at $100, ounce at $160. Flower, vapes, and pre-rolls. Payment is cash or CashApp ($Oskerspaid). All hemp-derived, 21+, no medical card needed.

The practical version: order in the early afternoon, plan for the delivery around dinner, and aim the evening at a sunset — Matheson, the Rickenbacker, or South Pointe. That's the whole formula. Miami does the rest of the work for you.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the delivery hours for Gramz 305?

Gramz 305 delivers from 10:00 AM to 3:00 AM, 7 days a week.

Do I need a medical card to order from Gramz 305?

No, you don't need a medical card to order from Gramz 305.

How much is the delivery fee for Gramz 305?

There is a $20 flat delivery fee, with a $75 minimum order.

What is the price for a premium eighth from Gramz 305?

Premium eighths start from $30 at Gramz 305.

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