Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jul 2002
Source: Metrowest Daily News (MA)
Copyright: 2002, MetroWest Daily News and Herald Interactive Advertising
Contact:  http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/619
Author: Melissa Beecher

MARIJUANA 'MINI-FARM' DISCOVERED IN WESTON FIELD

WESTON - Over the weekend, a group of environmentalists stumbled upon 
marijuana plants in a large field near the abandoned Massachusetts Central 
railroad tracks in Weston.

"We were out doing field restoration and cataloguing endangered species, 
and found the marijuana plants at the edge of an open field," said Peter 
Whittenberger, member of the Friends of the Spotted Turtle group. "I guess 
there is a first time for everything."

After finding the six small pot plants, Whittenberger and his group 
contacted the police. Officers said the discovery is far from uncommon.

"This is not unusual. In fact, every year we find a few plants growing in 
various places throughout town," said Weston Deputy Police Chief Roland 
Anderson. "There is a lot of wooded area in Weston, and people take 
advantage of the coverage."

According to police, the plants found on the southwest side of town were 
only a few inches high. Marijuana plants can grow to be 6 to 8 feet tall, 
Anderson said.

"In a couple months, these plants would have been full-grown. I think that 
we ruined someone's good time," he said.

The plantings were not simply a random scattering, according to the expert 
eye of Whittenberger.

"Our upland fieldwork uncovered a couple of 5- by 10-inch micro-farms 
hidden in the brush. Like microbreweries, these two hidden farms were 
technological marvels.

"They had perfect solar orientation, to catch the maximum light. There was 
an on-site irrigation device and all the necessary tools to maintain the 
crop, including powerful fertilizers.

"Crop rotation was used, as one of the fields was fallow, resting for 
alternate year use," he wrote in a letter to the Weston Town Crier.

After being uprooted, the confiscated plants were sent to the State Crime 
Lab in Jamaica Plain and destroyed, as is done with any illegal substance 
confiscated. Because the plants were so small, police said there is no 
street value associated with them.

Alongside the plants, a shovel, the irrigation device and other farming 
equipment were found.

"After we came upon the plants, we called the police and they came right 
out," said Whittenberger. "People are laughing about this now. We knew that 
in Maine and New Hampshire mini-farming of marijuana is a problem, but I 
guess people are starting to utilize the woods of Weston."

Police, however, are not laughing at the mystery farmer. The area will be 
monitored, according to Anderson.

"This is not a criminal case because there is no defendant. Right now, we 
have no idea who planted them. We will be patrolling the area," Anderson 
said. "We definitely will keep a watchful eye on the area."

In the cases where Weston Police have found marijuana plants on private 
property, the homeowner is prosecuted.

"That hasn't happened in years, though," said Anderson.
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