Plummeting Marijuana Prices Create A Panic In Calif.

RockX

Banned
For decades, illegal marijuana cultivation has been an economic lifeblood for three counties in northern California known as the Emerald Triangle.

The war on drugs and frequent raids by federal drug agents have helped support the local economy — keeping prices for street sales of pot high and keeping profits rich.

But high times are changing. Legal pot, under the guise of the California's medical marijuana laws, has spurred a rush of new competition. As a result, the wholesale price of pot grown in these areas is plunging.

Demand Not Meeting Supply

In 1983, the Reagan administration launched a massive air and ground campaign to eradicate pot and lock up growers in northern California. Charley Custer, a writer and community activist, had just arrived to Humboldt County from Chicago. With the Reagan crackdown, Custer recalls, wholesale prices shot up — to as high as $5,000 a pound. That sudden and ironic windfall for those growers willing to risk prison time transformed the community.


"A lot of people were living on welfare and peanut butter and banana sandwiches for a long time before pot made it possible to be part of the middle class," Custer says.

Nearly 30 years later, Custer says that boom may be over.

"Outdoor growers are having a hard time unloading their fall harvest," Custer says. "And this is six months later and when some people do move it, they don't get nearly the price they were hoping for."


That goes for both legal growers who cultivate limited quantities of pot under the medical marijuana laws and illegal operators who often grow larger amounts.

Prices are now much less than $2,000 a pound, according to interviews with more than a dozen growers and dealers. Mendocino County Sheriff Tom Allman says some growers can't get rid of their processed pot at any price.

'Only The Good Ones Make It'

As recently as last December, things were still pretty upbeat. At Area 101, an events and healing center near Laytonville, local growers gathered to celebrate the Emerald Cup, an annual competition for the season's best pot buds. But the event's host, Tim Blake, says the mood has darkened since then.

"There's a tremendous amount of concern, borderlining on fear," says the former underground grower who now cultivates medical marijuana.

He says the drop in pot prices is in part the result of more growers and a more tolerant legal landscape. But he says another factor is quality. Indoor-grown marijuana is increasingly favored by dispensaries and consumers for its looks, consistence and potency. It costs more to produce than pot grown under the sun, but commands as much as double the price. That's one reason retail prices haven't hit the skids.

"What's happening is the people that don't have quality product aren't selling it," Blake says. "So they're the ones that are creating this panic. So it really comes back down to that, just like in every other agricultural industry. When you get too many vineyards and too many people growing vines out there, then only the good ones make it."

Matt Cohen is one of those growers who are making it. On an organic farm near Ukiah, Cohen raises chickens, grows vegetables and cultivates high-grade medical pot. He has avoided the downturn by distributing marijuana directly to patients. But other growers who rely on middlemen and dealers for legal and illegal sales are in financial trouble.

"And I know people, and they're living from credit card to credit card," Cohen says. "They're not even making money. It's just a lifestyle that they're in and the alternative is to go do what?"

Instability And Anxiety

In recent weeks the upheaval has spurred a series of unprecedented public forums about where things are headed for the marijuana industry, especially if Californians vote to legalize pot this fall.

"The displacement of persons deriving supplemental income through clipping, gardening and distribution of marijuana dwarfs the number of growers who will lose their income entirely," says local activist Anna Hamilton, who organized a gathering in Garberville. She says the broader community is already feeling the ripple effects of falling pot prices.

"There are business foreclosures, storefronts closing. There's a lot of instability and anxiety," she says.

Or maybe not. California's pot economy is transforming, and it's starting to resemble a real commodities market where only big players can compete. It's a shift that could leave some growers in the dust.


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126806429

Just think if they do legalize it in California, you wonder if the big corporations will move in and flood the market. RJ Reynolds could be the next big kingpin in the legal selling of marijuana cigarettes. No more little growers, a mass produced product available everywhere.
 
This is good evidence to support the claim we have always made that legalizing pot would ruin the business for smugglers and cartels.
 
I don't think that was Dweebway's intent for posting this article but you are correct.

You are incorrect.

Hydroponics is the main reason why. No one wants that outdoor bush weed anymore. Other than the Rastafarians.

Though there is a way the farmers can be saved but I am not into giving advice to drug dealers.lol

I like Reagan's policy of going after the crops. Making drugs more scarce and more expensive and less affordable, thus less people will smoke it. Especially children.

Sure legalizing pot would be very profitable to the government, though at what cost? At the cost of the souls of our children? How many great minds would be ruined?

Yes, kids today growing up think that drug use is the norm but us older folks know better. And until the older generation passes away? There is no way legalizing pot will ever fly.

Maybe Hippie parents and English men, but most elders of Europe(in America) and world wide KNOW that drugs is bad.

They'd have to wait another 20 years till all these pot heads grow up and pot use becomes more and more tolerated.
 
You are incorrect.

Hydroponics is the main reason why. No one wants that outdoor bush weed anymore. Other than the Rastafarians.

Though there is a way the farmers can be saved but I am not into giving advice to drug dealers.lol

I like Reagan's policy of going after the crops. Making drugs more scarce and more expensive and less affordable, thus less people will smoke it. Especially children.

Sure legalizing pot would be very profitable to the government, though at what cost? At the cost of the souls of our children? How many great minds would be ruined?

Yes, kids today growing up think that drug use is the norm but us older folks know better. And until the older generation passes away? There is no way legalizing pot will ever fly.

Maybe Hippie parents and English men, but most elders of Europe(in America) and world wide KNOW that drugs is bad.

They'd have to wait another 20 years till all these pot heads grow up and pot use becomes more and more tolerated.

Please, good sir, name a single ill effect of marijuana.
 
This is good evidence to support the claim we have always made that legalizing pot would ruin the business for smugglers and cartels.

exactly....there is so much blatant evidence for legalizing marijuana it boggles the mind how anyone can be against it.....ESPECIALLY conservatives, unless they are the conservatives who believe morality is to be legislated, just like the folks who outlawed booze....

and we all know how well that turned out...unfortunately, BOTH parties were for prohibition and the majority of americans were as well....hence why it passed enough muster to get a constitutional amendment....well..about a decade of that and we see what a bad idea it was....

legalize marijuana, tax it, regulate it so we don't get brick
 
Webb as usual is full of shit, an interview with one dude.
Hightimes does a city by city listing. Quality Ganja is $400 oz and not falling a bit.
Heck I'd love to pay about half that.
 
Please, good sir, name a single ill effect of marijuana.
One picture worth 1000 words:

avatar654_1.gif
 
When the cartels start killing off their competition, as they usually do, the price will go back up....
 
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