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notverysalmonlike
07-10-2006, 09:15 AM
Aerial school on marijuana teaches how to spot plants

Pilots from law enforcement agencies throughout the country have been in Mendocino County this week learning to identify marijuana gardens from the air at the Aerial Observation School.

Forty-two students from across California and as far away as the East Coast have been flying above Mendocino County's national forests and private forest land learning to spot the illegal gardens.

"It's the biggest class we've run," said Rusty Noe, commander of the County of Mendocino Marijuana Eradication Team.

Pilots and students fly deep into the forests and try to find marijuana gardens that Noe and members of COMMET have already identified. Noe said marijuana gardens can be recognized from the air because they are a different color than forest undergrowth and the plants are laid out in an ordered fashion..

Because of their size, Noe said he had seen gardens as large as half a mile across; pilots can often identify them from as high as 500 or 600 feet. Noe said it is actually easier to recognize marijuana gardens from higher up because it gives officers a fuller view of the area.

"The lower you fly, the harder it is to see it," Noe said.

Mendocino County has been hosting the observation school since 1998 with the help of the Butte County Sheriff's Department, Placer County law enforcement, the National Guard and the Drug Enforcement Agency, among others.

"The whole situation is a collaborative effort," Noe said.

Mendocino County hosts the school because there are many large marijuana gardens in the area. Officers also come to take advantage of the expertise of Noe and the officers on COMMET.

Aerial identification of marijuana gardens is essential to fighting the cultivation of marijuana, Noe said. COMMET receives some of its tips from the public, but most large gardens are hidden deep in the woods where people aren't going to see them.

Noe said he has been seeing more and bigger gardens this year than in previous years. He said he wasn't sure why that might be.

"It goes in cycles," he said. "This is the year they're going for broke."

Noe said the heavy rains that plagued Mendocino County until March have slowed the marijuana crop. He said COMMET has been seeing baby plants and plants in nurseries, two things that are almost unheard of this late in the season.

Smaller plants may mean a later harvest season for many marijuana growers. Normally, the harvest season runs between July and October. It is also during this season that COMMET performs raids on identified marijuana gardens.

COMMET often works with the California attorney general's Campaign Against Marijuana Planting to raid gardens and eradicate plants. In 2005, CAMP seized and destroyed 1,134,692 marijuana plants, which had an estimated street value of $4.5 billion.

In 2005, COMMET raided more than 397 marijuana gardens in Mendocino County and eliminated 144,159 marijuana plants.

The Aerial Observation Training School will continue training through Friday.

Source (http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/searchresults/ci_3998987)j

Pretty interesting. Sad to see they're trying to still keep us down. What you guys think about them going out and spotting our crops? *shakes fist* GAR! I really don't like it that they have a whole school dedicated to this crap. :-\ What can ya do though?

-Tom

enfect
07-10-2006, 09:29 AM
It's actually pretty scarey.

I was at a friend's house who has a few plants out back - one of them like 5 feet tall, and a chopper was flying around in the area. Luckily, it never came directly overhead - but I wonder if it could identify a marijuana plant, or would it have to be like a marijuana garden/field?

notverysalmonlike
07-10-2006, 09:46 AM
I'm pretty sure that it'd have to be like a growfield or something of the sort. They're looking for the off-color plants and huge rows of them. Any smart grow-op would definately have their shit covered. What if they could ID a single plant? That'd be very bad....very very bad.

-Tom

nonemoreblack
07-10-2006, 09:56 AM
In the book reefer madness they say that a very large amount of marijuana is grown in Indiana specifically, but also most of the farming midwest. They say that in the midwest farmers plant corn, and once the corn gets so tall, they plant marijuana and it's said that if done right it's almost impossible to spot the marijuana from the air. Just an interesting note. I can't believe they're messing with our crops! How dare they! And they destroyed 1,134,692 marijuana plants!? How dare they!?

Loonysalmon I guess it's just the ones that don't cover their plants that get caught, so maybe there are tons of people out there with covered plants like in the Midwest that are getting away with it. If you'll excuse me I'll be wandering around in some corn fields...