Archive for the ‘Hemp based products’ Category

The Hemp Handbook

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

March 10, 2010 – As the debate continues in the news on whether to legalize cannabis, The Hemp Handbook aims to demythologize hemp and its by-products. Informed and well researched, the book Picture 2explores the long history of hemp, and its uses as a healing substance, showing how the plant has much to offer as a renewable resource. The book includes recipes for cosmetics and healthy food, using both hemp seed and hemp seed oil. It investigates the medical benefits to patients with AIDS, cancer, glaucoma and Multiple Sclerosis and as an appetite stimulant, as well as its potential as fibre for paper, clothing, and insulation. The Hemp Handbook is essential reading for anyone seeking a balanced understanding of this topical issue. Source.

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Wisconsin: Hemp for Victory over Recession

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

March 4, 2010 – At a time when Wisconsin farm families are Picture 1constantly looking for new sources of revenue, hemp would be a good one.

The states of North Dakota, Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Montana, West Virginia, Vermont and Oregon already have legalized the cultivation of industrial hemp, recognizing that these crops can be used to produce fibers that are useful in the making of rope and other products.

At a time when Wisconsin farm families are constantly looking for new sources of revenue, this is a good one. And it has a history in the state; until 1957, notes Bill Tracy, who chairs the Agronomy Department at the University of Wisconsin, industrial hemp was a significant crop for Wisconsin farmers.

With that combination of current need and relatively recent history in mind, legislators should not hesitate to back a bill, introduced by state Rep. Louis Molepske Jr., D-Stevens Point, which would address the state prohibition on the production of hemp.

The controversy regarding this bill, to the extent that there is any, will have to do with the fact that hemp is cultivated from the same plant that is used to grow marijuana.

Molepske’s bill would require the state Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection to permit farmers to grow and process the Cannabis sativa plant, so long as it contains only a minimal amount of the active ingredient in marijuana. In other words: He is not proposing to make Wisconsin the nation’s prime pot producer.

Under the Stevens Point Democrat’s proposal, farmers would be required to provide a legal description of the land where the hemp would be grown or processed and to report all sales. There would, as well, be restrictions on access to permits for those convicted of drug crimes.

This is sound legislation.

Of course, Molepske’s bill is really only a step in the process of lifting the ban on hemp production. The federal Drug Enforcement Agency still restricts production. But, noting recent legislation introduced by Congressman Ron Paul, R-Texas, and Barney Frank, D-Mass., which would ease federal restrictions, Molepske correctly suggests that Wisconsin should be prepared to capitalize on any change in federal regulations. Source.

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