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Pot growers find fertile ground in Wisconsin national forest

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He estimated much of the marijuana found in recent years on public land in Wisconsin would have a street value of $2,500 per pound. Each marijuana plant provides roughly 1 pound of pot. Last summer in the Chequamegon-Nicolet in Oconto County 8,385 plants were confiscated while almost 7,000 plants were discovered in the forest in Ashland County in 2011.

The plants are dried on racks made from poles cut and lashed together, then usually vacuumed packed into plastic bags and carried out where the men and their backpacks filled with marijuana are picked up and driven away, leaving behind their garbage and hundreds of holes left in the ground. Investigators know in some cases growers returned to use the same land in subsequent years when they were not detected.

“It disgusts me. They don’t respect the environment, they don’t respect other people who want to enjoy the land,” said Seefeldt, who grew up in Wausau. “I would think there would be a huge outcry from the public because these people are misusing the land.”

Since Wisconsin has a shorter growing season than in western states, growers usually plant two crops, putting three to four seedlings in each hole. The seedlings are typically planted in May and then another crop is planted a couple weeks later so the first crop is ready for harvesting in late August and the second crop can be picked before the first frost arrives.

Growers pick their areas for remoteness and access to water, cutting down trees to reduce the canopy and allow in more light, which sometimes raises the temperature of trout streams. Law enforcement has found stumps covered with dirt so they won’t be noticed in aerial surveillance. At one site investigators discovered a 4-foot-deep pit where growers hid their generators, water pumps and cellphone chargers with logs and a tarp over the top to reduce noise.

As more sites have been discovered and arrests made, officers noticed growers changed their tactics, planting in more remote areas and dividing their crop up into smaller quarter- to half-acre plots. Wisconsin National Guard helicopters were used at one site to airlift the garbage and marijuana plants out of a remote area.

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