Vancouver Sun

GOING TO POT

California’s ‘outlaw’ marijuana culture faces a harsh reckoning as legal weed brings its own problems

- SCOTT WILSON

The quaint town plaza here is lined with locally owned stores, their names and products recalling the post-Flower Power migration from San Francisco decades ago: Moonrise Herbs, Heart Bead, Hemp Recycled Solutions.

The shops trade largely in cash with customers who are paid in cash — the marijuana growers, distributo­rs and “trimmigran­ts,” seasonal workers who cut back the flowering plants for market each autumn. But business is stalling as marijuana’s dark cash economy comes into the light, pushed by the state’s legalizati­on of the drug earlier this year.

Humboldt County, traditiona­lly shorthand for outlaw culture and the great dope it produces, is facing a harsh reckoning. Every trait that made this strip along California’s wild northwest coast the best place in the world to grow pot is now working against its future as a producer in the state’s $7 billiona-year marijuana market.

A massive industry never before regulated is being tamed by laws and taxation, characteri­stically extensive in this state. Nowhere is this process upending a culture and economy more than here in Humboldt, where tens of thousands of people who have been breaking the law for years are being asked to hire accountant­s, tax lawyers and declare themselves to a government they have famously distrusted.

“We’re at that moment in the movie ‘Thelma and Louise’ when they have driven the car off the cliff,” said Scott Greacen, a longtime Humboldt resident and environmen­talist who is both a supporter and critic of the marijuana trade. “We’re just waiting for the impact.”

Fewer than 1 in 10 of the county ’s estimated 12,500 marijuana farmers are likely to make it in the legal trade. Growers who have anticipate­d legalizati­on are preparing for a shift from badlands to boutique, a cultural transforma­tion they hope will make this county a destinatio­n to visit for its rich history, artisanal strains of cannabis, and matchless natural beauty.

The shift, already underway with property values falling and growers departing, will be painful and unfamiliar. Marketing and consulting operations are appearing, along with logos branding various marijuana strains. Even the local terminolog­y is changing. “Cannabis” is now the preferred public term for “marijuana,” though in casual conversati­on it is still just “weed.”

Once prized, Humboldt’s remoteness is a drawback in the age of legal pot, and the industry is moving to meet California’s population. Places to the south that have never been known for marijuana production — such as Santa Barbara County and the Salinas Valley — are licensing hundreds of greenhouse growers to take advantage of proximity to roads, rails and airports for distributi­on.

But the state licensing process is slow, threatenin­g a fledgling legal marijuana economy by failing to eliminate a stubborn illegal one quickly enough. Of the state’s projected $4-billion legal marijuana market, industry experts say at least that much is still being supplied by illegal growers who can charge lower prices.

Less than one per cent of the estimated 69,000 growers statewide have received a permit to farm marijuana since the beginning of the year. Thousands more are in the works, but nowhere near the total number of those now cultivatin­g cannabis; any cannabis farmer operating without a license is cultivatin­g illegally, and government officials could begin enforcing the law when the growing season begins in the next six weeks.

The state has issued more than 2,000 licenses to about 600 growers this year, some of whom hold dozens of them. These alreadylic­ensed growers will produce about 4.1 million pounds of marijuana annually — almost double the demand for legal weed, with tens of thousands of farmers still deciding what to do. Growers in Humboldt County, an area the size of Connecticu­t, produce enough marijuana each year to supply the state’s entire legal market.

The glut in legal and illegal supply has kicked the bottom out of prices at a time when small growers most need the money to begin complying with California’s stiff regulatory demands. At the same time, the state’s licensing of retail shops has been slow, leaving a lot of legal product without a legal place to be sold.

Marijuana from Humboldt that used to sell for $1,200 a pound three years ago is now selling at a 75-per-cent discount. State officials and many growers predict the vast overproduc­tion will be curtailed by the new rules, likely by consolidat­ing cultivatio­n among large agricultur­e companies that can afford the regulation­s.

“The future of weed in Humboldt County will not be in its production,” said Mikal Jakubal, who owns a cannabis nursery in the south end of the county.

“We’ll become the Napa Valley of weed. But we’re going to see a rough transition for a lot of people, and then this place will gentrify.”

Before pot, there were fish and timber.

Humboldt’s economy first relied on the salmon that ran in the Mattole and Eel rivers, so plentiful once that canneries lined the Eel’s mouth as it emptied into the Pacific Ocean and the shores of Humboldt Bay just to the north.

Then came the logging of the pines, firs and redwoods. Lumber mills, disused for yea rs, sit along the roads and streams that run through Humboldt’s thickly forested hills.

The population grew and changed in the 1970s, when disaffecte­d hippies migrated north, a “back to the land” exodus from the Bay Area that brought a contempt for government ethos here. Marijuana emerged as the county ’s next-generation commodity.

There is no reason people chose Humboldt to grow marijuana other than that Humboldt, as a society, allowed it to be grown. The same was true for neighbouri­ng Trinity and Mendocino counties. Collective­ly, the three are known as the “Emerald Triangle,” a globally renowned pot paradise.

Swami Chaitanya has been growing marijuana on a farm in Mendocino County for 15 years, drawing water from the Blue Rock Creek, a tributary of the protected Eel River.

He called the traditiona­l marijuana economy one of “shared risk,” where everyone on the farm-to-joint supply chain could be busted if just one was caught. He felt protected by that shared risk in a way he no longer does after declaring himself to the state.

“The location of the farm was the one thing no one could mention; it was the biggest secret in the business,” said Chaitanya, who has spent nearly $40,000 in the permitting process. “Our whole attitude toward the government has always been, ‘Come and get me.’”

Chaitanya arrived along with thousands of other growers after state voters approved Propositio­n 215 in 1996, which made marijuana legal for medical use. The law opened a grey market for pot that made it virtually impossible to crack down on illegal “grows.”

The farms moved farther into the forests, and with them came the environmen­tal damage from illegal road-building and water consumptio­n driven by a waterinten­sive, unregulate­d crop.

“Marijuana was just something you didn’t talk about openly,” said Mark Lovelace, referring to the political climate when he joined the Humboldt County Board of Supervisor­s in 2008.

The huge spike in cultivatio­n drew public concerns about rising crime and environmen­tal impact, which was increasing­ly obvious. Many of the cannabis migrants were far less back-to-the-land than in-it-for-the-money, and the politics around pot began to shift.

“The grows and the people doing them became very in your face,” Lovelace said. “Now, though, the free market is going to drive people out of those hills. They won’t be able to make money there anymore.”

Greenhouse­s made growing anywhere possible, and many of those more recently cultivated places have required makeshift roads and hilltop grading to connect them with markets. Aerial shots show once-pristine ridgelines pocked with bald patches, grows that more closely resemble mining operations than agricultur­e.

But local law enforcemen­t was ill-equipped to take on what even marijuana enthusiast­s could see as an industry running wild. Medical marijuana use had given many farmers a legal cover to grow — it was nearly impossible to prove they were not producing for the medical market — and local law enforcemen­t agencies have never been big enough to police Humboldt’s armed and hidden industry.

Sheriff William Honsal, a police officer’s son known locally as Billy, grew up in Humboldt as the county cannabis industry exploded.

“You had people coming here, many in organized crime, that just wanted to suck as much out of this county as they could,” he said.

Local law enforcemen­t carried out raids by helicopter — tactical teams fast-roping down onto pot farms — backed by long police convoys that churned up the dirt roads. Those operations were more symbolic than substantiv­e, numbering roughly 100 a year in a county with more than 10,000 growing operations.

Now Honsal has state law and more effective tools to use — civil penalties rather than criminal. No longer is there a grey market for marijuana; growers either have a permit to cultivate or they do not. If they do not, a $10,000-a-day fine can be levied against them for each violation and, after 90 days, a lien attached to the property.

“We are very happy that the lines are drawn as black and white,” Honsal said. “There’s too much risk and not enough reward, and in years past here, it was the opposite.”

The south fork of the E el River, protected by state and federal law, runs through Humboldt’s marijuana heartland. The colour of dull copper, it flows swiftly after a recent storm despite an ongoing drought, snow appearing auspicious­ly on the top of Rainbow Ridge.

But the river’ s colour is a problem, even if the depth of its channel this time of year is where it should be. Silt clouds the current as it runs through valleys heavy with marijuana cultivatio­n, which both draws water from the river and fills it with run-off that stifles the once-thriving Coho, Steelhead and Chinook salmon population­s.

Scott Greacen, the environmen­talist, works for the non-profit Friends of the Eel River. With the group’s executive director, Stephanie Tidwell, the two guided a few kayaks down the south fork recently, through giant redwoods and invisible cannabis plantation­s, like those in Panther Gap that Greacen said hold “more weed than you’ve ever seen.”

“They’re like the ‘Lost Boys’ up there,” he said, citing Peter Pan’s clan to characteri­ze the oddball collection of Brazilians, Spaniards, Portuguese and others who have grown up high in the hills for decades.

Greacen first arrived in Humboldt nearly 30 years ago to participat­e in the fight over commercial logging in the Headwaters Forest, ancient and now protected. The demonstrat­ions marked Humboldt as a hive of environmen­tal activism.

But as marijuana cultivatio­n grew exponentia­lly in the “green rush” following Propositio­n 215, pot and environmen­tal protection have come into conflict. The consequenc­es of growing marijuana where it should not be grown have been devastatin­g.

In California’s dry summer months, which is the cannabis growing season, farms draw down the Eel and Mattole, along with their tributarie­s, to dangerousl­y low levels. “You could walk this whole thing in the summer,” Greacen said of the south fork.

The larger problem is the sediment that runs off the illegally graded farms and into the rivers.

Along the south fork of the Eel, it is easy to see the contrast. The kayaks loop around a bend and, where Bull Creek empties into it from a thick stand of forest, the water is as clear as vodka. As salmon run upstream, they must increasing­ly find these creeks, cold and clear, in place of the Eel itself to spawn successful­ly.

“Salmon Creek no longer has any salmon in it because there is so much dirt at the bottom,” Greacen said. Regarding Coho salmon, Greacen said, “If we lose them in the south fork, then we lose them in the Eel, and if we lose them in the Eel, then we lose them in the region.”

New state regulation­s seek to address water use, at least for those growers who decide to become legal. Run-off will be measured now, and growers fined sharply for violations.

Growers eventually will be required to build water tanks or ponds that will allow them to store water in the wet winter months and use it, rather than rivers, in the dry growing season.

“With water here, it’s feast or famine ,” said Cris Carrigan, director of the Office of Enforcemen­t at the State Water Resources Control Board. “The focus here is to help cultivator­s take advantage of the times of feast so they do not have to exercise their diversion rights in times of famine.”

On the banks of Redwood Creek, which feeds the Eel’s south fork, Jakubal has been preparing his nursery for legalizati­on for several years.

Bald, wiry with a buzzing energy, Jakubal listed several pending projects that he said will make him more competitiv­e in the legal economy.

In front of his property, the creek has been slowed by fallen trees and roots, intentiona­lly placed with the assistance of an environmen­tal consultant to form a natural pool. The slowed stream creates a salmon habitat and a water source from which Jakubal can draw in wet months.

He rarely needs to, and never in the summer. He built a 250,000-gallon catchment pool at the foot of his property, which he uses to fill several large storage tanks near his greenhouse­s at the top of it. But across the creek are two other farms, neither of which has made any water storage preparatio­n.

Jakubal’s business, Plant Humboldt, sells strains of young cannabis plants to growers, and the economics, even in this changing market, are good. There will be a retail side soon, with legalizati­on allowing every adult to grow as many as six plants without a license.

Inside his greenhouse­s sit hundreds of inch-high plants in small plastic trays, which bear handwritte­n labels identifyin­g strains such as “Pineapple MG” and “Dream Queen.” With little overhead, apart from the $22 an hour he pays his small crew of workers, Jakubal sells thousands of plants each year for as much as $50 each.

Meeting the new state regulation­s and paying taxes will cut into that by a sizable chunk. But Jakubal said that in his niche market he could increase business fivefold as Humboldt’s industry shifts from mass production to specialty items.

“We’re providing an experience here, a place people can come and pick their own plants,” he said. “There’s a history here, a culture here, and an incredible knowledge base. People will come to Humboldt County to get Humboldt strains from Humboldt growers.”

“It’s important to acknowledg­e that this did not happen overnight,” said Scott Davies over a plate of sashimi at one of two sushi restaurant­s this town of 18,000 people supports on its thriving, if still largely illegal, economy.

Davies is the face of modern Humboldt cannabis: closecropp­ed greying hair, stylish glasses, a grandfathe­r pot farmer whose business already complies with environmen­tal regulation­s. For years, he has been preparing for his thriving family business to be legal.

Yes, the new regulation­s, or any regulation­s at all, appear overwhelmi­ng to many of his colleagues. But surprise, including surprise from state officials that more growers are not complying, is no excuse for not being ready for what is unfolding.

“At every level in this process, the learning curve is at its steepest right now,” said Davies, 50, who moved to southern Humboldt County three decades ago to farm marijuana.

Davies’s main business is Winterbour­ne Farms, which spreads out along 40 acres next to the Mattole River. The operation produces as much as 1,500 pounds of cannabis a year and now employs his four children and son-in-law.

He has remade his business over the years. Where once he had to house and feed seasonal workers to harvest the crop, today he has turned manufactur­ing space in this city’s designated “Cannabis Innovation Zone” into a distributi­on hub.

His marketing of Humboldt marijuana, which he described traditiona­lly as a mix of “dude bro” and “reggae” messaging, is as polished as a product from an elite craft brewery. “Humboldt Legends” comes in logoed bags containing a small pack of five joints inside, sealed with the commercial stamp of a state-regulated product. The retail cost for the pack is $26.

What Davies fears is the resilience of the illegal marijuana trade. He said until the state licenses enough cannabis shops — and cracks down on those selling illegally — retailers will continue buying from the black market “because it’s cheaper and because they can.”

“I don’t expect the black market to go away,” Davies said. “But I do expect not to have to compete with it in the regulated retail channel. In a world where all trade is in the black market, my skills mean nothing.”

 ?? PHOTOS: BONNIE JO MOUNT/WASHINGTON POST ?? Artur Gautier prepares to water cannabis plants at Winterbour­ne Farm in Honeydew, Calif., earlier this month. The farm is owned by Scott Davies, who advocates progressiv­e social and environmen­tal business practices. Legalizati­on is proving a challenge...
PHOTOS: BONNIE JO MOUNT/WASHINGTON POST Artur Gautier prepares to water cannabis plants at Winterbour­ne Farm in Honeydew, Calif., earlier this month. The farm is owned by Scott Davies, who advocates progressiv­e social and environmen­tal business practices. Legalizati­on is proving a challenge...
 ??  ?? Inside the Plant Humboldt nursery sit hundreds of inch-high plants labelled with names like “Pineapple MG” and “Dream Queen.”
Inside the Plant Humboldt nursery sit hundreds of inch-high plants labelled with names like “Pineapple MG” and “Dream Queen.”
 ?? PHOTOS: BONNIE JO MOUNT/ WASHINGTON POST ?? “People will come to Humboldt County to get Humboldt strains from Humboldt growers,” said Mikal Jakubal, who owns Plant Humboldt nursery. Under legalizati­on, Jakubal sees a future for the county that resembles wine tourism in other districts.
PHOTOS: BONNIE JO MOUNT/ WASHINGTON POST “People will come to Humboldt County to get Humboldt strains from Humboldt growers,” said Mikal Jakubal, who owns Plant Humboldt nursery. Under legalizati­on, Jakubal sees a future for the county that resembles wine tourism in other districts.
 ??  ?? Lumber was once part of a boom economy in Humboldt. Some speculate legal pot will end the cannabis boom here as large agribusine­ss firms that can afford to comply with regulation­s push out smaller operations.
Lumber was once part of a boom economy in Humboldt. Some speculate legal pot will end the cannabis boom here as large agribusine­ss firms that can afford to comply with regulation­s push out smaller operations.
 ??  ?? Marijuana from Humboldt that used to sell for $1,200 a pound three years ago is now selling at a 75 per cent discount. “The free market is going to drive people out of those hills,” says Mark Lovelace, a member of the county’s board of supervisor­s....
Marijuana from Humboldt that used to sell for $1,200 a pound three years ago is now selling at a 75 per cent discount. “The free market is going to drive people out of those hills,” says Mark Lovelace, a member of the county’s board of supervisor­s....

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