Can you give me anyone in North Carolina who may be supportive of this & who may have some clout? Senator Burr is out. We have a 5 acre spot that would do well growing hemp. How far away are we to being able to do this? How silly can we be?
Can you give me a contact person in North Carolina who is supportive of this & who may have some clout? Senator Burr is out. We have a 5 acre spot that would do well with hemp. How far away from this are we? How much sillier can we in this country be??
12:49 PM
[Image] Many people still have the image in their minds that those who run hemp companies are neo-Luddites, and that the farmers who supply them with their raw materials sow the seed by hand on small plots and harvest the grain or fiber with horse-drawn equipment. This may come to pass again in the future, but for now farmers, manufacturers, distributors and consumers are all part of a complex and modern system. I also work for a company that distributes all kinds of industrial supply parts from companies such as Grainger, John Deere, McMaster-Carr, Motion Industries, MSC and Timken. It often strikes me that the hemp industry is also part of this massive supply chain. We are far from being part of the "counterculture." As The Oregonian story on Living Harvest shows, we are indeed becoming more a part of the mainstream every day.
Traditional industries in the U.S. and around the world are embracing the benefits of using hemp in their products. I was reminded of this again earlier this week when Reuters reported that visitors at the British International Motorshow in London viewed a prototype of the Lotus Eco Elise which is made with the equivalent of 1,700 recycled aluminum cans and with hemp grown locally in Norfolk (comprising 25% of the car). It also has solar panels on the roof to help power its electrical system. While the car is not a high-torque electric tractor running off solar panels and farming local, organic, sustainable crops, it does push the envelope of industrial design. That in turn helps get us closer to that future by educating the media and the public about what is truly possible and attainable.
As wonderful as it is to imagine and work towards a future where industrial hemp is grown locally to meet our needs for food, clothing, shelter and transportation, reality does have a way of rearing its ugly head when you least expect it. Anna Korakaki found this out in Athens, Greece last week in a nightmarish scene where she was arrested for receiving 4.5 kilos of hemp protein powder at her local post office and was then forced to spend the night in a jail cell. All this because she was creating superfood recipes for her new natural foods company.
We have come a long way in the last fifteen years through educating farmers, legislators, the media, businesses and consumers, but it is obvious that we still have a long way to go, and we need your help to do it.
"Hemp News Update"
3 Comments -
Great story. I wish more people could/would see this! There are so many aspects to hemp it is a shame people are not more educated.
4:54 PM
Can you give me anyone in North Carolina who may be supportive of this & who may have some clout? Senator Burr is out. We have a 5 acre spot that would do well growing hemp. How far away are we to being able to do this? How silly can we be?
12:47 PM
Can you give me a contact person in North Carolina who is supportive of this & who may have some clout? Senator Burr is out. We have a 5 acre spot that would do well with hemp. How far away from this are we? How much sillier can we in this country be??
12:49 PM