St. Phatty
Active member
What are your thoughts?
My backyard 3 mile "track" ... Old logging roads, deer trails, etc.
What I like about it - it's so steep very few LEO types would ever come up there.
I have a feeling that LEO types in general don't like chasing contraband if it involves walking up steep slopes, falling a lot, getting face-fulls of poison oak & blackberry thorns, etc.
Of course, it doesn't matter whether the locals are speaking English or Farsi, or Pashtun ... maybe it's a little drier there so the primary safety issue is falling off a cliff ?
Guaranteed if a normal size SWAT team (10) tried to invade my guerilla grows, at least one of them would require medical attention afterwards.
Not because of anything I did - because of the however many dozens of times I've been to the top area (which is 45 to 60 degrees), there was only one time when I didn't fall on the way down.
As a side note to a conversation Putem & I were having - there's a big difference between falling 3 feet and falling 20 feet.
I think a lot of high-altitude hash grows are located for similar reasons.
If the cops went up there, they know a lot of them will end up looking like the 3 stooges. And these days, with nearly every person holding a video camera, their clumsy moments might end up on Youtube. What Leo wants that ?
LEO doesn't like to get too uncomfortable. And they don't like to have it highlighted that the growers they're chasing might be more physically fit than some of their recruits.
Maybe a project for some Grow-Mag -
It would be funny to set up a "Patsy" grow and report it to the Ocifer's.
Then set up trail-cams and video their attempts to capture the Cannabis.
That could make an epic article.
More light intensity in general at altitude.
70 watts per square foot at Sea Level in San Diego, about 140 watts per square foot without all that air (i.e. in outer space)
At serious altitude (e.g. 15,000 feet) I think the light intensity would be 100+ watts per square foot.
Plus these days, those grows are being CO2 supplemented. Natural atmospheric CO2 is up to about 410 ppm. The air may be thinner up there but I figure there's enough CO2.
If I was a sherpa who lived in the Himalayas, I might have Cannabis plants in my home just for the extra O2.