Saturday, September 29, 2018

Wisconsin farmers harvest hemp for first time in 50 years


By Adrienne Pedersen
Source:
wisn.com







Farmers in Wisconsin are one step closer to selling their hemp legally in Wisconsin.
For the first time in 50 years farmers in the state can legally grow hemp.
 
Steve Tomlins and Janet Gamble started harvesting one of their crops this week at Turtle Creek Gardens, an organic vegetable farm in Delavan. They used equipment from the 1950s and 1970s to do the job.
"This is what we had on hand," Tomlins said. "And we want to show farmers you don't have to have a bunch of big equipment, a bunch of fancy stuff and you can still grow this and make an income."
To get to the harvest, the farmers had to pass the state regulated THC test. A surveyor checked the plants to make sure they don't have more than 0.3 percent THC, the chemical in marijuana that makes users high.
"It's the culmination of passion," Tomlins said. "But there are still some unknowns. We still have a lot of work to do."
According to the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection, about 135 farmers are growing hemp in Wisconsin.
Dawn Schulz wants to get in on the effort and potentially start a hemp farm in the Chicago-area. She spent time shadowing Tomlins and Gamble during the harvest. 
"They are making history here," Schulz said. "People need to get the experience to pull it all together to reduce the risk for other farmers to do this next year. They can't bet the farm on a crop unless they have assurance its going to be successful."
Tomlins and Gamble will use some of their hemp plants to sell seeds to other farmers who want to plant hemp. Some of the buds will be used for Cannabidiol or CBD oil and a variety of other products including bedding.
 

Hemp, on the brink of being legal, still faces challenges


By Sophie Quinton

Source:

thecannifornian.com



DENVER — It’s a giddy time for the U.S. hemp industry. Farmers are planting more acres. Businesses are selling more products. And with Congress on the brink of fully legalizing hemp, industry insiders are eagerly anticipating a boom.

But even if the legalization provisions in the 2018 farm bill pass, hemp will remain a tightly regulated crop facing plenty of regulatory and legal challenges.

As the more than 30 states that operate hemp pilot programs have discovered, it’s not easy to oversee a plant that’s used to make everything from car parts to hand cream and that, except for the chemical that produces a high, is identical to marijuana — which the federal government still classifies as a dangerous drug.In this April 19, 2018 photo, Seth Crawford, co-owner of Oregon CBD, displays hemp seeds being prepared for sale to industrial hemp farmers at his facility in Monmouth, Ore. Applications for state licenses to grow hemp, marijuana’s non-intoxicating cousin, have increased more than twentyfold since 2015 and Oregon now ranks No. 2 behind Colorado among the 19 states with hemp cultivation. (AP Photos/Gillian Flaccus)

It could take one or two years for federal officials to craft regulations for hemp, said Tim Gordon, president of the Colorado Hemp Industries Association. “Just because the farm bill passes doesn’t mean hemp is suddenly legal and everything’s great.”

In Congress, House and Senate lawmakers are working to finalize this year’s farm bill, which is expected to fund farming and nutrition programs, agricultural research and other related policy areas for the coming five years. They have less than a week to reach an agreement before the 2014 farm bill expires.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican, is from the hemp-rich state of Kentucky and a strong supporter of legalizing the crop.

The amount of hemp grown in the United States has steadily increased since 2014, when Congress gave states permission to set up pilot programs focused on researching the plant and its commercial potential.

Nineteen of the states that allow hemp cultivation reported a crop last year, from a single acre grown in Hawaii and in Nevada to more than 9,000 acres in Colorado, according to Vote Hemp, a nonprofit that advocates for hemp legalization. Over 25,000 acres were planted nationwide.

Although legalization will solve many of the industry’s problems, such as by allowing farmers to get crop insurance for their hemp, there are several challenges officials running a hemp program — and people running a hemp business — will continue to face.

For instance, there are no national standards for how to test hemp for tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the psychoactive compound that, under federal law, cannot exceed 0.3 percent concentration in hemp plants.

There are also conflicting state rules for cannabidiol, or CBD, a cannabis compound with alleged healing qualities that’s sold as a natural remedy and ingredient in foods, drinks and lotions. “That will be the other real mess that will need to be cleaned up,” said Duane Sinning, director of the plant industry division at the Colorado Department of Agriculture.
In this April 23, 2018 photo, a sign designates the type of crop grown in a field as it stands ready to plant another hemp crop for Big Top Farms near Sisters, Ore. A glut of legal marijuana has driven pot prices to rock-bottom levels in Oregon, and an increasing number of nervous growers are pivoting to another type of cannabis to make ends meet–hemp. (AP Photo/Don Ryan)

Hemp and marijuana aren’t genetically distinct plants. The difference is legal: the 2014 and 2018 farm bills define “industrial hemp” as cannabis plants that have a THC concentration of 0.3 percent or less. The Controlled Substances Act of 1970, which the 2018 farm bill would explicitly override, defines hemp as the mature stalk, sterilized seeds and products made from stalk and seeds of the cannabis plant.

Under the guidelines for hemp pilot programs and the proposed rules for regulating fully legal hemp, states must destroy crops that test above the 0.3 percent threshold — known as “hot” hemp plants.

But the testing rules that determine whether a farmer will have a crop to sell aren’t the same across states. That can mean “drastically different” THC results, Sinning said.

For instance, he said, some states require testing of samples that are predominantly made up of flower material, and others on samples that blend more parts of the plant. Because flowers generate the most cannabinoids, including THC, samples heavy on flowers generate higher THC results.

Colorado tests the top two inches of a plant — so the flowers, leaves and buds, but not the seeds or stem.

State agriculture commissioners are now banding together to come up with a common standard. A working group convened by the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture is expected to start meeting next month, according to Amanda Culp, the association’s communications director.

It doesn’t help matters that some farmers have an incentive to push their crops to as close to the 0.3 percent THC limit as they can get.

Kentucky grain farmer Joseph Sisk and his business partner have planted 200 acres of hemp this year, which will be processed to extract CBD oil. Sisk said growing hemp isn’t easy, and making sure plants reliably test under the THC limit is one of the difficulties.

“I think that challenge would be the same no matter where you put the level,” he said, at least for farmers like him. That’s because growing plants to maximize CBD inevitably increases the levels of other cannabinoids, including THC.In this April 24, 2018 photo, pollen is removed from a hemp plant at the Unique Botanicals facility in Springfield, Ore. A glut of legal marijuana has driven pot prices to rock-bottom levels in Oregon, and an increasing number of nervous growers are pivoting to another type of cannabis to make ends meet – hemp. (AP Photo/Don Ryan)

Colorado state Sen. Don Coram, a Republican who runs a hemp CBD business in the rural western part of the state, said he thinks some hemp growers try to game state THC tests to push up their cannabinoid yield. “I think there’s some cheating,” he said, another issue that may merit more attention from lawmakers.

A decade ago, few people had heard of hemp-derived CBD. But four years from now, it’s expected to dominate sales of hemp in the United States, generating some $646 million, according to the Hemp Business Journal, a publication that tracks the hemp industry.

People across the country, from Brooklyn hipsters to middle-aged Kentucky dads, take hemp CBD as a pill, swallow spoonfuls of hemp CBD oil or rub CBD-infused creams onto their bodies to soothe aches, pains and anxiety. Patients who suffer from seizure disorders — and their parents — have successfully lobbied states for access to hemp or low-THC marijuana-derived CBD oils as a medical treatment.

The fast-growing hemp product has raised several regulatory issues. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has maintained that CBD oil cannot be marketed as a dietary supplement and has been going after companies for making outlandish health claims.

Laws and regulations that define the hemp extract, who can use it and who can sell it, differ from state to state. In Colorado, where voters in 2012 amended the constitution to legalize cannabis, marijuana-derived CBD products are sold in dispensaries and hemp-derived CBD products are sold in health food stores, coffee shops, smoke shops and spas.

In Ohio, where medical marijuana is legal but no state hemp program exists, hemp- and marijuana-derived CBD oil must be sold by licensed dispensaries. And in Wyoming, which is setting up an industrial hemp program, patients with intractable epilepsy are allowed to take hemp CBD oil for seizures.

Right now, state policies are all over the place, said Patrick Goggin, a San Francisco-based attorney for the Hoban Law Group. That’s not a problem federal legalization will solve. “It really is going to be left to the states,” he said.

Under the 2018 farm bill, states would still need to track where hemp is produced and come up with a procedure for testing, inspecting and getting rid of hot hemp, as they do under hemp pilot programs today. States may need to make a few tweaks to conform their programs to the proposed legislation.

In Colorado, lawmakers are looking even further ahead — to the possibility that the federal government might one day change the THC concentration limit for hemp. The 0.3 percent limit is written into the state constitution. If the federal limit increased, or decreased, that could make Colorado products less competitive or harder to sell across state lines.

So Colorado lawmakers placed a referendum on the November ballot that asks voters whether they want to change the constitutional definition of hemp to a more easily changed statutory one.

Last but not least, states face the ongoing challenges of managing an industry that generates new products constantly.

Gordon of the Colorado Hemp Association said that, for instance, he’s come across hemp-CBD-infused gummies — a non-psychoactive version of the pot candies state lawmakers banned last year, fearing that they were tempting to children.

Coram said a close partnership between various state officials, from agriculture regulators to law enforcement, has been key to Colorado’s program, and that he’s sharing that approach with colleagues in other states. “We’re trying to give them the Colorado solution,” he said.

For Sinning’s office, one aspect of the partnership involves fielding calls from local police or sheriffs who have passed a field of cannabis and want to know if they’re looking at a licensed hemp crop. “We’re getting calls all the time from law enforcement,” Sinning said, “because now hemp is everywhere.”

How Fly Whisks, Often Made of Hemp, Symbolize Life and Authority

By SCHWILLY
Source:
marijuana.com





Through a core virtue of Eastern religions, hemp wasn’t only a way of life for ancient humanity — hemp was used to protect it.
 
 
In “Shiva and Parvati on a composite cow made of assembled women,” the married god and goddess ride a cow bearing the images of several women. Behind the procession is the elephant-head god Ganesh, holding a fly whisk. The artist is unknown and the work dates to about 1775 to 1800, according to Google Arts and Culture. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons)
Ahimsa, or nonviolence, is a core tenet of Hinduism, Jainism, Taoism and Buddhism. Ahimsa stems from an earlier Sanskrit word for “no harm.” The principle was first vaguely mentioned in Vedic texts dating back thousands of years, but by 500 BC, Ahimsa had become a central concept making its way into the beliefs of most Eastern faiths.
In Jainism, Ahimsa became such a central concept of importance it was listed as the first of the five fundamental vows known as anuvratas, or small vows, taken by all members of the faith. Jains aspiring to be monks or nuns, must accept the same five vows but swear to a stricter pledge called mahavratas, or the “great vows.” To uphold this great vow of nonviolence, Jain monastics sought to protect all life no matter it’s size.
These Jain monks and nuns chose not to wear the animal-derived wool and silk cloths of their communities, but instead chose the animal-free option of cotton or hemp. [1] To further aid in this great vow, Jain monastics turned to an ancient tool to protect life: the fly whisk.
A fly whisk is a ancient fly swatter that mimics an animal’s tail to safely shoo away pesky flying insects. Early fly whisks were typically made with short wooden handles using animal hair or hemp for the ends. Jain monastics again chose hemp.
Daruma, the Japanese name for Bodhidharma, Zen Buddhism’s founder, raises his arms over his head. He is holding a fly whisk used during meditation in this 1800s copper kozuka by Toshiyuki. (Image from Wikimedia Commons)
Not wishing to accidentally harm life while walking, the monks and nuns also used their whisks to brush away any small creature that may be in their path. So worried over the unintentional loss of life, the monastics dawned cotton or hemp masks over their mouths to protect from accidentally breathing in any unseen creature.
In this photograph from R.V. Russell’s “The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India, Volume 1,” published in 1916, Jain ascetics wear cloths over their mouths and brandish fly whisks to avoid harming small creatures. The cloths and whisks were usually made from hemp or cotton, rather than animal-derived wools or silks. (Public domain images from Wikimedia Commons)

The Fly Whisk in Buddhism

It is believed that Buddha at his birth arose upright on a lotus flower. The newly born Buddha was protected on the lotus only by a parasol (umbrella) and fly whisk. [2] This whisk came to symbolize not only royalty but also taught the lesson to sweep away of all mental distractions and ignorance.
According to the Binaya Zoji, a early Buddhist text used by the Nichiren sect, Buddha not only ordered all Buddhist monks to use fly whisks at all times but also proclaimed they should be made from one of five materials ‘sheep’s wool, finely shredded fabric, old rags, tree branches/twigs or hemp’. [3]
Known in Japan as a hossu, the fly whisk became symbolic of a Zen Buddhist authority to teach and transmit Buddha Dharma, or teachings, to others. The hossu is frequently only passed from one master to the next. In Taoism and many Chinese Buddhist sects, the presiding master must hold the fly whisk during all religious debates.
The teachings of the fly whisk became of such importance within the various Eastern religions, its image became one of the eight Ashtamangala, or important symbols, in many sects of Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism. Held by many deities, these symbolic teaching tools represent the necessary qualities to find the path of enlightenment.

Fly Whisks: A Global Icon

Somehow, fly whisks found their way into many cultures around the world. In Africa, the fly whisk has become a sign of royalty still displayed as regalia by leaders such as the former Kenyan statesman Jomo Kenyatta (1891-1978).
In the Middle East, the whisks are used in markets during summer months to shoo away the onslaught of flying insects. These modern whisks are constructed of a wooden handle with plant fibers attached to them, just like the hemp construction of ancient fly whisks.
The fly whisk even made its way to the Polynesian islands, where it has become a prop during celebrations to represent the ultimate symbol of authority. During the design for the flag of American Samoa, the fly whisk was the chosen symbol to be carried in the talons of the iconic American bald eagle.
A member of a dinner party holds a fly whisk in the background in this illustration from an account of Edward William Lane’s observations of Egypt, published in 1836. [4] (Wikimedia Commons; used with a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 Generic license)

Footnotes:
[1] Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency Vol. 22, p. 118, 1884
[2] Renou, Louis L’Inde Classique, p. 470
[3] Binaya zoji 6 (T. 1451, XXIX, 229b, li. 15 ff.); quoted in BD 1589. Cf. Zimmer, The art of Indian Asia, II, Pl. 50
[4] Lane, Edward William. “An Account of the Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians, Written in Egypt During the Years 1833, -34, and -35, Partly from Notes Made During a Former Visit to that Country in the Years 1825, -26, -27, and -28. Volume 1”. Charles Knight & Co.: London, 1836. p 178 ( https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/F…6)_-_TIMEA.jpg )

American Women

By The American Women
Source: The American Women

WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 27: Dr. Christine Blasey Ford speaks before the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to be an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, on Capitol Hill September 27, 2018 in Washington, DC. A professor at Palo Alto University and a research psychologist at the Stanford University School of Medicine, Ford has accused Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her during a party in 1982 when they were high school students in suburban Maryland. (Photo By Michael Reynolds-Pool/Getty Images)  - xxxx xxxx
Dr. Christine Blasey Ford




Image result for the elevator women heroes

These two heroes, who confronted this morning, just changed the course of the Kavanaugh process. We❤️you so much, and Maria Gallagher.

Monday, September 17, 2018

Coca-Cola Is Eyeing the Cannabis Market

Image result for coke cannabisBy Jen Skerritt and Craig Giammona
Source: bloomberg.com

Drinks maker in talks with Aurora Cannabis, BNN Bloomberg says

Company watching growth of CBD for use in wellness beverages



The world’s largest beverage company may be the next industry giant to jump into the cannabis drinks business.
Coca-Cola Co. says it’s monitoring the nascent industry and is interested in drinks infused with CBD -- the non-psychoactive ingredient in marijuana that treats pain but doesn’t get you high. The Atlanta-based soft drinks maker is in talks with Canadian marijuana producer Aurora Cannabis Inc. to develop the beverages, according to a report from BNN Bloomberg Television.
“We are closely watching the growth of non-psychoactive CBD as an ingredient in functional wellness beverages around the world,” Coca-Cola spokesman Kent Landers said in an emailed statement to Bloomberg News. “The space is evolving quickly. No decisions have been made at this time.” Landers declined to comment on Aurora.
Pot stocks Tilray Inc., Cronos Group and Canopy Growth gained in pre-market trading Monday in response to Coca-Cola’s interest. Tilray jumped 6.8 percent, adding to its 40 percent gain last week; Cronos rose 3.1 percent and Canopy’s U.S. shares climbed 2.9 percent.
Coke’s possible foray into the marijuana sector comes as beverage makers are trying to add cannabis as a trendy ingredient while their traditional businesses slow. Last month, Corona beer brewer Constellation Brands Inc.announced it will spend $3.8 billion to increase its stake in Canopy Growth Corp., the Canadian marijuana producer with a value that exceeds C$13 billion ($10 billion).

Molson Coors Brewing Co. is starting a joint venture with Quebec’s Hydropothecary Corp. to develop cannabis drinks in Canada. Diageo PLC, maker of Guinness beer, is holding discussions with at least three Canadian cannabis producers about a possible deal, BNN Bloomberg reported last month. Heineken NV’s Lagunitas craft-brewing label has launched a brand specializing in non-alcoholic drinks infused with THC, marijuana’s active ingredient.
 
Coca-Cola has already been diversifying as consumption of soda continues to decline. The company, with its iconic brands ranging from Coke and Sprite to Powerade, announced it will acquire the Costa Coffee chain for $5.1 billion in August, and has expanded into other products including juice, tea and mineral water over the past decade.
The discussions with Aurora are focused on CBD-infused drinks to ease inflammation, pain and cramping, according to the BNN Bloomberg report. CBD, or cannabidiol, is the chemical in the pot plant often used for medicinal purposes, and doesn’t produce the high that comes from THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol. There are no guarantees of any deal between Aurora and Coca-Cola, according to the report.

Aurora Comment

Heather MacGregor, a spokeswoman for Aurora, said in an emailed statement that the cannabis producer has expressed specific interest in the infused-beverage space, and intends to enter that market, BNN Bloomberg’s David George-Cosh reported.
While marijuana remains illegal at the national level in the U.S., there is growing acceptance of the use of CBD derived from marijuana to treat illnesses ranging from chronic pain to anxiety and epilepsy. The first-ever medical treatment derived from a marijuana plant will hit the U.S. market soon, after regulators in June gave an epilepsy treatment by GW Pharmaceuticals Plc the green light.
Aurora is Canada’s third-largest pot company, with a market value of C$8.7 billion. The Edmonton, Alberta-based company has soared along with other pot stocks in Canada as the country gears up to become the first Group of Seven nation to legalize cannabis on Oct. 17. The BI Canada Cannabis Competitive Peers Index has more than doubled in the past 12 months, though has dropped 24 percent in 2018 on concern that the stocks are overvalued.