AMAZING WORK!!!! If I can help you out in any way, please let me know what you need me to do. I'm willing to get my hands in the dirt, and learn how to grow hemp from the"ground up". Be Blessed -----and keep up the AMAZING WORK
I just wanted to say "Hello". I'm Benjamin. I live in Nikiski, Alaska. Keep up the amazing work in the Hemp industry!!!! I believe in the AMAZING BENEFITS "Hemp"!!!! I would LOVE TO get involved with anyone in the Hemp Industry.
Great chat. Although I am a bit confused be the statement at the end on hemp's oil profile. If I am understanding it correctly, the implication that a higher omega 6 to 3 ratio as ideal for humans is made. I would highly advise against saying that as it totally goes against all the data showing that omega 3's are the most important and in line with human evolution and biology. The consistent evidence points to the ideal ratio being around 3:1 or 4:1 with a higher proportion of omega-3 fatty acids compared to omega-6. Diets higher in omega 6 and also diets low in omega 3 are inflammatory. This is one main reason why people are trying to steer away from seed oils in their diets. No disrespect intended to the people in the chat.
Hello, I am from India, Tamilnadu province. I am a watermelon farmer and planning to grow industrial hemp plants in my agricultural land. Please guide us. Thank you
Good question, No, hemp cultivation does not require pesticide use. While the EPA has approved 10 pesticides for hemp production, there are many domestic hemp farms that cultivate hemp with strict organic farming practices or are certified organic. The majority of hemp varieties are naturally resistant to pests and predators.
thank you for sharing how your psoriasis with hemp, i have the same condition as well kindly share how you incorporated food grade hemp oil in your daily regiment, doses, also if you take hemp hearts how much do you take in a day?
@@dianeibsen5994 good question, No, hemp cultivation does not require pesticide use. While the EPA has approved 10 pesticides for hemp production, there are many domestic hemp farms that cultivate hemp with strict organic farming practices or are certified organic. The majority of hemp varieties are naturally resistant to pests and predators.
And most people in the cbd industry are for banning delta 8 ... no one in their right mind thinks this should be legal. Make sensible legislation that removes dangerous D8 and D9 products but protects the players that are trying to abide by the rules with safe and effective cbd products.
At last check many cbd companies are going bankrupt b/c of lack of action from congress to help the cbd industry thrive. Hemp production is down nearly 70% vs. 2021. Soon, the entire industry will just disappear if Congress doesn't get their shyt together. And promoting the fiber end of the industry and the climate change potential is not going to do anything beneficial for the industry as a whole, it's a very minuscule part of the industry and the end markets aren't developed yet. Let's make the original part of the plant profitable first by creating clear legislation that helps big box retailers accept safe and effective non-psychoactive ingestibles and topicals and then start supporting the fiber end of the market when the demand is readily available.
Need to also have sensible legislation regarding hemp cbd consumer products that allow a farmer to profit off of entire plant, not just industrial fiber which won't provide a lot of incentive to farmers if the rest of the hemp cbd market for end products such as ingestibles and topicals aren't given focus. Pretty clear that Charlotte's Web and many other companies' studies prove there is no toxicity to the liver and male reproductive system. FDA cited an old study from 2020, prior to Charlotte's Web, statistically significant study came out in 2022. FDA is ignoring these study results and hemp farmers are suffering as a result.
I also think it's worth noting that almost every industrial producer I've talked to states they grow a dual/tri crop that provides CBD output still. So how will regulators be able to fully know a producer is being honest about the variety they are growing and if that plant will actually be siphoned off for CBD production. This is another reason I do not support this bill, as it ripe for abuse by farmers who would grow a try/dual crop while claiming it's just fiber/grain. Where's the guardrails for that?
Guardrails for what? No one's every died from cannabis. What exactly is being guarded? How much hemp food has and still does, contain CBD, but has never been tested for it, and has never been marketed that way? Those chemicals are in all cannabis plants. Why can't someone grow drug rich cultivars for non-drug use? There's no limit on poison ivy, why are people still being absurd over cannabis?
Dividing hemp up into numerous smaller categories is not something I support. This industry has been entirely carried by the medical/CBD element for the last 8 years. To introduce a law that would give one part of the industry a leg over the other is not something that would bring equity to the industry. Instead, this is an attempt to have the government pick winners and losers. Industrial growers have been upset that industrial hemp hasn't caught on or even been as remotely attractive is CBD/medical hemp. And there's no evidence, from where I'm standing, that it will change soon. I can support this bill if it applies to ALL hemp producers. But slicing hemp into different small categories and trying to create strings of regulations for those categories is counter-productive and frankly a backhand to the segment of the industry that is carrying everyone else. Need I remind the world: USDA's own figures put the medical side of the hemp industry at over $700 million, while the industrial side is well under $100m (closer to $50m). The CBD side of the industry should have more pull in this discussion, but unfortunately industrial growers have closed the door with no desire to work across the aisle. This is obvious in the written and spoken statements from representatives of these different industrial trade associations. It's sad, because this divide in the industry may very well be its demise. Why would anyone on the CBD side want to work with the industrial side when the industrial side is actively trying to shut them down and create leg-ups for themselves?
Work to remove that illegal law that's on the books. And then we'll be free to use it as often as how we please. I'd like to see Hemp come back and destroy petroleum like it did Hemp.
The very reason behind the criminalization of hemp was to prevent the competition of fabrics produced in Egypt using cotton when on reality hemp was easily cultivated and didn't need to enslave African people to cultivate and the harsh harvesting by hand picking also our bodies need hemp oils so yeah look it up is a deal made by the king of England and the king of Egypt way back.
I Clinical Nurse Specialist I started using Hemp on my home care patients with varias diagnosis for over 2 years I found it helpful during the pandemic.