Probiotics & Cannabis Magazine June/July 2015 | Page 9

my parents purchased in 1975. They moved up to "the hill" in the spring of 1982, I was born that September. Those were the early days of the Emerald Triangle Cannabis boom. As masons, bricklayers and carpenters, my people moved to Northern California to homestead but they underestimated the difficulties involved. They were lucky enough to have good neighbors and a strong, supportive community. They found work in the building trades and soon found themselves also participating in a side vocation that helped folks to make a go of homesteading in arid, harsh country. In those days, cannabis was about personal use and a means to an ends, a way for people to survive and live out in the woods the way they wanted to. Throughout the Reagan and Bush years, the government used Marines and National Guard troops against the citizens of Northern California. In July of 1985 they landed a helicopter in the meadow below our place and proceeded to ransack the homestead. The federal government attempted to seize our land for the 30 cannabis plants grown in a communal family garden. This vast governmental overreach is the background to the modern cannabis movement and should provide insight into the difficulties that heritage cannabis farmers face in overcoming decades of stigma from living under a deviant label applied by the dominant culture by force. This traditional backdrop shifted in monumental fashion with the passage of California Proposition 215 in 1996. Prior to that, all cannabis had been illegal everywhere in the U.S., a black and white issue. With the passage of 215, there became a gray area that was written in broad fashion to protect citizens who found relief, support or enhancement of wellness from cannabis use. As with all industries, cannabis cultivation developed and industrial practices began to be applied. Unlike other industries however, there were no guidelines, no best management practices, no standards of practice, and no effective regulation. The heavy-handed attempt at enforcement served to force the plant further underground, where it became more accessible to organized crime and large scale criminal operators. There came a time in rural California when cannabis became an end in itself. Two kinds of people arrive as cannabis emigrants to the rural communities; homesteaders and resource extractors. In the old days, most of the people were homesteaders; in the past ten years the balance has shifted somewhat and we see the negative reports splashed across the headlines. The Emerald Growers Association (EGA) was formed in 2010 from a merger of the Humboldt Growers Association and Mendo Grown. The founders led the organization through great turmoil and tribulation; half of the founding board members had their farms raided in that first year and it was a very scary time for the community. We thank the Founding Members of EGA for their effort in the cause, you laid the foundation for the work we now seek to accomplish. EGA spent a tremendous amount of energy fighting the subpoenas of the 9.31 program and working to backstop the safety of our community during the years of 2011-2012 and the fight left everyone weary and bewildered. What had seemed such a heady and promising time not long before had collapsed into the same old feeling of unease and fear. 9