Pubdate: Thu, 23 Oct 2014
Source: Sacramento News & Review (CA)
Copyright: 2014 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact:  http://newsreview.com/sacto/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/540
Author: Ngaio Bealum

ALL THE TRIMMINGS

How much money can you make harvesting marijuana during this time of 
year? My friend says there's work for me up north but I wanted to 
know what you think.

- -Mike Grant-Labor

Yes. You can make good money. But the money is not particularly easy 
to get. It requires long hours and hard work, like being on an 
Alaskan fishing boat, except you probably won't be thrown overboard 
or washed out to sea.

The going rate for trimming a pound of cannabis is about $200. A 
newbie can do maybe a pound in a 12-hour day. And that's with decent 
pot. If the bud is larfy or small or riddled with mold, it may take 
longer. People with more experience can do maybe two pounds. I know 
someone who can do three pounds in a day, but she grew up on the 
mountain and is a bit of a legend. Plus, trimming can be boring as 
hell. You basically sit in a cabin and trim until your muscles cramp 
up, then you switch hands and trim some more. Perhaps if you are with 
some cool folks, there may be good conversation and decent food. But 
really, you just sit and trim and trim and sit. It can be a bit 
meditative if you have the right mindset, but mostly it's like 
working an assembly line.

Don't just show up somewhere in Humboldt County with your scissors 
and a sign saying "will trim for weed." Marijuana is still illegal, 
and some people are less than scrupulous in their business dealings. 
If you agree to trim for a bunch of people you don't know, and they 
stiff you come payday, who you gonna tell? The best thing to do is to 
have some work set up before you arrive. Such as your friend.

But the thing is, if someone you know has a good connection to a 
sweet gig, you don't even have to go to the Emerald Triangle anymore. 
Outdoor cannabis is everywhere in California, except maybe Fresno 
County. From Loomis to Susanville, Marin to Redding, the crops are 
there, and the growers need help. Good luck, be careful and don't 
forget to pack a set of clean clothes in some sort of airtight 
container. When you leave the shed, you will reek of weed and not 
know it because you have become inured to the aroma. Having some 
clothes that don't smell like a skunk hotboxed a blunt in your car 
will go a long way toward keeping people from staring at you when you 
are in line at the bank.

Side note:

Kudos to The New York Times coming out (again!) for legalization. In 
an editorial piece from October 5, the good people at the NYT (they 
still drug test their employees, but that's a different column) 
announce and encourage support for all three recreational marijuana 
legalization measures on statewide ballots this November (that's 
Alaska, Oregon, and D.C., if you forgot). This is big. Let's keep it going.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom