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As California Votes to Legalize, Pot Is Quickly Turning into Big Business

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-30-10 08:14 AM
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As California Votes to Legalize, Pot Is Quickly Turning into Big Business
via AlterNet:



Washington Monthly / By John Gravois

As California Votes to Legalize, Pot Is Quickly Turning into Big Business
California is not just deciding whether pot should be legal. It’s determining the shape of a major new American industry.

October 29, 2010 |


When my wife and I bought a house last year in the little town of Ukiah, California, the first person to offer us advice about growing marijuana was our realtor. The house was a stolid 1909 prairie box that had been partitioned into four units, with a front porch, dark green trim, and a couple of fruit trees in the yard. It was charming, but we probably would have settled for a yurt. What mattered most to us was having a foothold in Mendocino County, a place we had long ago decided was the most beautiful in America.

Our realtor, however, drew our attention to the house's electrical meters. There were four in total, one for each unit. If we ever wanted to grow a few indoor pot gardens, he said, we had an ideal setup. I laughed and thanked him for the tip.

Then the advice kept coming. A neighbor offered to help me get started with a few plants whenever I was ready. The owner of a local hydroponics supply store shook my hand and encouraged me to stop by his warehouse. "We'll set you up," he said. Ukiah, I realized, was weirder than I thought.

I'd always known that pot was a huge part of the county's livelihood, accounting for two-thirds of the local economy, by some estimates. But in eight years of visiting the place with my wife--including one gloriously unsuccessful four-month experiment in backcountry living--I'd never so much as set eyes on a seven-fingered leaf. Then, last year, I began exploring the region's cannabis economy in earnest, setting out for dirt roads in the hills and basements in Ukiah, occasionally wearing a blindfold.

Gradually a new picture of Mendocino County began to emerge. Neighborhoods in town were dotted with light-flooded outbuildings packed with plants, quietly paying the mortgages of those who tended them. And the county's amber and green hills were full of homesteaders who for decades had been leading the kind of existence we'd once failed at--men and women who'd come for the land but managed to stay because of marijuana. Many had built their own off-grid homes and outfitted them with elaborate solar arrays, potbellied stoves, and well-tended gardens. In an age of homemade baby food, fire-escape agriculture, and home-brew chic, they'd achieved an almost mythical ideal: economic independence derived from a small piece of earth. ............(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.alternet.org/drugs/148676/as_california_votes_to_legalize%2C_pot_is_quickly_turning_into_big_business/



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Bluenorthwest Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-30-10 08:24 AM
Response to Original message
1. Not 'is turning into' it already is and has been for many years
I've had family in Mendo since the 70's. The county's economy has been hugely 'green' for decades. Even my elderly family members have known that for ages, and welcome it for the economic boon. This is not a 'becoming' this is an 'is and has been for ages'.
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Webster Green Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-30-10 08:48 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Wierd headline.
The author gets well into what you are noting, with stories about the first hippies arriving and starting to sow the seed, and watching their pot patches turn into increasingly big money makers.

Good article!
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-30-10 10:31 AM
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3. Pot is already the largest cash crop in California, and a number of other states too. nt
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