Former ‘drug farm’ now used for education

By Liz McMahan
Assistant City Editor

August 13, 2008 11:37 pm

PORUM — This year’s Muskogee County Cattlemen’s Association picnic was different than in years past.
Not only did they combine their event with cattlemen from McIntosh and Haskell counties, where they met used to be the site of a large underground marijuana growing operation.
Today, the old drug farm between Warner and Porum is officially the Harding Ranch and Research Station. There are herds of Angus, Simmental, Santa Gertrudis and commercial cattle at the north end and recently mown hay meadows on the hilltop at the south end.
In between, there are serene lakes, a huge picnic pavilion and restroom facilities. There’s also a large wetlands where hundreds of waterfowl make their winter home.
The 1,316 acres is now owned by Connors State College and has been developed with funding from Union Pacific Railroad, Ducks Unlimited, the Audubon Society, a fence wire company and other groups.
While it is named for Dr. Gary Harding, who was with the college 28 years before retiring as dean of agriculture, people still refer to it as the drug farm.
It has been 18 years since authorities flying over the property spotted marijuana growing in the woods surrounding those hilltop haymeadows.
They swooped in on the property and accidentally discovered two sophisticated underground marijuana growing operations.
The property owner and his son were charged and convicted. The son went to prison, but about 500 area residents signed a petition asking that the property owner, Marvin Smith, 55, get a suspended sentence.
And he did.
Harding recalls having visited with Smith on one occasion before his arrest and never suspected a thing.
Smith was removing dirt from the hillside near where the outdoor pavillion now stands, Harding recalls. Smith told Harding he was building an underground house. The front had caved in and Smith was in the process of bracing it up.
Harding didn’t think anything of it because Smith was “brilliant,” Harding said.
That’s where officers discovered one of the two underground hydroponic marijuana gardens.
Smith used the dirt removed from the hillside to build a fishing peninsula in the six-acre lake just outside.
That lake is fed from one at the top of the property that covers 12 acres.
“There are six acres that are over 50 feet deep,” Harding said. “At the base of it is 320 feet of eight-inch pipe that comes through the bottom. He ran that through to move water from lake to lake.”
The net result is that the cattle water troughs at the lowest points on the property are filled by gravity flow from the lakes above them.
Smith had also set up two irrigation systems on those upper hay meadows and three on the lower fields that were much like those used to irrigate corn fields in the Webbers Falls area, said Roger Morton, livestock manager on the farm.
The irrigation equipment was removed before the college acquired the property from the Farmers Home Administration.
Morton said he had visited with Smith on several occasions.
“He would come back after we got it for the college and he would tell us where water lines went,” Morton said.
It’s not unusual to walk through the woods on top of the hill and still find a random piece of plastic pipe that once fed water to marijuana growing in the woods, Morton said.
Today, Connors State College agricultural students learn cattle management with the herds on the Harding research station. Area public school students study ecology there several times throughout the year and the state holds educational sessions for teens in the summer.
The research station also is the center for a study of the nearly extinct American burying beetle, Morton said.
“It’s a very unique property,” Harding said.

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Photos


Dr. Gary Harding demonstrates a sliding door that used to conceal the entrance to an underground marijuana-growing operation near Porum.


Connors State College has taken over the 1,316 acres of Marvin Smith and is now the Harding Ranch and Research Center.