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Nearly 10-Acre Pot Farm Found in Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area

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Crews have been working the past two weeks to break down and clean up a marijuana growing operation found in Santa Monica Mountains NRA in California. NPS photo.

A sizable marijuana farming operation has been found in Santa Monica National Recreation Area, one that has yielded more than 3,500 pot plants, according to NRA officials.

The operation was found in late June, and rangers and assisting agencies have been working the past two weeks to remove debris and marijuana plants from the site and rehabilitate it to natural conditions.

Herbicides, pesticides, rodent fencing, two miles of plastic water hose, and fertilizer were all found at the site. Water was being diverted from a nearby creek to irrigate the plants, and native vegetation had been cut down to make room for the grow sites. These findings are consistent with other marijuana grow sites found on public park lands throughout the Santa Monica Mountains, including diverting water resources, altering topography, and introducing garbage, biohazards, and chemicals into park lands and watersheds.

“Marijuana cultivation is a serious and rising problem in the Santa Monica Mountains and other park lands across the country,” said park Superintendent Woody Smeck. “The environmental damage caused by marijuana cultivation in otherwise pristine natural areas costs approximately $12,000 per acre to clean up.”

In 2009, the National Park Service received additional funding from a bill introduced by U.S. Sen. Diane Feinstein to combat illegal marijuana grows on park lands. The funding "significantly increases the park’s capacity to deny marijuana growers access to park lands in the Santa Monica Mountains," a park news release said.

Marijuana plantations often occur in remote and hard to access park locations, away from designated trails and other places frequented by the public. Therefore, hikers and bikers are encouraged to stay on designated trails.

The public can help by reporting any suspicious activity to local law enforcement officials. Suspicious activity includes drip irrigation lines lying next to or in streams, collections of supplies and food left at roadside pull-outs, and piles of seedling cartons, food cartons, propane tanks, and camping equipment in unusual locations.

The marijuana growing season is approximately April through November. Park rangers will conduct regular patrols of remote parkland throughout the summer and fall to curtail growing efforts and prevent unchecked damage to the environment.

Comments

Can't do anything anymore, can we?


I hope they prosecute the people responsible for this to the fullest extent that the law allows, if and/or when they find and apprehend them. Our National Parks and National Recreation Areas are for the benefit and enjoyment of everyone, not criminals destroying the natural landscape for illegal profit.

That said, it would be great if they could permit the growing of medicinal marijuana for those who have the need.


With the amount of smoking' going on I would think NPS would have there own plots and be a money making proposition to save the environment:)


Prohibition is not working.


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