Pubdate: Thu, 22 Sep 2011
Source: Hanford Sentinel, The (CA)
Copyright: 2011 Lee Newspapers
Contact:  http://www.hanfordsentinel.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2338
Author: Don Curlee
Note: Don Curlee operates his own public relations firm specializing 
in agriculture issues. His column appears in The Sentinel every Thursday.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)

STATE'S ILLEGAL CROP IN DEMAND

Some say jokingly that marijuana is California's largest agricultural 
crop, and they might be right. Right or wrong, it is no joke to law 
enforcement people.

While the vigorous growth of marijuana in California's foothills and 
on land owned or controlled by the federal government testifies to 
the state's optimum natural growing conditions, the activity creates 
none of the pride that officials and citizens feel about the state's 
350 legitimate agricultural crops.

Crackdowns on growing operations have been numerous, but California 
is the country's third largest state, and those seized by the 
enormous profit potential always seem to find space off the beaten 
paths to produce, harvest and ship the weed to an eager nationwide, 
perhaps international clientele.

In Fresno County, one of the state's largest counties with a high 
percentage of mountainous acreage, recent emphasis has been placed on 
efforts to control the production and sale of marijuana plants for 
personal and prescribed medical use.

However, that measure of control of storefront sales and backyard 
cultivation has little effect on the vast acreages of illegal 
production and distribution.

Law enforcement officials have the keenest focus on the outlaw aspect 
of the crop and the best concept of its volume, its enormous profit 
potential, the vigorous steps taken by its producers to hide and 
protect their production areas and their clandestine transportation 
and distribution networks.

Not every county in the state has helicopter surveillance at its 
fingertips, and illegal marijuana production is judged by law 
enforcement personnel to be taking place in every one of the state's 
58 counties. The sheriff's office in Fresno County depends heavily on 
its helicopter detail to locate and monitor production sites.

Monitoring marijuana "groves" from the sky is not only the most 
efficient way to keep track of them, but the safest. Stumbling onto a 
protected production site can result in armed resistance, and 
postings have been made in several remote areas to warn hikers and 
other innocents of the danger.

Fresno County Sheriff Lt. Rick Ko says each marijuana plant produces 
about a pound of saleable material worth $2,500 to $4,000. Sizable 
plantings can produce as many as 1,000 plants per acre. That adds up 
to a lot of cash.

The blossoms of the plant are believed to contain the highest 
concentration of THC, the ingredient credited with causing the 
maximum reaction when smoked. Peak of harvest occurs as the buds 
droop toward the ground, ready to be plucked, dried and marketed.

Transportation of the finished product is a risky and a 
tension-filled operation. Those dealing in the stuff get credit for 
some of the most imaginative and sometimes unlikely hiding places in 
cars, trucks, trailers and motor homes. Fender wells, fake fuel 
tanks, phony spare tires and seats padded with pot are just a few of 
the more common modes for clandestine transport.

Imagination and technology are also applied by the growers in 
providing water for healthy plant production. Several groves that 
have been raided have yielded the latest in sophisticated irrigation 
technology, bringing water long distances from wells, springs, creeks 
and ponds to individual plants. One raid in Fresno County yielded 52 
miles of irrigation hose.

Natural terrain and native growth are utilized more than technology 
to camouflage growing sites, especially in foothill and mountainous 
terrain. Native growth provides a cover that makes detection 
difficult, even from helicopters. Alarm systems display 
state-of-the-art development, able to relay messages to guards 
bearing state-of-the-art firearms.

Besides enormous profits, the one thing hidden growing sites are 
guaranteed to create is a mess, with devastation of natural growth 
and even wildlife. Crews' campsites are littered, often with 
pesticides and other chemicals in unmarked containers.

Illegal marijuana production may be big in dollar volume, but it 
takes an enormous toll on the environment and monopolizes law 
enforcement resources that society needs to apply elsewhere. And its 
burden on society through its users and abusers is yet to be measured.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom