Pubdate: Sun, 23 Aug 2009 Source: Ventura County Star (CA) Copyright: 2009 The E.W. Scripps Co. Contact: http://www.venturacountystar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/479 Author: John Scheibe CARTELS A GROWING CONCERN IN FOREST Officials Finding More Backcountry Pot Plots Last week's announcement that the 89,000-acre La Brea fire in northern Santa Barbara County might have been sparked by a Mexican cartel's marijuana-growing operation was little surprise to local law enforcement agents who are finding record amounts of pot on public lands. Agents from the U.S. Forest Service and Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department suspect the fire in Los Padres National Forest, which so far has cost more than $20 million to fight, was caused by an Aug. 8 cooking fire at a large marijuana garden 21 miles east of Santa Maria. Investigators say they found 30,000 marijuana plants and an AK-47 assault rifle in a remote canyon near where the wildfire started. They also found piles of garbage, propane tanks and a charred stove. The incident comes as narcotics agents with the Ventura County Sheriff's Department expect to seize a record amount of marijuana plants this year. The current record for the county -- 58,000 plants -- was set last year, authorities said. "We're probably going to see a lot more this year," possibly twice as much, said Sgt. Mike Horne of the department's narcotics bureau. Officials believe the problem is getting worse partly because of an increase in the influence of Mexican drug cartels. People working for large drug-trafficking organizations plant marijuana in the county's remote canyons and forests each year, with the growing season typically lasting from April to October, Horne said. In response, authorities take to the air in helicopters to spot marijuana gardens. On July 8, for example, agents from the Sheriff's Department, state Department of Fish and Game, U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency destroyed three large gardens in Los Padres containing a combined 17,800 marijuana plants. Some Advice for Hikers The gardens are a danger to hikers, because growers often booby-trap them or even directly confront hikers, Horne said. Garden workers are often supervised by armed foremen, he said. "If you run across a garden, the best thing to do is to get out of there as quickly and quietly as possible," Horne said, then contact authorities when in a safe place. Workers typically cut the tops off the plants, to harvest the most potent buds. Such pruning also keeps the plants from growing too tall, Horne said, making them harder to spot. Growers also try not to place the young plants in straight rows -- another thing easier to spot -- but "more often than not, they fail in some way," Horne said. The human mind requires some sort of order, foiling their attempts at randomness during planting, he said. Horne said growers typically run plastic irrigation pipes and drips to the plants. "If you see irrigation equipment out in the middle of the forest, it's very likely there's a garden nearby," Horne said. Other signs of an illicit growing operation include fertilizers and pesticides, shovels, picks and other gardening equipment. Workers often clear away brush and build terraces for the gardens, Horne said. The operations can cause soil erosion, he said, as well as other environmental damage, including runoff of pesticides and waste from open latrines. Propane Gets Packed In Growers prefer to use propane for cooking, he said, because wood-burning fires create smoke and are easier to spot. Horne said he's found many abandoned camps littered with propane tanks. Marijuana is not only grown in the forest gardens but also dried and packed there, Horne said. It's then carried out, sometimes many miles over primitive trails, to a waiting vehicle, he said. Firearms and ammunition have been left behind in almost every garden Horne and his agents have found, he said. "With the potential profit being in the millions of dollars, growers are becoming bolder in protecting their investments," he said. Michael Meyer, a 61-year-old Ventura man who has used medicinal marijuana for years to cope with numerous ailments, said that unlike much of the marijuana cultivated in Northern California areas like Humboldt County, the cannabis grown in Los Padres tends to be lower quality. That's partly because plants in larger operations don't receive as much care as those in a smaller, home-grown garden, he said. "This is pot that is going to supply the lower end of the recreational marijuana market," Meyer said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake