Resiliency and Community: A Story of Determination as the August Complex Swept Over a Cannabis Farm

The fire burned up to the fence on this cannabis garden.

The August Complex burned up to the fence on Jennifer Procacci and Joey Gothelf’s cannabis garden near Covelo. [Photo from @wildlandcannabis]

As much as wildfires destroy so much in their path, the people facing the fire often show strength and find a sense of community in the face of adversity that makes them both stronger as individuals and as neighbors.

37-year-old Jennifer Procacci, a cannabis cultivator who lives northeast of Covelo by the Black Butte Campground, and co-owns Wildland Cannabis, said she came through the experience feeling much more connected to her neighbors and feeling personally resilient.

“We were aware of the fire encroaching upon us for several weeks,” she told us. “We began preparing. We weedwhacked down to the dirt. We took all our propane containers and put them out in the field…This was all two weeks before the fire made it to us.”

Eventually, the area was put under an evacuation warning. Then on September 7, under hot and dry conditions, the August Complex began to push up the ridge behind Procacci and her business partner’s property.

Procacci said she hadn’t really been worried, but then this day she was listening to the Forest Service do an online update. “The person had this soothing voice,” she said. But then she realized that he was saying that the fire was going to come through her area. “The fire was on the ridge behind my property and firefighters were going to ‘lead” the fire down my ridge,” She realized, “I knew I should probably get my stuff together and get out of there.”

A friend offered to come help her evacuate. But soon after he hung up, he called back. The Oak Fire north of Willits had exploded near him and he was forced to evacuate. Eventually, in spite of his own concerns, he still showed up and began helping her gather her belongings

“We packed up my whole house,” she said. “We got the Mandatory Evacuation [Order]. We took up all my stuff and left.”

“Then the next day the sky was black and red,” she explained. “We’d never seen anything like this before.” She said even the firefighters she talked to seemed unsettled by the strange wine red skies.

Procacci was glad she left. “I wasn’t interested in putting myself in a life threatening situation,” she told us. But she kept in touch with those who stayed.

“We had a neighbor that stayed behind and did not evacuate,” she explained. “He gave us text updates…He went and cut a line around our outhouse…My neighbor saved his house and his neighbor’s house ”

Mexico Ridge burning above the geodesic dome situated on Wildland Cannabis's property.

Mexico Ridge continued burning above the geodesic dome situated on Wildland Cannabis’s property even after Jenn Procacci hiked back in. [Photo provided by Jenn Procacci]

Eventually, the fire calmed down around her property. And even though the area was under an Evacuation Order, Procacci’s neighbor told her that she could probably come back. She was worried about their plants. Because the smoke was so thick, there was no solar to draw water. “Our well wasn’t pumping,” she explained. “[The plants] hadn’t been watered in about a week.”

Because of the Evacuation Order, Procacci wouldn’t be able to drive past the checkpoints so she decided to hike back in while carrying her Honda 2200 generator so that she could pump water to take care of her plants. “I knew that if I didn’t have any power I couldn’t run my water,” she explained.

Joey Gothelf, Procacci’s business partner in Wildland Cannabis said that Procacci was incredibly determined. “She hiked in like a champ, like a badass,” he said in amazement.

Procacci tried to downplay the experience of carrying a backpack with supplies and hauling a generator in her hands overland to her property. “The Honda 2200 weighs about 50 pounds,” she explained. “I only had to carry it like a mile. Once I was inside the evac zone, I had a neighbor [already inside the zone] come and get me.”

She admitted, “It was really awkward…I was carrying the generator by the handles and I did have to climb up this really steep hillside.”

Once there she was able to see that the fire had stopped at their garden’s boundary. “It melted our deer fencing,” she said. “But, I have friends who lost everything.”

She said she was delighted at how kind the firefighting crews were. “The day I got up to my land, there were a lot of Forestry Service and BLM…They were so complimentary about the plants…They definitely were working to protect people’s gardens…They were from all over–from Montana, Minnesota, from New Mexico and even one from Mexico.”

When she got back, she and her neighbors began working to help not only each other but those who were outside the evacuation zone and unable to check on their properties. “Once I was back on my land, it felt like I was on another planet. The world got very small. It was just me and my neighbors trying to take care of problems. I got to make amazing community connections. We all felt really resilient. It is just what the cannabis community has always felt like–working together.”

Before the fire, she hadn’t known all who lived nearby, but the fire changed that. “One of my neighbors I hadn’t even met…and now we’ve become really close,” she explained. “He invited me up for dinner for the first five nights I was back…Either I would go or someone would bring it to me.” She added in awe, “Someone bringing you a hot meal at the end of the day is the most amazing thing.”

She noted that this neighbor wasn’t the only one she built ties with. “I’ve just become really close to the three neighbors that are nearest,” she told us. “We were all trying to take care of each other’s gardens. There were a lot of people texting and calling us, asking us to water.”

She expects the camaraderie to last and make their neighborhood better. “It was a real opportunity to build community…We’ve talked about doing land projects together [in the future].”

Gothelf, Procacci’s business partner, agreed that the fire bound the residents of the area together.  Living in a rural area, he explained, “We’re often times left to fend for ourselves. You are not going to sit around and wait for people to help you.” He noted that because there were so many fires across California and resources were stretched so thin that there was “an absence of firefighters” in their area. “We’re up here alone,” he said. “Houses spread out. It is good to know we have tough, resilient neighbors…That’s just the spirit of Covelo.”

Spots of fire still continued to burn after Jenn Procacci returned to her land.

Spots of fire still continued to burn after Jenn Procacci and later Joey Gothelf returned to their land. [Photo provided by Jenn Procacci]

Gothelf, who says he has been back to the property almost everyday since the Evacuation Order was downgraded, described the experience and the landscape as surreal. “The ground is black everywhere you look,” he told us. “There are still smoking trees. There are still spot fires. It is crazy how much time can elapse, then the wind will pick up and a spot fire will pop up.”

The understory of the forest is swept almost clean he said. “The forest floor is pretty bare except all these little lines of white ash where every piece of wood was,” he explained. “The meadows–just black.” But he said, there is some sign of animal life. “I can see all these burrows that have been re-dug..little dots of brown where all these burrows popped back up.”

The two partners are somewhat concerned about the effect of smoke and ash on their cannabis harvest. But both are very hopeful the flowers are unaffected. “I am on the edge of the national forest,” Procacci explained. “Everything that was burning around me was pasture and meadows and trees.” She feels that if there had been homes or vehicles that had burned that might have effected the final product.

Gothelf agrees. “I don’t necessarily think [the smoke and ash are] going to be an issue,” he said. He said they are shaking or blowing the ash off and eventually washing the buds. “As soon as I have a dry bud, I’m going to get it in for…testing,” he said explaining that is a normal part of the harvest process anyway and he believes the tests will show the flowers won’t have been damaged.

“Cannabis is a survivor and is a tough plant,” he said and unspoken was the comparison with the rural people who grow it.

But beyond the resiliency of the individuals who grow the plant, Jennifer Procacci says it was working together with her neighbors that not only helped her farm survive but built strong bonds that she thinks will last long after new green grass grows in her black meadows. She told us, “It was the power of community that helped me through this experience.”

A butterfly and soot smudged fingers.

A moth and soot smudged fingers. [Photo provided by Jenn Procacci]

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Gazoo
Guest
Gazoo
3 years ago

Great story!!
Thank you for the share.
As far as the lady involved…. puff on!!
💨💨💨

Ps; big hugs miss Kym!!

Willie Bray
Guest
3 years ago
Reply to  Gazoo

🕯🌳I second this post and this whole story, thank you Kym for a good heart story. 👍🏽👍🏽

Keahi
Guest
Keahi
3 years ago

Kym, great article, thank you. These folks deserve recognition. With their typical modesty, Jenn and Joey didn’t mention that Wildlands Cannabis brought home an Emerald Cup award last year. This article gives you an idea of the determination, commitment and connection with nature that made that possible. Love you guys, so proud of you, and so glad you prevailed!

john
Guest
john
3 years ago

There is no way those plants are unaffected. Sorry to hear and glad to read everyone is ok.

A
Guest
A
3 years ago

That bud will smell and taste like liquid smoke.

Steeze
Guest
Steeze
3 years ago
Reply to  A

I love that people have no clue but still love to comment. It’s got a month of getting rained on. It’ll smell and taste plenty normal. Now, any dep that was ready to be cut as people evacuated that was all sticky and got fully covered in ash.. ya, that stuff might not be all that great…

Sleepy Alligator
Guest
Sleepy Alligator
3 years ago
Reply to  Steeze

Because anyone who has a clue wants their plants to be rained on the month before harvest right?

Willow Creeker
Guest
Willow Creeker
3 years ago

I don’t know what kind of herb that is- I harvested my full sun outdoors last week, no rain and no permits, hopefully no smoke taint.

knew it
Guest
knew it
3 years ago
Reply to  Willow Creeker

i knew you didnt know about growing

Steez
Guest
Steez
3 years ago
Reply to  Willow Creeker

Of course there are the early bird strains. Last week sounds early regardless, though. Most should go until at least the 10th

Remain calm
Guest
Remain calm
3 years ago

There’s nothing wrong with rain. I foliar beneficials until the last week so there’s no chance of rot. My ish clean as a whistle

A
Guest
A
3 years ago
Reply to  Steeze

What rain.lmao

Lori Keating Wright
Guest
Lori Keating Wright
3 years ago
Reply to  A

I say we support the smokey weed this year!…

Marc
Guest
Marc
3 years ago

Send it all to NC, it’ll go great with my bbq ribs and smoke pork shoulder.

Larry D Parker
Guest
Larry D Parker
3 years ago
Reply to  Marc

Eastern (vinegar) or Western NC (tomato based)? I swear, I cannot declare one over the other. Both are supreme/best of the best. How does anyone say one is best? They are both equally superior.

R-dog
Guest
3 years ago

I think people are going to have no choice this year if they want to smoke weed there going to get a certain amount of weed that has been on the area of the fire I mean all of calf. and Oregon covered in smoke

Redwood Dan
Guest
Redwood Dan
3 years ago

That’s a good read. Kym do you have a link to the fire story you put out a few years back of the 2 guys who drug trailers and water tanks of dried weed out of the fire zone?

JB
Guest
JB
3 years ago

Amids the sadness, what a great story. Thanks Kym.

Guest
Guest
Guest
3 years ago

Why do pot grows always look so regimented in the middle of devastated, sterilized patches of soil.

Gimmie a break
Guest
Gimmie a break
3 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Wow Kym what a beautiful view you have from your backyard!

Please educate this non-cannabis farmer: Does cultivating marijuana damage the environment? How about water usage? I am under the impression that growing this type of plant hurts the environment. Thx Kym.

Cy Anse
Guest
Cy Anse
3 years ago
Reply to  Gimmie a break

All farming damages the environment in the same sense that pretty much everything humans do damages things. Agriculture however does have a unique set of things that while viewed negatively from an environmental viewpoint are balanced by producing beneficial products (e.g. food) that we require to continue to exist. The big problem is the system has to be simplified to just the crop in order to maximize efficiency — everything else has to go.

You can easily argue that the benefit outweighs the damage and most folks accept that without blinking. But any agriculture tends to remove or eliminate the native vegetation and wildlife to make room for commercial production of a crop. It also tends to increase the nutrient flow through the system because of fertilizers and alters hydrology by diverting streams or pumping groundwater that is either lost through evaporation or picks up nutrients and salts when returning to streams.

Additional negative impacts are increases in the numbers of roads, increases in feral animals (cats especially) which prey on native wildlife, poisoning of native wildlife, spread of invasive species, altering dark skies with lighting, fragmentation of wildlife habitat, increases in noise disturbance, soil erosion, sediment input into streams, etc.

I’m not picking on cannabis farms with those statements, they are true of all kinds of agriculture. They just stick out more when the farms are carved out of existing forests and hills and tend to have a larger negative impact when they do that.

All that said, most aren’t any worse than the average golf course and many are significantly better and all golf does is provide a little amusement.

Gimmie a break
Guest
Gimmie a break
3 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Thank you both for your thoughtful responses to my question. (Although I believe that pot is a dangerous gateway drug that I would never want my kids using, I do appreciate your points of view.)

Anon Forrest
Guest
3 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Every alcoholic I know started on milk…

Legallettuce
Guest
Legallettuce
3 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Very Nice!! Need more of these. Then maybe I might consider goin legit, maybe

Gazoo
Guest
Gazoo
3 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Keep on keepin on miss Kym!!

Mingo
Guest
Mingo
3 years ago

Thank you for this story. That is a beautiful farm and I hope everything comes out OK for everyone affected by this fire.

Ernie Branscomb
Guest
Ernie Branscomb
3 years ago

With all the devastation caused by the wildfires this year It will be hard to profit on the local cannabis.

My opinion is “dance with who brung ya”. Market the product as “Humboldt Wildfire”, a completely new terroir. You will be amazed at the folks that will support the brand, knowing what the Farmers have gone through.

Lori Keating Wright
Guest
Lori Keating Wright
3 years ago

I agree, and hope it will be appreciated!

Dave Kirby
Guest
Dave Kirby
3 years ago

Remembering when Briceland Winery’s local vineyard got smoked in the Canoe Fire. Harvest had a smokey taste. As I recall Charles Shaw ( two buck chuck) bought the crop and sold the wine as “Barbecue Red”.

shortjohnson
Guest
shortjohnson
3 years ago

Team work.
Im a huge fan of team work and community building.

Good story

Bushytails
Guest
Bushytails
3 years ago

If it was saving someone’s house, or horses, or rescuing someone’s priceless family heirlooms, or whatever, I’d say great job… But it’s none of that. It’s just drugs. Someone violated evacuation orders and potentially put their life at risk, and the lives of first responders that might have had to rescue them (there’s a reason areas are evacuated, you know), for drugs. And we’re supposed to be impressed by this?

Legallettuce
Guest
Legallettuce
3 years ago
Reply to  Bushytails

The War On Drugs has been a brutal war. I can see where someone might wanna take whatever you can get as a victory. I am not opposed especially since no one seems to care about 200,000 COVID deaths.

thetallone
Guest
thetallone
3 years ago
Reply to  Bushytails

Thank God YOU don’t use drugs. No caffeine, alcohol, sugar or tobacco. Must be awesome to be a saint.

SmallFry
Guest
SmallFry
3 years ago
Reply to  Bushytails

Bushy.. actually, saving someone’s livelihood is also a kin to saving their house, and maybe their “heirlooms”.. Maybe someone’s heirloom isn’t shiny gems, or the like, but the land and livelihood they have taken a great deal and time and energy to create. You might think of weed as a “ drug”. Nature doesn’t manufacturer “drugs” that’s literally a man made concept.. This is literally an agricultural crop.

Is it dangerous to go back into a evac. Zone? Probably. Hopefully done with discression. People should be able to make those decisions For themselves with the understanding they are taking their safety into their own hands.. Loosing ones livelihood can also cause suffering. I know next time there is a large fire like this, I will probably not evacuate.. unless I can see signs of fire close…

Big Bang
Guest
3 years ago

Boo (edit) hoo… (edit) weed growers (edit) (edit) the earth.. (edit) all (edit) (edit)… Better now? (edit) potheads)…
See? Saved you a bundle of time to tend to your “medicine” (edit)… (edit) you!!!!!!!!!

STAY WILD
Guest
STAY WILD
3 years ago

Stay wild my friends

Jx
Guest
Jx
3 years ago

Worthless dirt bud, smoked ruined. Prices up I bet for prime early dep. fires ruin crops of all types, grapes oranges nuts.

Screwed Sideways
Guest
Screwed Sideways
3 years ago

Hooray for pot farmers… YOU are a community!

Is this, though, where marijuana farmers are heading?

https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/7-fatally-shot-at-marijuana-operation-in-rural-15549865.php

Looks like everyone there was killed, and the weed wasn’t taken!

This is the kind of community pot farmers create, and California is overrun with weed grows.

I don’t think there’s anything to be proud of here, and every pot farmer, is another American blowing off society and regular lifestyles for an aberrant and illegal existence, in the shadows of the drug industry…

The thought of a young woman hauling a Honda 2200 generator up a hill so she can water her 100 pot plants make me shudder for the younger generation, and makes me worried for the future of the country.

Pot farming is not beneficent, innocuous… Pot farmers are terrorists, and, they are destroying California, one patch at a time…

So good luck girl, hope you are not murdered for your weed, or because you competed with the wrong gang…

Screwed Sideways
Guest
Screwed Sideways
3 years ago

And this story:

https://www.foxbusiness.com/lifestyle/largest-california-wildfire-threatens-marijuana-growing-area

This story clearly indicates just how bad things are getting in Northern California!

I don’t think we are far from mass forcible eradication of criminal marijuana grows in California, which is rapidly becoming the most lawless area in the United States…

Screwed Sideways
Guest
Screwed Sideways
3 years ago

AND:

Growers who refuse to obey evacuation orders, who run blockades, hike around authorities: These folks value their “award winning cannabis” more than their own safety and lives!”

Imagine being so stupid as to refuse to leave during the largest fire in California history, while surrounded by the largest mobile fire-fighting force ever assembled! Then, what? These idiots fire their guns into the air to warn off possible thieves?

Guess who would need helicopter evac when the fire happens to them? Guess who will “overwhelm hospitals” during the worst pandemic ever? Hey, let’s waste public resources to protect our private illegal interests!

The selfishness and level of idiocy exhibited by these terrorists, the “cannabis farmers”, has to be beyond example in recent history!

My opinion: Mr Trump, shortly following his ultimate victory over polite society, in the lack of respectable, decent competition for the office, will order an all out war on un-taxed and illegal pot-farming, in which there will be great loss of life and forfeiture of property/wealth!

Watch for this to happen, in 2021 and beyond…

It completely baffles me that all you reactionary types are congratulating this person for continuing to resist and evade, in order to illegally farm a useless product in a dangerous location. I would have thought that someone would have said something about how wrong her actions are…

Thanks for your comments Bushytails…

Akasha
Guest
Akasha
3 years ago

Screwed sideways I guess you missed the part about how her farm is a LEGAL farm.
Of course you obviously don’t know anything about the cannabis industry or cannabis at all. You’re still back in the dark ages where you think it’s a gateway drug. I think milk is the gateway drug everybody who gets hooked on real drugs, mostly the prescription kind, drank milk first. 😆

Screwed Sideways
Guest
Screwed Sideways
3 years ago
Reply to  Akasha

Akasha:

Thanks for your comment… I started smoking weed, at 15, in 1967. I was a “wake and bake” stoner through 2010, when I gave it up for good. We were smoking Humboldt product, possibly well before you or many current growers were born, maybe before your parents were born.

Cannabis is a gateway drug. Milk is a food. Cannabis messes with a very delicate balance of neurochemicals, deranging a normal neural process, and causing many bodily systems to malfunction. One of those malfunctioning systems tells your brain that “you are ok” when you are not. And there is the problem…

Use of Cannabis is one thing, running around the authorities during an emergency because you think you are smarter than them, or because somebody told you that you probably could, is reckless, and stupid.

Whether or not this is a permitted grow, is not mentioned in this story. I think you are projecting.

I own a Honda 2200 generator, which I can barely haul up the stairs, much less travel a mile uphill with the thing in my hand!

You are missing the point! Pot farmers feel that they can do no wrong, since, hell, they are “just making a living” “growing the sacred flower” or “promoting the revolution”… Whatever, I’ve heard it all… I don’t care why you grow, but, we have government, laws, authorities, and those Sheriff Deputies and CHP officers, the Firefighting Crews and the idea of evacuations, are all to make you safe. That’s it. You are expected to stay out during an evacuation, not “stay out if you decide to obey”… Smoking pot, growing weed, it seems to make people think that the weed is more important than anything else!

As for Ms Kemp, she and her family are professional marijuana farmers, fully permitted, taxpaying landowners. In my book, she can stay home or flee, up to her! Like the folks in Trinity Pines, if you get burned up, it’s your problem!

This gal in the story, she chose to disobey the evac, and placed herself at risk, so, she broke the lawful order to evac, and then hiked in, carrying a heavy item, at great risk to her own safety. If you think this is acceptable, I can’t give you any more advice… She is not “a hero”, a rugged individualist, or a bastion of marijuana plant-rescue, what she is, is a very misguided person…

I personally have and will always evacuate my home, if a fire is close. It’s not my job to fight fires, and, I don’t want to be burned to death. Sounds very unpleasant. I may make up my mind to leave even before the fire comes near, since my safety and the safety of my animals and family is much more important than anything I own.

Your simple minded assertion that people drink milk and then do prescription drugs is very insulting and puerile. You shouldn’t make silly assumptions, or gross generalizations, as it’s not a really good look for someone attempting to debate a point.

Have a good weekend Akasha! Smarten up dear…

For sure
Guest
For sure
3 years ago

I guess you’ve never heard of civil disobedience . Or that cannabis is legal? How many are killed and maimed in car accidents ? Let’s get real here…HATE KILLS. There’s an epidemic of hate in the world, but thankfully , there’s the ongoing epidemic of love & peace.
That some folks choose to make their living growing a useful plant is a simple thing. The ignorance & greed of those (DuPont , Anslinger, Mellon& Hearst) who demonized& illegalized it is the true root of why we have what we have today. History much ? Enlarge your perspective & you may become less hateful.

Screwed Sideways
Guest
Screwed Sideways
3 years ago
Reply to  For sure

Thanks for your extremely typical “delusional pot-smoker” reply…

Legally grown marijuana, legally purchased marijuana, is “legal “. Non-permitted non-taxed marijuana is not legal…

Wasting land and human energy is pretty pathetic, avoiding authorities to water a useless garden at risk of personal safety is very stupid.

Think about what you wrote for a minute: there may be some bad stuff in the world, but it does not justify the risks taken by the person in this story.

Cy Anse
Guest
Cy Anse
3 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Kym, while I can respect an individual’s decision about staying a defending their property, you do have to recognize that your decision can put firefighters at increased risk if they feel obligated to come protect you when the fire approaches your property rather than backing off to a safe zone. That’s the general reason behind evacuation orders. Well that and those narrow roads get clogged fast when everyone does the same thing.

I think the county needs a “No Rescue if Not Evacuating” policy to make it clear that anyone who stays behind during an Evacuation Order is on their own. No dramatic helicopters racing in or engine crews staying behind to protect your house or grow when it puts their lives at risk on narrow, winding back roads. The problem is that firefighters are going to want to risk themselves to save someone because that’s part of the job culture.

If people are truly willing to bear the risk and the consequences, then let them as long as it doesn’t endanger others trying to save them.

SmallFry
Guest
SmallFry
3 years ago

Actually, I think reading that scribble caused more headache and brain damage than smoking any joint.. Screwed S. Lol.. There again, I did chose too read it.. Just like I would choose to smoke a joint or two.. Literally my choice is what we would choose to do, and if it’s harming no one… than it shouldn’t bother you.. If you feel Cannabis is inappropriate for you.. SS, don’t partake. Simple. And let’s see here.. simply watch a commercial for ANY prescription drug, guaranteed the side effects will be much worse than anything you have described here with cannabis…

Legal Smegal… Legal or not the discriminatory factor should be for consumers to choose, not a heavy handed gov…

As for a gate way drug.. there are literally many gateways to hard drugs, including depression, hanging out with the wrong crowd, legal prescription drugs, telling people that cannabis is extremely dangerous, to finally use it, find out it’s not, then figure someone must be lying about the harder substances as well.. OR actually having a completely dumbed down populous who can’t think or educate themselves, and thrives on misinformation … is probably the biggest gateway of them all…

And yes. This farmer made a choice to risk their safety to protect their livelihood. I come from a Long line of multi generational farmers, .. and I can guarantee.. They would have done everything in their power to A) keep the family safe.. and B) save their crops and livelihoods. It’s what farmers do! They are constantly battling with oppositional forces of Mother Nature.. this situation is no different.

I am not a fan of the permits or it’s process, but qudo’s to this farmer for saving their livelihood, and the neighbors coming together to make it happen!

Screwed Sideways
Guest
Screwed Sideways
3 years ago
Reply to  SmallFry

Drug use aside: personal choice… It’s your day, do whatever you want with it!

And absolutely anyone who resides in California is perfectly welcome to grow six plants. Totally legal. Pay no money to anyone for weed, ever, this is the way it should be… Personal cannabis, grown personally, hey, why not? Great idea!

I shouldn’t be bothered to watch a prescription drug commercial! Won’t take them, won’t watch a commercial for anything at all… Haven’t watched TV in two decades and don’t miss it…

I don’t need any weed at all, not ever. If I want some, I will buy it. The alcohol sellers of America would all be starved out, if everyone drank no alcohol, like me…

I do like some coffee, won’t smoke tobacco: this is not about the legality of marijuana! And sugar is the most addictive substance known to man, more than Methamphetamine or Nicotine…

No, we’re talking about the attitude that we will do whatever we want, without regard for societal laws, or official orders given to protect lives and personal safety! The person in this story blew past, into a closed area, with an idea to water marijuana in an evacuated region! The risks to her safety included fire, smoke, possibly even crazy people with guns bent upon protecting their properties, she risked fatigue, emaciation, dehydration, and faced high order stresses to save: some plants?

This isn’t sustainable farming, subsistence farming, growing food for personal use, no, it’s profit farming, raising raw cash, so that the farm can continue, so that the costs of farming can be recouped!

The risks to safety and the disregard of general orders are the issue! I don’t care if you smoke weed, I don’t care if you grow it!

Let’s be clear: If nobody feels that they have to follow laws, in a state with 40,000,000 people, then what are “wildland pot farmers?”

Terrorists. An environmental nightmare. Scofflaws. And, not too smart.

If everybody wants to farm 100 plants out near a forest, what will happen?

Soon, pot will become worthless, and, maybe, not everybody should be a pot farmer…

Between the grapevines being planted everywhere, and all the marijuana grows, soon there will be no water for people, and all the people who are left in the great state of California will be drunk, and completely stoned, all the time…

I will be gone then, so, via con Dios, amigo, and thanks for your comment!

Screwed Sideways
Guest
Screwed Sideways
3 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Indeed!

You, Ms Kemp, are an educated adult, a retired schoolteacher. I would not presume to tell a seasoned resident of your area what to do, much less a SoHum native. Do as you please, and even I, once ran an evac to return home during a “high water” episode that resulted in the evacuation of my town… After a long history in an area, we may well decide to do as we please according to our own reckoning of the risks.

Fires are less predictable. 85 people burned to death in Paradise was very sobering for me. The fires in 2018 out West of Lakeport and up the Scott’s Valley Road towards Ukiah were very concerning. Lots of people have big pumps, bulldozers and a lot of guts and determination to fight the fires themselves, which saved properties on Cobb Mountain in 2015… If you decide to stay and fight, heck, at least you died with your boots on!

I am not equipped to make a stand, and I have no pot farm. At all. Be safe, be well.

JB
Guest
JB
3 years ago
Reply to  Kym Kemp

Humans are weird.

geoffrey davis
Guest
geoffrey davis
3 years ago

please leave some water out and around for any wild life that has survived, cut in half plastic milk jugs / with a stick so small critters can crawl out and not drown….thanks.