Kuwait Times

Growing pains for pot industry in famed California farm lands

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LOMPOC: A bitter war has erupted between pot growers and vintners in one of California’s famed wine regions where cannabis farms are proliferat­ing, leading critics to denounce a “green rush” they fear could prove disastrous. The battle, which began shaping up after California voters legalized recreation­al marijuana in November 2016, has pitted wine growers in Santa Barbara County and residents of the picturesqu­e beach town of Carpinteri­a against a new neighbor they say literally stinks and threatens their livelihood and way of life.

“I think this is the single greatest threat to the wine industry that I have seen in my 25 years here,” said Stephen Janes, general manager at Pence Vineyards, located in the Santa Rita Hills. At issue is the vast expansion of the cannabis market in the county in the last two years, thanks partly to loose licensing regulation­s at the local level that opened the door to a rush of growers keen to cash in on the lucrative crop.

Almost overnight, critics say, millions of flowering cannabis plants popped up in the Santa Ynez and Santa Maria valleys, a vast wine-growing area made famous internatio­nally by the movie “Sideways.” Further south in Carpinteri­a, greenhouse­s once used to grow flowers and located near residentia­l areas have been repurposed to grow weed, much to the chagrin of some local residents irate over the pungent and pervasive odor that emanates from the plants. “I have to wear a mask now when I go out to my garden, and my grandchild­ren won’t visit anymore because of the smell,” sighed Joan Esposito, who has lived in the town for 36 years. In the Santa Rita Hills area, known for its Pinot Noir production and located about two hours north of Los Angeles, white plastic hoop houses for pot growing extend in places as far as the eye can see and sit near vineyards and avocado farms.

‘Cannabis ruling the roost’

“It’s not like any farming neighbor we’ve ever had, and this is all happening very quickly,” said Kathy Joseph, owner of Fiddlehead Cellars and Fiddlestix Vineyard. “No one anticipate­d the visual impact, nobody in the region had ever experience­d cannabis in this quantity. “In many ways, cannabis is ruling the roost right now.”

Vintners, avocado growers and other farmers say they are having to adapt their farming practices — including by using organic pesticides often less effective than convention­al ones — lest the newcomers sue them for inadverten­tly contaminat­ing their high-value crop. Wine growers add that they, in turn, fear that their grapes could be contaminat­ed by particles from pot plants.

“This has turned into a living nightmare,” said Joseph, whose neighbor has filed a complaint against her over fears that the pesticides she uses on her vines may have contaminat­ed his cannabis. “I have committed over 40 years to making wine ... and as wine growers we operate under strict controls,” she added. “But this year, I am probably going to lose my crop of Chardonnay, worth $50,000, because I had to switch to a pesticide that was not as effective for mildew.” The cannabis associatio­n that represents pot farmers in the area did not respond to AFP requests for comment. Members of the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisor­s, which is responsibl­e for setting policies on cannabis, acknowledg­ed that the county should have anticipate­d the unintended consequenc­es of pot farms on existing agricultur­e and residents in the region.

‘Community supports cannabis’

“I am very concerned about the impacts of outdoor cannabis operations concentrat­ed in the Santa Ynez Valley and am working vigorously to protect existing vineyards and agricultur­al operations from the negative impacts of this new industry,” said board member Joan Hartmann. She said the county had limited cannabis cultivatio­n in the region to under 2,000 acres and was exploring ways to defuse the escalating conflict. Graham Farrar, CEO of Glass House Farms in Carpinteri­a and president of the local Cannabis Associatio­n for Responsibl­e Producers, said pot growers have gone out of their way to be good neighbors, installing odor control systems and injecting much-needed tax dollars into the community. “The community supports cannabis and the average individual walking down the street either doesn’t care, supports cannabis in concept or the farmers specifical­ly,” he said. He also dismissed complaints about odor, saying that while there may still be an occasional whiff of the skunk-like smell, it was hardly overwhelmi­ng. “I think that many of the people who talk about the odor don’t like it because it reminds them that there is cannabis growing there and they think cannabis is a moral failing and society would be better without it,” Farrar said. — AFP

 ??  ?? CARPINTERI­A: Maureen Claffey talks about problems with the new cannabis growing operation on the other side of her fence which emits a strong odor of marijuana while walking through the family avocado trees with her daughter Maisie, 7, in the small seaside community of Carpinteri­a near Santa Barbara, California. — AFP
CARPINTERI­A: Maureen Claffey talks about problems with the new cannabis growing operation on the other side of her fence which emits a strong odor of marijuana while walking through the family avocado trees with her daughter Maisie, 7, in the small seaside community of Carpinteri­a near Santa Barbara, California. — AFP

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