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Legal or not, industrial hemp harvested in Colo.

Tudo

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Legal or not, industrial hemp harvested in Colo.
Legal or not, Colorado farmers bringing in nation's first hemp harvest since the 1950s

</HEADER> <CITE class="byline vcard top-line">By Kristen Wyatt, Associated Press <ABBR>25 minutes ago</ABBR></CITE>
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SPRINGFIELD, Colo. (AP) -- Southeast Colorado farmer Ryan Loflin tried an illegal crop this year. He didn't hide it from neighbors, and he never feared law enforcement would come asking about it.
Loflin is among about two dozen Colorado farmers who raised industrial hemp, marijuana's non-intoxicating cousin that can't be grown under federal drug law, and bringing in the nation's first acknowledged crop in more than five decades.
Emboldened by voters in Colorado and Washington last year giving the green light to both marijuana and industrial hemp production, Loflin planted 55 acres of several varieties of hemp alongside his typical alfalfa and wheat crops. The hemp came in sparse and scraggly this month, but Loflin said but he's still turning away buyers.
"Phone's been ringing off the hook," said Loflin, who plans to press the seeds into oil and sell the fibrous remainder to buyers who'll use it in building materials, fabric and rope. "People want to buy more than I can grow."
But hemp's economic prospects are far from certain. Finished hemp is legal in the U.S., but growing it remains off-limits under federal law. The Congressional Research Service recently noted wildly differing projections about hemp's economic potential.
However, America is one of hemp's fastest-growing markets, with imports largely coming from China and Canada. In 2011, the U.S. imported $11.5 million worth of hemp products, up from $1.4 million in 2000. Most of that is hemp seed and hemp oil, which finds its way into granola bars, soaps, lotions and even cooking oil. Whole Foods Market now sells hemp milk, hemp tortilla chips and hemp seeds coated in dark chocolate.
Colorado won't start granting hemp-cultivation licenses until 2014, but Loflin didn't wait.
His confidence got a boost in August when the U.S. Department of Justice said the federal government would generally defer to state marijuana laws as long as states keep marijuana away from children and drug cartels. The memo didn't even mention hemp as an enforcement priority for the Drug Enforcement Administration.
"I figured they have more important things to worry about than, you know, rope," a smiling Loflin said as he hand-harvested 4-foot-tall plants on his Baca County land.
Colorado's hemp experiment may not be unique for long. Ten states now have industrial hemp laws that conflict with federal drug policy, including one signed by California Gov. Jerry Brown last month. And it's not just the typical marijuana-friendly suspects: Kentucky, North Dakota and West Virginia have industrial hemp laws on the books.
Hemp production was never banned outright, but it dropped to zero in the late 1950s because of competition from synthetic fibers and increasing anti-drug sentiment.
Hemp and marijuana are the same species, Cannabis sativa, just cultivated differently to enhance or reduce marijuana's psychoactive chemical, THC. The 1970 Controlled Substances Act required hemp growers to get a permit from the DEA, the last of which was issued in 1999 for a quarter-acre experimental plot in Hawaii. That permit expired in 2003.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture last recorded an industrial hemp crop in the late 1950s, down from a 1943 peak of more than 150 million pounds on 146,200 harvested acres.
But Loflin and other legalization advocates say hemp is back in style and that federal obstacles need to go.
Loflin didn't even have to hire help to bring in his crop, instead posting on Facebook that he needed volunteer harvesters. More than two dozen people showed up — from as far as Texas and Idaho.
Volunteers pulled the plants up from the root and piled them whole on two flatbed trucks. The mood was celebratory, people whooping at the sight of it and joking they thought they'd never see the day.
But there are reasons to doubt hemp's viability. Even if law enforcement doesn't interfere, the market might.
"It is not possible," Congressional Research Service researchers wrote in a July report, "to predict the potential market and employment effects of relaxing current restrictions on U.S. hemp production."
The most recent federal study came 13 years ago, when the USDA concluded the nation's hemp markets "are, and will likely remain, small" and "thin." And a 2004 study by the University of Wisconsin warned hemp "is not likely to generate sizeable profits" and highlighted "uncertainty about long-run demand for hemp products."
Still, there are seeds of hope. Global hemp production has increased from 250 million pounds in 1999 to more than 380 million pounds in 2011, according to United Nations agricultural surveys, which attributed the boost to increased demand for hemp seeds and hemp oil.
Congress is paying attention to the country's increasing acceptance of hemp. The House version of the stalled farm bill includes an amendment, sponsored by lawmakers in Colorado, Oregon and Kentucky, allowing industrial hemp cultivation nationwide. The amendment's prospects, like the farm bill's timely passage, are far from certain.
Ron Carleton, a Colorado deputy agricultural commissioner who is heading up the state's looming hemp licensure, said he has no idea what hemp's commercial potential is. He's not even sure how many farmers will sign up for Colorado's licensure program next year, though he's fielded a "fair number of inquiries." "What's going to happen, we'll just have to see," Carleton said.
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LINK: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/legal-not-industrial-hemp-harvested-141744957.html
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BOMBAYCAT

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I have heard if hemp throws pollen everywhere the drug weed will suffer because the sensi will take up the pollen and grow seeds and be useless. How far does pollen travel in the Colorado dry climate?
 
I have heard if hemp throws pollen everywhere the drug weed will suffer because the sensi will take up the pollen and grow seeds and be useless. How far does pollen travel in the Colorado dry climate?

i don't think this will be a huge issue, sure you wont be able to grow in your backyard if your near a hemp field, but hemp grows wild all over my state, my city is infested, along every single ditch and in every undeveloped acreage are fields of hemp, and it has never caused issues with my indoor crops or anybody elses that i know of...it can make outdoor growing a pain but all you really need to do is be half a mile or so away from any source of hemp and your mostly fine...

not to mention hemp males die off around early september, so many drug varieties are just starting to bud...but i don't think the highest quality pot will ever be possible outdoors, there just isn't the ripening time in most of the country...greenhouse weed can be comparable or better than indoors when done right but would be just as suseptable to the occasional hemp seed.

of course all of the large legal indoor grows have filtration systems that clean the incoming and outgoing air so hemp isn't an issue...even without a filter hemp isn't an issue indoors, unless you grow with your windows open maybe and a big male right outside your window.

these stories that stoners have about male pollen causing seeds in any females within a mile are total bs, depending on moisture, wind, and a million other factors it's far far less than that. i mean if you are downwind from a hemp field at just the right time of year and it's nice and dry a few plants could maybe catch a few grains of pollen from a mile away but just 100 feet upwind of the field there is probably almost no pollen...and on a moist rainy fall? you are probably safe within a hundred feet, and lets not forget that the male hemp plants are dying off right as drug variety females are starting to bud, so the overlap is so small that usually if anything only the preflowers end up getting pollinated.

im not making this stuff up, there are literally millions of hemp plants growing wild in my small town alone, and ive been growing outdoors here for 14 years as of this season.
 

mojave green

rockin in the free world
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I have heard if hemp throws pollen everywhere the drug weed will suffer because the sensi will take up the pollen and grow seeds and be useless. How far does pollen travel in the Colorado dry climate?
i'm bettin along way! i never thought about that side effect. are we going to see the next hemp wars? surely these two outdoor crops cannot peacefully co-exist within close proximity to one another.:tumbleweed:
 

Jhhnn

Active member
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I have heard if hemp throws pollen everywhere the drug weed will suffer because the sensi will take up the pollen and grow seeds and be useless. How far does pollen travel in the Colorado dry climate?

Seeded pot isn't useless, it's just seeded. Years ago, sinsemilla was a rarity in the marketplace. Imported Colombian & Mexican pot was generally heavily seeded. Even Thai sticks & very rare Mexican Sinse had some seeds. Hash from all over the world is made from seeded buds.

Depending on the variety, the plants will turn their efforts away from making more buds to making seeds, somewhat reducing yield. Left unpollinated too long, they'll often overcome reproductive frustration by going hermie.

The real issue with nearby feral cannabis is genetic dilution causing diminished potency in subsequent generations. Farmers have the same kind of problem with corn, wheat, whatever, because their neighbors grow different varieties. They solve the problem buying fresh seed every year. That's way expensive now for pot growers, but I suspect that legalization in Colorado will cause seed prices to drop tremendously over the next few years.

Hell, growers who need substantial seed stocks will likely be able to vacation in Colorado & take home lots of seeds for about the same price they now pay for seeds alone.
 

MrGoodBudz

Member
Veteran
Extremely interesting. I'd be curious to see the cost/profit scenario per acre of hemp vs. cotton or corn.
 

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