Loflin's plans to grow hemp already have been chronicled, and Monday's planting attracted the attention of more media in southeastern Colorado and a documentary film crew.
Hemp is genetically related to marijuana but contains little or no THC, the psychoactive substance in marijuana. Hemp has dozens of uses in food, cosmetics, clothing and industrial materials.
Its
Loflin is planting 60 acres on acreage previously used to grow alfalfa. He and business partner Chris Thompson also are installing a seed press to produce hemp oil.
Collaborators in the documentary include the Colorado-based advocacy group Hemp Cleans and hemp-products company Hemp Inc.
"This is monumental for our industry," said Bruce Perlowin, chief executive of Hemp Inc. "It will unlock a clean industrial revolution that will be good for the economy, good for jobs and good for the environment."
Read more: First major hemp crop in 60 years is planted in southeast Colorado - The Denver Post http://www.denverpost.com/breakingnews/ci_23232417/first-major-hemp-crop-60-years-is-planted#ixzz2TSpHmxnJ
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2 comments:
Colorado has a cash crop here, and I do not mean marijuana, which will be all over the place. Nice idea if pot growers donated their stems to make hemp twine and paper. Some did in California where John Stahl made hemp paper. This is not just a nice idea, the stems of hemp produce what was once the world's most traded commodity. Using it again in the US would create thousands of jobs, reduce dependency on plastic bags, create a paper industry, etc etc.
We need more people to contact the press and the leglislators and make some noise.
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