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Reflections of a Retired Pot Farmer

Twenty years ago, in our rural subdivision south of Laytonville, a man bought three parcels from the same Los Angeles heiress who also sold us our land. Dave, as I’ll call our neighbor, didn’t live here; he drove up from San Francisco on weekends — camping, hiking, stopping by to chat, share cookies and give us the latest gate code to his parcel by the creek so we could swim.

For a few years, we didn’t know Dave grew pot. We learned from Ricky, his tenant farmer, a sweet guy from Humboldt, who told us about his operation one day when he passed us on the road in his turquoise pickup and invited us over to check out his “girls.”

We became pot farmers, too, when friends offered to bring us clones and teach us how to grow, harvest, cure and trim. I worried a lot, then figured why not?, since Prop 215 said it was legal to grow a few plants for medical use. My portfolio of nasty knee and disk X-rays in hand, I breezed through my exam at MediCann in Ukiah and got my medical marijuana card.

Yesterday, I hiked Dave’s parcel, the one where he camped and where Ricky had his garden. A bank now owns all three parcels and has put them up for sale. Apparently, Dave used his land as collateral on a business loan that didn’t turn out well.

It was sad to see the remains of Ricky’s garden hidden among the oaks and madrones. The fencing to keep out the deer and wild horses had collapsed; so had his fabric pots. It was not a sinister place like the grows law-enforcement agencies sometimes show the public — garbage-strewn landscapes where drums of diesel fuel and bags of rat poison leak into nearby streams. At Ricky’s garden, a few half-inch irrigation pipes came and went to nowhere, but the fabulous redwood combination shower and outhouse he built (and always intended to plumb) was still standing. Above the garden, an aluminum drying shed was holding its own in the clearing; rust and critters had invaded a propane grill, a wood stove and a couple of trailers. 

The scene reminded me of the day my partner visited Billy to consult with him about a pest problem.

“You just missed the DEA,” Ricky called that afternoon. “Sixteen vehicles came and cut down all my plants.”

“Are they headed here?” Our driveway was a stone’s throw from his.

“They’re gone. You’re safe. They handcuffed me and my gerry crew, but they didn’t arrest us."

“Your gerry crew?” 

“Geriatrics,” he laughed, despite his trauma. “They’re all retired. Don’t get enough from Social Security to live on, so I hire them to trim. Best crew I’ve ever had.”

“Are you OK?”

“I worked so hard on those girls, and all that’s left is nothing.”

Dave hired a big-time San Francisco attorney, and eventually everyone’s legal troubles went away. Ricky returned to grow at Dave’s for many more summers despite the brain injury he suffered in a diving accident. He was happy. He had fallen in love, had a wife and child and painted houses for a living. We weren’t sure that Dave, who was deep into his business by then and rarely visited, even knew Ricky still grew pot at his place. There were no more raids.

In 2014, as the California legislature debated new medical marijuana regulations, my partner and I joined dozens of small farmers in Mendocino County going public about growing weed. We attended meetings at the Grange and Harwood Hall, organizing ourselves and lobbying local and state politicians to consider the needs of small farmers. We stopped calling our crop by its street names, referring to it as cannabis to give it, and us, more legitimacy. We joined the Emerald Growers Association and a local farmers’ cooperative whose members shared information about regenerative farming practices, irrigation, distribution, manufacturing and permitting. The Laytonville Garden Club launched its amazing Cannabis Renaissance series, bringing a lawyer, a doctor, a lab owner, a plant breeder and soil and water scientists to share their expertise with local growers.

There was so much happening that I began covering our meetings for local papers, eventually convincing KZYX to host a cannabis talk show. In 2016, my partner and I proudly procured our first Mendocino County 9.31 program cannabis cultivation permit. Flow Kana distributed our newly legal buds, even filming a short documentary about our little farm, Wild Women Herbals. We hired an attorney and several consultants, created an LLC, and filled out endless state and county forms. We were poised to press “Send” on our 2017 California cannabis cultivator’s license application when we came to our senses. 

We were gerries now. We were too old to raise, cure and trim enough cannabis to cover our farm expenses and keep pace with the ever-growing, ever-changing list of costly county and state regulations. There were rules and fees for everything: water use and discharge, track and trace technology, zoning, building codes, bookkeeping, taxes, payroll and more. We couldn’t wrap our minds around all the red tape. We would wake up in a sweat at night wondering what form we had forgotten or which agency might pounce on us. The black market was a breeze compared to the bureaucratic nightmare called compliance.

We were sad, shocked, relieved and done. We continued to raise a few plants for personal use, but, next to them in our garden that year, we grew watermelon, pole beans, squash, kale, tomatoes, eggplant, zucchini and cucumbers.

Today, the garden below our house looks a lot like Ricky’s: Our pots are overgrown with grass; the weeds come up to my chest. We hope to hire someone this summer with a backhoe to help us haul up all that wonderful dirt we made for the flower and vegetable beds by our house.

I don’t miss the backbreaking work and constant worries of cannabis farming. But I do miss the beauty of the buds bursting with resin and terpenes in the fall. I miss the community of farmers and friends we made in our growing years. I miss the feeling that we were on the cutting edge of a green revolution and an exploding industry that could bring healing herb to people who needed it and ensure our financial stability for years to come.

I love and admire our friends who are still fighting the good fight, growing beautiful organic cannabis, paying the fees and taxes, complying with the laws and working with lawmakers to revise the most onerous, costly and unnecessary cannabis regulations. 

Meantime, there are a lot of us in the hills of Mendocino County who have abandoned our dream of becoming legal, respectable and profitable. Not all of us are old, but many are, and we pray we can survive on less. If the growing number of empty storefronts in Willits is any indication, the entire county must learn, and quickly, to survive on less.

I hope the bank sells Dave’s land to people we like. I hope the new owners are friendly, as Dave and Ricky were. I hope they will let us swim in the creek.

(Jane Futcher lives near Laytonville.)

8 Comments

  1. Charles Sargenti June 5, 2019

    Thanks Jane Futcher. I met you once outside of a BOS meeting. That was the one I told the board they should ask whether the ordinance they were contemplating was going to help or hinder pot farmers wanting to get legal. I don’t think that idea ever got any traction with them. Your article is an eloquent description of the result. Bless you.

  2. Lucinda Walker June 6, 2019

    Wonderful and timely article. It’s heartbreaking to see how the best intentions of California voters turned into too many family farmers worst experiences. I thank you for bringing a spot of compassion to this issue, both for other farmers, readers at large, and importantly, yourself.

  3. burnunit June 7, 2019

    Jane, Since you farmed at a time when the price per pound was at or near its highest, and you didn’t pay a dime of tax on that income, I have no sympathy for you.

    • The Dank Duchess June 8, 2019

      You might need to smoke some weed. Perhaps compassion will crop into your sad little heart. Pot prices have been in the skids for years. Contrary to popular belief, people were not becoming millionaires. Cannabis farming outdoors is ridiculously hard and the margins are very thin; especially considering all that can go wrong…pests by the millions, fire, thieves, bad weather, and having a mean neighbor who’d probably call the sheriff on little old ladies trying to BETTER the world with cannabis. Don’t buy into the narrative that pot farmers were banking the big bucks and didn’t give back. Pull the veil off your eyes. People yell that they want clean medicine as if the majority of righteous farmers were not only providing the best; at extreme cost difference. Do you know how much it costs to run a farm? Do you know that it’s a gamble every time? Your nervousness belys a sadness and a sense of lack that you may want to address instead of bleeding pain into the world. Perhaps smoke a joint.

  4. Upful Life June 7, 2019

    F*ck your taxes, Burn Unit. These folks put more than just money back into their communities. Take your shaming and judgement to the bar with your buddies. Nobody here wants any sympathy from a curmudgeonly old man

  5. jonah raskin June 9, 2019

    Glad to see real cannabis farmers coming out of the cannabis closet and telling real stories. Thanks,

  6. Mike Carter June 14, 2019

    A little clarification on Jane’s story about “Dave”.

    Dave did own three parcels in our subdivision near Laytonville. Unfortunately, Dave forgot to make payments on those parcels. Dave also forgot to pay the property taxes on the parcels, pay employees at another business he owned, pay the FISA taxes for his employees and also pay his road association dues. The road association was forced to sue Dave on three occasions and finally put liens on all of his parcels.

    Dave was eventually forced to file bankruptcy and the U.S. Bankruptcy Court appointed a trustee to manage Dave’s assets. It seems that Dave was $3.3 million dollars in debt for all the things he forgot to pay. Two of those three parcels recently sold to other owners in our subdivision and the U.S. Bankruptcy Court trustee paid the road association about sixty cents on the dollar that Dave owed. The road association took a loss of about $3000.00.

    The raid on Dave’s parcel where Ricky lost his garden took place on October 11, 2006 and was conducted by the DEA and the COMMET unit from the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office. They also conducted simultaneous raids on two other parcels here and took out over 2000 marijuana plants and 80 pounds of processed marijuana.

    • George Hollister June 15, 2019

      Mike, thanks. It’s always good to see the bigger picture that’s behind the scenes. I wonder what Dave is doing these days, if he’s still alive? What does he have to say? There are so many similar stories in recent Mendocino County history. Most will never be told, which is unfortunate.

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