Quoi de neuf ?

Bienvenue sur Psychonaut.fr !

En vous enregistrant, vous pourrez discuter de psychotropes, écrire vos meilleurs trip-reports et mieux connaitre la communauté

Je m'inscris!

HEMP BRINGING HIGHS TO FARMERS' LOWS

Markov

Neurotransmetteur
Inscrit
20 Jan 2009
Messages
72
HEMP BRINGING HIGHS TO FARMERS' LOWS


100 Mile area farmers are on the cutting edge of local diversification. They're working with industrial hemp, a crop that was grown for thousands of years before the government banned it.

"The word hemp was being used for medicinal or illegal drug side so it got a bad rap. The government said OK, just quit the whole thing altogether," said Erik Eising, the hemp coordinator hired by the District of 100 Mile House through the Hemp Steering Committee.

He said the government re-introduced the crop 10 years ago and they now have the technology to test that growers are using the low THC ( tetrahydrocannabinol ) plants. THC is the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana.

The district received approximately $300,000 in grants from Western Diversification and Northern Development Initiative for this year's pilot program.

Eising is working with farmers on five different properties and they have finished seeding some fields and some plants are already up. He said he's fully aware of the challenges for farmers on the beef market, with that farming aspect taking a severe hit and, at the same time, hay farmers finding that yields on a field decrease over time, so diversification with industrial hemp could help.

"We're looking at different avenues here and exploring if it would be possible for a rancher to incorporate this into a rotational program," he said.

Eising said there are indications hemp could regenerate the soil and that will be explored in the project, although he said the benefits might be long-term.

The plant itself is used in a variety of applications, the seed for oil and the fibre for fabric and a myriad of other uses. Eising said the core can be used for animal bedding, which would be a primary, easy to access market.

The market is still in its development stages but industrial hemp can be used to create something equivalent to oriented strand board that is lightweight and has a high acoustical value, although Eising said the cost would be much higher.

"We are moving toward looking at local production and also marketing and processing the products in a fashion the local economy can benefit from," said Eising. "We are looking at low-tech, low investment and maybe even on-farm processing and some of the products that can go into building, the green construction market or paper recycling."

Eising is planning an open house day later in the season so the public can see exactly what is happening with the project.

"We hope to kickstart a strong local interest in the producer and we will also be able to provide - at the end of this year - technical background information and also cost input information so farmers can make their own calculations if this will work on their particular farm or it might not be in their best interest."


SOURCE: 100 Mile House Free Press
 

Dantediv86

Holofractale de l'hypervérité
Inscrit
18 Avr 2007
Messages
2 264
AAAAAGH! i wanna work THERE!!! if only the norwegian govt would take my proposition in consideration (a field, a govt sponsored chemist, hemp seed, we don't even need a water supply it rains like hell over here, and of course the necessary machinery to work on it)
...i'd be a happy panda...
 

Markov

Neurotransmetteur
Inscrit
20 Jan 2009
Messages
72
Didnt want to create a new post for this, considering its brieviety and similarity, but this is good news.

SOURCE:StatesManJournal.com
SENATE BILL ALLOWS GROWTH, SALE OF HEMP FOR INDUSTRIAL USES
The Oregon Senate has voted to join 15 other states with legislation that outlines state practices for the growth and sale of industrial hemp.
Senate Bill 676 moved to the House on a 27-2 vote Friday.

"Industrial hemp is an innovative crop that is regaining its popularity across the globe," said Sen. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, the bill's floor manager. "This legislation sets the course for growing and selling this high-demand crop in Oregon."

SB 676 identifies that industrial hemp is an agricultural product that is subject to regulation by the Department of Agriculture and requires that all growers and handlers have an industrial-hemp license.

The department will establish a field inspection program, a certification process for hemp seed, and a civil-penalty procedure for violations.

The terms "hemp" and "industrial hemp" refer specifically to varieties of Cannabis sativa characterized by low levels of THC, marijuana's primary psychoactive chemical. These strains are cultivated for industrial use only.

Industrial hemp was grown in the United States since colonial times but was banned in 1970 when it was redefined as marijuana.
 
Haut