Pubdate: Mon, 07 Mar 2016 Source: Porterville Recorder (CA) Copyright: 2016 Freedom Communications Inc. Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/AJm5UIc8 Website: http://www.recorderonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2887 Author: Don Curlee Note: Don Curlee is an agriculture consultant in the Valley. His column appears each Monday in The Recorder. NEXT GOLD RUSH MAY BE FARMING Unofficial of course but widespread is the belief that marijuana is already California's largest cash crop. Many who believe that also predict that "we ain't seen nuthin' yet." They project the belief that pot will lead to another gold rush economically, probably with as much wildcatting, thievery, claim jumping and bedlam as the first. If that were not so, they say, tighr controls on the illegal weed would have been relaxed long ago. With approval of marijuana for recreational use on next November's ballot it is not hard to believe that smoking it in a legal context will skyrocket. If voters determine that it can be smoked legally can it be long before it will be grown and distributed legally? If all that occurs it will certainly lead to an absolute bonanza for growers, and why wouldn't they enter in? In its illegal growing mode the weed has done well at all elevations and all climates and conditions offered by the dynamic California agricultural complex. "The damn stuff will grow anywhere," one law enforcement observer told me. However, with all that going for it I have found little enthusiasm or optimism among farmers and in the farm community for such a lucrative but hazy future. Some of the reluctance may come from the skepticism that says it is all too good to be true. But I think there is a greater depth to the reluctance. It is based on what I judge to be a moral commitment. I see farmers wanting to do the right thing in most circumstances. That is certainly an evaluation too broad to stand up in today's world, or even yesterday's. But coming to grips with a long illegal drug is difficult for farmers, especially those in that "greatest generation" category. Relating the production of marijuana to the growth of tobacco, so basic to some of our southern states, is an easy association to make. Once widely accepted, at least in the south, as a respected piece of the agricultural landscape, production of tobacco is coming under attack. How can tobacco's production be admired when the detrimental effects of its use has been so convincingly shown? Following that reasoning, how can farmers gain respect by growing a plant that might mimic tobacco in its ability to damage lungs and respiratory tissue? Even more extreme in marijuana's case is the possibility that brain tissue might be affected as well. Can there be any doubt about that? Farmers, as I observe and understand them, don't want to be part of a system that might cause damage - to humans or anything else. I think most of them would like to have a friendly session even with overeaters, explaining how it is not the food they eat, but the quantity that causes health risks. If farmers are so concerned about the weight and well-being of consumers who buy their food products, they are sure to be concerned about those who might smoke marijuana they have grown. Tobacco growers in the south and their neighbors and friends are becoming increasingly concerned about those who smoke that tobacco, especially young people. I've heard that tobacco growing is slowing down in the south. Is it possible that marijuana growing in California or elsewhere might slow down before it begins. Smugglers and importers will never accept that premise. But perhaps they haven't dealt with honest-to-goodness farmers, only back door criminals and smugglers. Business is business they say. But moral degradation has to be overcome lest a society deteriorates and crumbles. Farmers have been perennial supporters of a strong society, at least in America and California. If the legal production of marijuana is seen by many farmers as a threat to society the pot of gold may be way beyond the end of the rainbow. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom