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The grandfather of all grow-ops - 89-year-old busted
for growing pot for Salmon Arm's senior tokers
By: John Colebourn, The Province (CN BC), 04-10-05
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At the age of 89, and quite likely the oldest Canadian to be convicted of
growing pot, Herman Nathe thinks he has learned a valuable lesson from his
foray into the drug trade.
The Salmon Arm senior now knows to keep quiet -- especially when somebody's hearing aid is turned up.
"Someone ratted me out," he said wistfully Friday, still reeling from the $4,000 he was recently fined after pleading guilty to a charge of production of a controlled substance.
His geriatric grow-op in the basement of his home that sits on two-thirds of an acre just outside the town of Salmon Arm was shut down by the local RCMP on July 11, 2002.
While initial reports indicated he had 400 plants, Nathe maintains he only had 200 plants ready for the area's toking seniors.
RCMP also found he had rigged up a hydro bypass, and he was found to have a number of unregistered guns.
By the time he got to court last month, Nathe's dope debacle had left him with the type of papers he didn't want, including a court order to make monthly payments of $150.
The Crown agreed to stay the trafficking, firearms and theft of hydro charges.
As part of the court agreement, Nathe also agreed to pay B.C. Hydro $1,500, the amount that was estimated to have been used in cultivating his cash crop.
A lifelong gardener, Nathe cringes when he recalls the big THC-laced buds his two months of hard work produced. "I had a nice crop," says Nathe.
The Geritol gardener has a hunch whose dentures were clacking to the authorities, but won't say.
And just who gave him the clones needed to start up the grow-op is something Nathe will also take to his grave.
"I met some friends," is all he'll say about the plants.
How he managed to reroute the power in the hydro bypass is something he will talk about.
"The hydro bypass, I did it myself," he says.
"I used to do electrical work, so it wasn't too difficult."
Even though it was his first grow-op, Nathe was sharp enough to know a sudden high use of power on his hydro bill would be a tell-tale sign that he was growing more than just daffodils.
"I figured it was a giveaway if they looked at your hydro bill," he points out.
Despite a lifetime of farming, logging and work in the mines in Alberta and B.C., Nathe found himself tight for cash a few years ago when an investment into a speculative mining equipment venture went belly up and he lost about $100,000.
"That's what attracted me to it, the quick cash," he says of the illegal operation.
"I assumed there was some money to be made."
Nathe's lawyer, Paul Danyliu, thinks his client probably is the oldest person in the country to be convicted on pot-growing charges.
"Has anyone in their '90s been popped?" he asks.
"He's a very colourful, unique individual," said Danyliu.
"He didn't believe it was something that was harming mankind."
Growing high-grade pot is not for amateurs, and Danyliu said Nathe did his homework before producing the pot.
"He used the real technical manuals to produce the marijuana. It would have been real nice pot."
Nathe, who calls himself "an organic gardener," also feels pot may be the answer for people of his vintage who are in pain.
"I think people would be better off if doctors put them on the marijuana instead of other drugs," says Nathe.
As for some of the seniors he knows around town, his conviction won't bar him from lawn bowling or the dances.
"My friends all laughed -- they got a kick out of it," he says.
"Only one person tried to give me a bad time."
(Rolo Commentary: I bet Herman's herb was pretty good! Good Luck & All The Best To You Herman!!)
© 2005 H.U.M.A.N.: Hemp Users Medical Access Network - Toronto Medical Marijuana