Monday, August 11, 2008

Winemakers turn to Marijuana

(From the Brittish Newspaper, The Independent)
By Shannon Dininny in Wapato, Washington
Sunday, 10 August 2008

The vineyards of America's Washington state do not all, it turns out, grow grapes. Increasingly, they are growing marijuana, a plant that could surpass grapes in value this year.

So far this summer, law enforcement officials in the Yakima Valley have converged on seven vineyards that had been converted to marijuana. In 2006 more than 144,000 plants were seized; the following year the total more than doubled to 296,611 plants.

Finding farmers willing to sell their property isn't difficult. In one case, drug operatives approached a farmer who didn't have his farm listed for sale. He resisted until, asked to name a price, he threw out a figure: $263,000 (£137,000) for 27 acres and no building. The buyer returned a few days later and bought the property for cash.

Great idea! What an awesome return you'd get on your investment! I always said that if my career in the art world didn't pan out, I'd start a vineyard, and this article has just entirely validated that pursuit.

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