The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Media -- Dont Quote Me  |  News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In
Nominate-best-2010

Pot Edward Island

Canada's most picturesque province is surprisingly also the fertile center of an underground marijuana explosion
By ALAN R. EARLS  |  August 19, 2008

0815_peiIN

In 2004, a newspaper report appeared in the Guardian — the biggest daily newspaper on Prince Edward Island (PEI) — that was at odds with the outside world’s image of the idyllic Canadian province. Two bullets had hit local resident Kenneth Rae MacFarlane while he was home alone in the midst of a blizzard. With the help of snow-plow operators, an ambulance and a police team eventually reached him. He survived the attack, but ended up in court with some explaining to do. It seems in the course of investigating the shooting — so rare on the island that emergency-room physicians are routinely sent for training to Baltimore, where such injuries are a dime a dozen — police made an unexpected discovery. MacFarlane’s home housed an elaborate indoor pot-growing operation, with two rooms dedicated to cannabis cultivation and a third undergoing conversion.

When you think of PEI, you probably come up with crisp, clean-cut tourist-brochure images: lush and rolling hills, tranquil ocean beaches, villages of whitewashed cottages and, inevitably, the smiling face of the island’s indefatigably cheery heroine, Anne of Green Gables. But while Lucy Maud Montgomery’s fictional Edwardian character maintained her Pollyanna disposition on the strength of nothing but her spunk and a cheerily romantic vision of how life should be, it seems modern-day islanders have discovered another way to smile through the summer and avoid the blues during the bleak local winters.

A recent issue of the Guardian, for instance, featured the headline POLICE SEEK HELP FINDING MARIJUANA GROWERS, followed by a lurid story about local pot cultivators and a warning to the populace to be on the lookout for suspicious activities along country lanes and farm fields.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) spokesperson Sergeant Denis Morin, located in the capital of Charlottetown, admits that there is a something of problem — and his statistics prove it. The number of plants seized through the end of May (250) in areas of RCMP jurisdiction — excluding the island’s four small cities, which have their own independent police departments — already exceeds the 200 plants seized in all of 2007.

To be sure, PEI — where Canada’s province-by-province alcohol prohibition started first and ended last, in 1948 — is still largely a bastion of clean-cut, yesteryear values. A number of island communities remain defiantly dry. But it is also home to a thriving cottage industry that includes both indoor hydroponic pot production — aided by the inexpensive electricity the island imports from Quebec — and a more daring coterie of growers who take advantage of the island’s perfect summer climate and endless fields of spuds, soybeans, and corn to pursue small-scale cultivation en plein air.

Live and let smoke
Getting an authoritative picture of the province’s pot industry is difficult. The island is largely rural with a relative lack of crime that translates into a thinness of policing. In fact, outside of the cities and a few larger towns, police are almost invisible. Perhaps, too, there’s an Anne of Green Gables–like refusal to admit to inconvenient truths.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Legalize pot now, Weed picking up speed?, An old dog teaches his tricks, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Canada, Illegal Drugs, Police,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
17 Comments / Add Comment

FromBoston

 I'm sure lots of people will weigh in on this, but it seemsMr Earls did all his research based on newspaper articles. Indeed, he may never have been to PEI. Of course there's pot here. But cheap electricity? Please. It's 2x the price in Boston. And it doesn't come from Quebec. We generate it here (oil fired and wind) and buy it from New Brunswick. Boston buys electricity from Quebec. Maybe the Phoenix doesn't have budget to send its reports to BC or Ontario, where there really are large grow ops. He could have found that out through internet search as well.

Posted: August 15 2008 at 10:00 AM

Halifax_Guy

Wow the only person I can think of using POT is the author of this article!  Four cities in PEI?  I only count two, the largest being Charlottetown with a population of 32000.  Cheap electiricty from Quebec?  Hardly cheap.  One of the most expensive in Canada.  And what isnt generated on PEI comes from New Brunswick.  The cheap Quebec electricity gets sold to the US instead of staying in Canada.  Emergency staff getting trained in Baltimore?  That's just crap.  Just like the article.  Pot in PEI?  Yeah, I know there is.  Does it need to be controlled better?  I can think of better places to put the public funds.

Posted: August 15 2008 at 10:11 AM

Hammerthumb

To the Editor,

Alan R Earls should check his sources, he is full of it.  If you want to be taken more seriously than the Enquirer then you should really check your facts.  PEI being a large tourist Province does not need to be tarnished by complete lies.  You will be lucky not to get sued for slander.

PEI does not have the climate to grow marijuana.  The growing season is too short for good bud and the weather is not hot and humid enough.  It is a very good place to grow potatoes.  This is what they actually grow there for money.  Small rural areas=hard working christian farmers, right wingers  There are surely people on the Island who grow pot here and there for personal use as the majority of North American adults have tried or still smoke it but any bud grown would be inferior due to the climate and not good for export.

200 plants is nothing compared to what is coming out of Southern States.  Not what I would call an epidemic or enough to deface the Canadian flag.  This article is shameful and should be retracted with an apology.  What a load of BS.

Posted: August 15 2008 at 10:17 AM

Halifax_Guy

Oh I forgot a point!  Please Mr. Earls when you come to visit Canada, and PEI in particular, to do your next 'fact filled' article, please leave your guns at the border?  We are a socially liberal country but not that liberal! 

Posted: August 15 2008 at 10:27 AM

smashorange

The ignorance shown by the writer of this article continues a long tradition in the US of not paying attention to anything going on beyond the border.  There must be some actual reporting talent at The Phoenix - people who do actual research.  This story is just crap.

Posted: August 15 2008 at 11:30 AM

WeepyD

Obviously this guy has never been to PEI! Once again another American who doesn't have a clue about Canada. Worry about your own gun-ridden crack infested country and having a complete moron for a president.

Posted: August 15 2008 at 11:49 AM

bigguy39

It's a shame people can write anything at all without ever having to do any in depth research.  Obviously anyone can do that.  I can read this article and assume that this guy hasn't been to PEI.  I can assume that he's read a copy of the Guardian (why, I'll never know.....must have been a slow news day in Boston to warrant reading a paper from a province with a population that is only one quarter the circulation of his own paper).  I can assume he knows how to Google.....  Shy of that, he hasn't shown any journalistic skills at all.  I'm sure I could come up with the same quality of journalism from the comfort of my own home as well and slander Boston or whatever city I want.  Now, I've just got to find a rag to print it.  As far as this guy's little piece of fiction, it hardly ranks up there with the current Jughead Digest........  In the end, those who want to listen to his regurgitated nonsense will do so, but those with an iota of intelligence will hopefully know better.

Posted: August 15 2008 at 1:46 PM

levelhead

You seem to think its OK to disgrace our National Flag. It is not OK.

You should apologize for this rude careless act.

We dont change your flag and make fun of it.Show some respect.

How would you like all the stars to be changed to bullets on your countries Flag??

Posted: August 15 2008 at 2:50 PM

pei_moe

 It is easy to see that the "gentleman" in question, and I use the term very loosely, has never been to PEI and knows very little about it. What is even more interesting is that he did not reply to a request from CBC news for an interview...makes one wonder if he really has the balls to answer questions on his mis-information.

Let's do some math here, 250 plants seized since May would make 600 plants per year. A google search (yes, I can do that too!) tells me that given the growing season in this area one could expect to yield about 1/4 to 1/2 a pound of usable (read smokable here) marijauna. So that means our "fertile center of an underground marijuana explosion" would be anywhere from 150 to 300 pounds. If one sells it for $15 per ounce then you could be making $2250 to $4500. We've really hit the big time here folks.Think I had better run right out and invest!

It's really easy to create a story using old news stories of an isolated incident and statistics. One can spin statistics to support whatever "view" one wants.I wonder what percentage of the Boston population used marijauna or other illicit drugs. Bet it's higher than you think!

 

Posted: August 15 2008 at 8:51 PM

mjsimm

 OK obviously this "reporter" is an idiot and the editor is just putting out another sensationalistic American rag. The Phoenix owes the people of Prince Edward Island an apology and retraction. The author of this fiction can't even spell the name of the director of PEIF of Agriculture correctly, and just out of curiosity where are these 4 cities, and dry communities? The whole article should never been allowed to go to print. If New England is having a serious issue with marijauna they should look elsewhere for the source because it isn't being sent from here. 

Posted: August 16 2008 at 10:42 AM
1 | 2 | next >
HTML Prohibited
Add Comment

ARTICLES BY ALAN R. EARLS
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REALLY GOING GREEN  |  February 25, 2009
    According to environmental activists, traditional funerary activities such as embalming, burial in concrete liners, and cremation are anything but planet friendly.
  •   POT EDWARD ISLAND  |  August 19, 2008
    It seems modern-day islanders have discovered another way to smile through the summer and avoid the blues during the bleak local winters.
  •   SLIP-SLIDING AWAY  |  January 23, 2008
    What’s that, you say, front-wheel drive is unsafe?

 See all articles by: ALAN R. EARLS

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2010 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group