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UK: Cottage industry

Robert McNeil

The Scotsman

Wednesday 29 Aug 2001

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The winding three-mile single-track road skirts Widewall Bay and brings
visitors past the lobster pots and the red pillar-box and the picturesque
wrecked hull to a row of pretty houses with neat and colourful gardens.

In one of those houses sits a cheerful, wheelchair-bound woman in a red
Prince's Trust sweatshirt and tartan trousers. A half-tame blackbird
called Spot sits on the kitchen windowsill peering in with a sideways eye at Biz
Ivol, who is busying herself among her correspondence.

On the front lawn, old Stroma, a bearded-cum-border collie, dozes lightly
with his chin on his paws. And somewhere in the house is Willie, a cat Biz
took in after it was badly injured in an accident.

The sun shines brightly and gentle waves lap the shore 20 yards from the
front door of Craigflower Cottage. Welcome to the scene of the crime.

These unlikely surroundings in the village of Herston, South Ronaldsay,
Orkney, were the focus of a police raid at 4:45pm on Monday, 6 August. The
police were looking for chocolates. But not any old chocolates. For we have
come to Bizzie's Bonkers Chocolate Factory.

Biz suffers from multiple sclerosis. It's painful and crippling. Only one
thing eases the pain. But that one thing is illegal. It is cannabis, and
Biz smokes it merrily enough, not hiding her enjoyment of the mild high
that accompanies the easing of her physical distress.

Biz's friend, Bill, who lives in nearby Burray, also suffers MS. But he
doesn't like smoking. So Biz made him cannabis chocolates. They worked a
treat, which indeed they were, and Bill's pain eased. Biz began making
more hash chocolates and sending them out to other sufferers, and soon her fame
spread, which embarrassed the Orkney police. Hence the raid.

Biz, 53, and originally from Cornwall, recalls: "It was about quarter to
five. Four of them came in, three policemen and one policewoman. They were
very nice except for one who kept on at me about who took my mail to the
post office and trying to get me to say who I gave cannabis to.

"They were here for about two hours and went through the whole house with a
fine-tooth comb. They took my receipts and my address book, which is a
blasted nuisance. They took away my computer, though I only used that once
and it just produced gobbledegook. They took away the plants, though there
were just three at the time."

She is annoyed at the raid, but not bitter at the police. "They had to do
something. I've been a thorn in their side for long enough."

Cannabis has taken over Biz's life. Sometimes she wishes it would just go
away. But she needs it, and believes many others do too. She has other
interests - a framed photograph of Colin Firth as Heathcliff sits atop the
fridge. But her cosy cottage is also decorated with slogan-bearing stickers
and posters: "God made grass, man made alcohol, which do you trust?" "Don't
walk on the grass, smoke it."

Biz is an unapologetic proselytiser for the herb. She is not against its
recreational use and was previously involved in an attempt by the Legalise
Cannabis Alliance to take the government to the European court.

In 1997, too, she was taken to court for growing 33 plants, "which was a
lie - there were 40".

She was admonished, and also picked up tips. "During that first raid, a
policeman said it was stupid to bother with the greenhouse and better just
to grow it among the trees. He was right."

Her interest, however, is more medicinal than recreational or cultural. She
wants to be high on health. She wants to be free from pain.

"I get the most horrific muscle spasms in my legs. My eyesight goes. I get
a pain down my spine which sometimes feels like barbed wire is being pulled
through it.

"When I have cannabis I seem to be able to function properly but when I
don't have it I feel zombified. When I was growing my own I didn't know
what to do. I used to chew the little tips and next thing I was glued to
the ceiling for hours. I'm afraid to use it during the day because I get
giggly and talk nonsense. When I'm making chocolate, I lick the spoon - I
like that bit. But it's such a minimal dose in the chocolate."

Biz jokes about applying for a council grant to buy chocolate manufacturing
equipment and a greenhouse.

Ask how people got to hear about her and she explains by referring to a
highly effective communications interface: "My gob." She claims she was cut
off during a recent BBC phone-in when advising a caller how to get the drug.
She has had inquiries from Finland, America and Canada. She sends out about
three packages a week, recent recipients including MS sufferers in
Switzerland and Ireland. The letter from Switzerland was accompanied by a
doctor's prescription. Biz reckons 95 per cent of those who write have
been recommended to do so by their doctors. She does not charge for her
confectionery, though she does appreciate a stamped-addressed-envelope.

The neighbours have been fine. "They have been very supportive because they
see the difference it makes to me," she says. When she used to grow the
plants upstairs, one neighbour used to come and water them. And when there
was a previous rumour about a raid, the plants were moved to another house.

The local grocer is pleased because of all the cooking chocolate Biz buys.

There's a delightful whiff of Weed Galore about the whole thing. Bill, her
fellow sufferer in Burray, was anti-drugs in the beginning and didn't like
smoking but he turned up at Craigflower Cottage one day, driven to
desperation by terrible muscle spasms.

Biz gave him the chocolates and - despite one incident in which he thought
the telegraph pole, now called Trevor, was bending over to speak to him -
Bill has never looked back. Cannabis campaigners claim the weed can help
with other conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, anorexia nervosa and
glaucoma.

Says Biz: "I have a lovely old man. He's 74. He's had four operations
for glaucoma. His doctor advised him to try cannabis. He contacted me and I
sent him some cannabis chocolate.

"He took it the first time and the next morning his eyesight was back. That
is how quickly it works with glaucoma. But he didn't like it because he
got a bit high. He went on holiday last month to Devon. He had been there 15
years ago but hadn't seen any of it because of his glaucoma. But this time
he saw it all."

Biz eventually found the right dosage for the old gentleman, but admits her
recipes, which involve rubbing the cannabis into a powder, vary
considerably. She still prefers to smoke hers, having one joint last thing
at night, usually rolled for her by a neighbour. "The cigarettes I roll
usually disintegrate and nearly set my vest on fire," she says, adding:
"Sometimes I get utterly stoned because every time you use cannabis it's a
different strength." This is something she feels could be rectified by
legalisation.

Neil Montgomery, consultant anthropologist to the UK Medicinal Cannabis
Project and scientific adviser to the Medicinal Cannabis Research
Foundation, backs this idea, claiming that not only does cannabis
undoubtedly alleviate serious illnesses, it would also bring £2 billion a
year into the Exchequer.

Montgomery says there's little evidence to back claims the herb could
trigger paranoia or even schizophrenia, and claims any negative effect on
the heart tends to be limited to minor disturbances in rhythm for some
people.

He was horrified to hear of the raid on Biz's house. "Some of the
behaviour of the police in that case - taking address books and so on - was
disgusting. It is even more appalling that they did this knowing why she
was using cannabis."

He concludes: "We should remove the punitive aspect of the law now and have
some kind of independent commission to decide how to go about legalising
it."

Biz and Bill have sent handwritten letters to every MSP. Not one Labour MSP
replied. All the Liberal Democrats did, as did some from the SNP.

Tommy Sheridan, the Scottish Socialist, was particularly supportive. Alex
Fergusson, a Tory, was strongly against legalisation. Jim Wallace, the
justice minister and Lib Dem MSP for Orkney, backs legalisation for
medicinal use.

Charles Kennedy, the Lib Dem leader, wrote saying: "The vast majority of
experts agree with you and it is only the failure of successive governments
to face up to the drugs debate that delays legislation."

In the meantime, the force of legislation faces Biz, though the procurator
fiscal has not yet decided whether to prosecute. Biz hopes she will be
prosecuted so that she can plead not guilty, citing the "law of medical
necessity".

What if she is found guilty and later prosecuted again? Would she go to
prison for her beliefs? "Have they got a prison hospital for women? Because
I would have to be kept in one. They can't fine me anything because I
haven't got any money. I give the stuff away and I'm skint. They can't
give me a suspended sentence because what good would that do? I would just carry
on what I have been doing. I don't know what they can do to us because
there are so many of us.

"We are not the criminals. They are, for not legalising something that
alleviates this bloody disease."

The police decline to comment on an individual case and maintain they are
obliged to uphold the law, a position that brought a stinging riposte from
a recent visitor to the islands who wrote to the Orcadain saying, if that
were the case, why did they not pick up the brawling drunks hanging about
the harbour?

"Cannabiz", meanwhile, has suspended her chocolate-making temporarily, and
the operation has been taken over by a couple in Cumbria.

But, from her happy cottage in Herston, Biz will carry on campaigning. She
says: "I can't give in. I want to. I just want to go to bed and forget
about cannabis. But I can't. I did have a quiet life, but cannabis has
just taken over now."

 

 

 

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