Marijuana farming rebounds in economic hard times

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Cali smoke

Cali smoke

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Marijuana farming rebounds in economic hard times
By ROGER ALFORD (AP) – 38 minutes ago

BARBOURVILLE, Ky. — Machete-wielding police officers have hacked their way through billions of dollars worth of marijuana in the country's top pot-growing states to stave off a bumper crop sprouting in the tough economy.

The number of plants seized has jumped this year in California, the nation's top marijuana-growing state, while seizures continue to rise in Washington after nearly doubling the previous year. Growers in a three-state region of central Appalachia also appear to have reversed a decline in pot cultivation over the last two years.

Officers in those areas, the nation's biggest hotbeds for marijuana production, have chopped down plants with a combined street value of around $12 billion in the first eight months of this year. While national numbers aren't yet available this year, officers around the country increased their haul from 7 million plants in 2007 to 8 million in 2008.

"A lot of that, we theorize, is the economy," said Ed Shemelya, head of marijuana eradication for the Office of Drug Control Policy's Appalachian High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area. "Places in east Tennessee, eastern Kentucky and West Virginia are probably feeling the recession a lot more severely than the rest of the country and have probably been in that condition a lot longer than the rest of the country."

Growers in Appalachia are often hard-luck entrepreneurs supplementing their income by growing marijuana, authorities say. Troopers thrashing through the thick mountain brush there typically find plots that could easily be tended by a single grower, while officers in the two western states have focused on larger fields run by Mexican cartels with immigrant labor.

The demand for domestically grown marijuana is at a record high, in part because stricter border control has made it more difficult to import pot from Mexico, said Dave Keller, deputy director of the Appalachian High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area. Keller said growers large and small across the country are trying to fill the void.

The ailing economy isn't stopping users from spending money on pot. In fact, Shemelya said the demand appears to be rising with the unemployment rate.
"I've never seen any decline in demand for marijuana in bad economic times," he said. "If anything, it's the opposite. People always seem to find money somewhere to buy drugs."

The number of plants destroyed in California has increased over the last three years, said the assistant chief of the California Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, Kent Shaw. The total increased from 4.9 million plants in 2007 to 5.3 million in 2008. Already this year, Shaw said, California authorities have exceeded last year's total.

To the north, authorities in Washington have seen the numbers jump from 295,000 plants seized in 2007 to 580,000 in 2008. Lt. Rich Wiley, commander of the Washington State Patrol's narcotics unit, said his officers have confiscated 540,000 so far this year and that he expects to meet or exceed last year's numbers.

In the heart of Appalachia, ground forces have cut more than 600,000 marijuana plants this summer in Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia, and they should end the year with a significantly higher total, Shemelya said. The plants' street value of about $2,000 each creates an often irresistible draw in communities where long-standing poverty has been fed over the years by the shuttering of factories and coal mines.

In Appalachia and the two western states, authorities said the amount of resources put into eradication efforts has been constant over the past several years.
Judge Kelsey Friend, whose jurisdiction includes some of the most isolated mountain communities in Kentucky, said he believes a huge chunk of the Appalachian marijuana is grown by people so hard-pressed that they're willing to risk freedom to improve their standard of living. The ill-gotten gains, Friend said, show up in the form of new pickup trucks, boats and even homes.
However, only an estimated 20 to 40 percent of the growers in the region manage to harvest and collect their payoff without being detected by modern day G-men assisted by spotters in helicopters.

Last month, Trooper Mac McDonald descended a mountainside near Barbourville with a load of freshly cut marijuana bundled on his shoulder, sweat dripping from his brow. McDonald and his co-workers had trudged up mountains as steep as they were remote to search dense Chinese silvergrass and expansive patches of thorny blackberry briars to find the typically small, scattered plots.

A crackdown begun six years ago had convinced many growers to give up, rather than contend with the helicopters constantly crisscrossing the region in the summer months, authorities said. But the number of growers appears to have picked up since the economy turned sour.

The amount of marijuana confiscated in Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia fell from more than 1.2 million plants in 2003 to just more than 700,000 in 2007. But in 2008, with the economy faltering, narcotics officers witnessed another marijuana boom in the mountains, and they again confiscated more than 1 million plants in the three states.

"The economy or lack of economy has always driven the marijuana trade," Shemelya said. "It still is the cash cow as far as illicit drugs. It offers the greatest return on investment."
 
aldus

aldus

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THe outdoor stuff is just starting to trickle in around these parts mentioned in the article.
 
500lbs Guerilla

500lbs Guerilla

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Everyone and there mothers seem to be growing this year. Heck, even the old innocent sushi rolling lady in town has some in her backyard.
 
S

scuba steve

32
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Overgrow the goverment!!!Everyone needs to start growing,would make it alot harder for leo's to bust,if everyone grew.Get out there and plant some magic beans
 
fractal

fractal

2,009
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Very bad for those towns and people who have no other economy besides a gas station or repair shop and stores for necessities. What are they supposed to do?
 
capegrower

capegrower

75
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what a game... the cops get nice cushy jobs walking around in the woods... the growers get to feed their families for another year.... something aint right
 
MileHighChic

MileHighChic

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If we can grow in our own countries, then we can stop giving our money to foreign mafia cartels that are growin in our national parks, mountains and forests. Keep the green at home!
 
L

Lost

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If we can grow in our own countries, then we can stop giving our money to foreign mafia cartels that are growin in our national parks, mountains and forests. Keep the green at home!

US grown herb FTW!!


Stop employing mexican drug cartels!!! It makes me sick, I saw brick being sold in a shop the other day %$*^%$*^%$*%$*%$^%$(
 
A

akstp

1
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keep the cops busy go plant hermy/junk seeds in spots that are easy to get too they make great decoy crops the cops spend there time triing to watch them and catch some taking care of them. I have planted a few decoys in my time.it keeps the cops here in the blue mountains that border wa,id,or from destroying a family if every one would do a few decoy crops just think of how many inocent families might be saved.
 
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realbeer

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If enough folks grew, there would be no demand for cartel weed. I sa w adispensary advertising schwag. I think that is a bad thing for everything we all do.
 
K

Kushables

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keep the cops busy go plant hermy/junk seeds in spots that are easy to get too they make great decoy crops the cops spend there time triing to watch them and catch some taking care of them. I have planted a few decoys in my time.it keeps the cops here in the blue mountains that border wa,id,or from destroying a family if every one would do a few decoy crops just think of how many inocent families might be saved.

I was thinking about this yesterday. Why can't we do something as one movement, if all of us, meaning all who oppose cannabis legislation and the corruption surrounding it, were to continually plant wild seeds. If it was advertised, people caught on and just pitched in by placing some seeds in the dirt in any random area. Something so simple could literally overgrow the government. It's up to the people to turn this world into what we want.
 
R

revolutionseeds

Premium Member
Supporter
240
16
Machete-wielding police officers have hacked their way through billions of dollars worth of marijuana in the country's top pot-growing states to stave off a bumper crop sprouting in the tough economy.

They better hire about 10 billion more cops or quit smoking the shit they seize cause they haven't staved off shit!
 
M

mojavegreg

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0
Such brave police

IT'S TOO DAMNED BAD THESE MANCHO SENIOR CITIZEN KILLING COPS CAN'T GO AFTER THE REAL CRIMINALS IN THIS COUNTRY..HELL THEY ALL WANT TO GO AND PICK FLOWERS AND GET PAID FOR IT WHEN HALF OF AMERICA IS OUT OF WORK, DO YOU REALLY THINK THESE COPS WANT TO GO AFTER GANG MEMBERS WITH AK-47'S, SERIAL KILLERS, PEDAPHILES,HOME INVASION ROBBERS WHO HAVE 2 STRIKES ALREADY AND ARN'T GOING TO LET A FLOWER PICKING COP TAKE THEM IN, SO THEN THEY WOULD HAVE TO RISK THERE LIVES TO EARN A PAY-CHECK, HELL NO THEY WON'T, THESE PUSSIES WOULD RATHER PICK FLOWERS.ONLY AFTER SOMEONE TELLS THEM WHERE IT'S AT. LAZY BASTARDS NEED TO BE IN WASHINGTON WITH THE REST OF THE FAGS. MOJAVE GREG:rasta2:
 
mikeb437

mikeb437

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naturally pot smoking increases during a bad economy,, i can smoke a 10 dollar joint with a few people and have a great time doing nothing.. cant do a cheaper fun evening than that..
 
T

TheAngryCook

40
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naturally pot smoking increases during a bad economy,, i can smoke a 10 dollar joint with a few people and have a great time doing nothing.. cant do a cheaper fun evening than that..

fo sho man. :bong-hits:
 
D

Dan K

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The area's in which the article was written, are the most poor in the country. These appalachain people deserve any oppurtunity to support themselves. Instead, they devote entire mj task force and spend god only knows how much. Maybe they should offer the same amount in aid, and they would'nt have to grow.
 
D

Dan K

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I was thinking about this yesterday. Why can't we do something as one movement, if all of us, meaning all who oppose cannabis legislation and the corruption surrounding it, were to continually plant wild seeds. If it was advertised, people caught on and just pitched in by placing some seeds in the dirt in any random area. Something so simple could literally overgrow the government. It's up to the people to turn this world into what we want.

This is what it means to overgrow and it is being advertised, you just did:)
 
Venom818

Venom818

3,303
263
We should be able to grow in the safety of our own home with out fear.
Hey Lost how do u know there mexican maybe next time u see one go up to him and ask him if he's mexican LOL
 

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