industrial hemp

The old adage “You are what you eat” is one to live by. Today, more and more people are making healthy dietary choices—not only for their own health, but also for the health of the Earth.

Hempseed is known by researchers and physicians to be one of the most nutritious food sources on the planet. Its 33 percent protein content is well-balanced, easily digestible, and also rich in iron, zinc, magnesium, vitamins B and E, Omega-3, and GLA. A Canadian government report says that hemp protein has 66 percent high-quality edestin protein—the highest percentage of any plant source. And hemp has the ideal 3:1 ratio of Omega-6 to Omega-3.

No wonder the hemp foods sector is booming! Walk down the aisles of a good store and you can now find hemp oil, hemp seeds, hemp protein, hemp bars, hemp bread, hemp butter, hemp milk . . . even hemp ice cream!

The Origins of Hemp Foods

More than 6,000 years ago, hemp was cultivated in China from a wild plant that grew in central Asia. The Chinese recognized the nutritional value of the hemp seed, and used it as a food source long before they used soy. About 1,000 years ago, hemp traveled to Europe, where one of the most popular ways that peasants used the plant was to make hemp butter by grinding the tasty seeds.

Health and Eco Concerns Regarding Soy Foods

Soy foods stand in marked contrast to hemp foods. Since the 1970s, the soy-food industry has spent hundreds of millions of dollars to convince the public of soy’s supposed “health benefits.“ Consequently, the average American diet includes about 10 percent soy—in dressings, butter spreads, cooking oils, shakes, desserts, etc. Yet, while the mainstream media has long promoted soy, a growing number of health professionals now caution people to think twice before consuming it in large quantities, due to potential allergic reactions, soy’s impact on thyroid health and mineral absorption, its poor fat ratio, and its estrogenic properties.

We should also be concerned about the environmental impacts of soy foods. First, most soybeans grown today are genetically modified, and even organic soy is often contaminated with GMOs by wind drift or processing. Also, toxic chemicals are applied to conventional soy fields in great amounts, causing damage to ecosystems from South America to America’s heartland.

A July 13, 2009, article, “Study Released in Argentina Puts Glyphosate Under Fire”  stated: “. . . research released by Argentina’s top medical school showed that a leading chemical used in soy farming may be harmful to human health.”

The article explained how soy cultivation is producing deformed frogs and adding untold hardships to small farmers. Do people understand that buying non-organic soy milk, food bars, cereal, and even common soy protein, supports this bitter harvest?

chemplant_web

And it’s not only how soy is grown. The toxic chemical hexane, a petroleum byproduct, is used as a solvent to extract soy oil for about 98 percent of all soybeans processed in America. When ordering a soy burger or soymilk, you wouldn’t request a side of petrol solvent. But you get that added serving of hexane—also a major greenhouse gas emitter—anyway! Listen to what leading health researcher Mike Adams, a.k.a. “the Health Ranger,” says about soy protein products.

If you eat only organic soy (a much better choice), please read The Soy Report Scorecard by the organic watchdog group Cornucopia. If you are going to use soy, choose foods that are both organic and fermented, such as miso, tamari, and tempeh. The fermentation process makes soy more bioavailable and reduces its antinutritional qualities. And beware: Some firms claim “made with organic soybeans” even though their products contain hexane-processed soy.

Another issue that medical doctors are watching is soy’s effects on the thyroid.

Also, learn why longtime vegetarian Julia Wey is rethinking her consumption of soy foods.

Hemp Benefits

Unlike soy, hemp isn’t genetically modified, and no company uses hexane to extract its healthy oil. Another plus for hemp is that it’s easy to grow without pesticides or herbicides. It smothers weeds as a rotation crop, and its long taproot helps to restore soil health. Besides the seeds’ nutritional benefits, hemp’s strong fibers are being used to replace unsustainable cotton, petrol, and concrete in everything from clothing to car parts to construction materials.

More than thirty industrialized nations grow commercial hemp, including England, Germany, China, and Canada. Nevertheless,

United States law forbids growing hemp without a federal license. This has prevented commercial hemp production since the 1950s. Visit VoteHemp.com to learn how you can help to restore hemp farming in America.

Back in 1995, I wrote a booklet on industrial hemp in which these were the opening words:

“Imagine a crop more versatile than the soybean, the cotton plant, and the Douglas fir tree put together . . . one whose products are interchangeable with those from timber or petroleum . . . one that grows like Jack’s beanstalk with minimal tending. There is such a crop: industrial hemp.

Hempfields_web“Hemp was once indispensable to world commerce. New World colonists and traders were able to cross the Atlantic Ocean because the hemp ropes and sails of their ships, unlike other natural fibers, resisted salt damage. Not so long ago, it was inconceivable for an economy to function without hemp.”

These words hold true today, and it’s good to see that the world is again acknowledging hemp’s great value. In this era of Google and YouTube, we can all access cutting-edge health information to help us compare hemp food crops to soy. I encourage you to do your own research, and to remember that good health is our greatest wealth. Our lives depend on it.

John W. Roulac is the Founder and CEO of Nutiva, the world’s leading brand of organic hemp foods and coconut oil. A longtime advocate of holistic living, he is the author of four books (with a million-plus copies sold) on hemp and composting. He helped jump-start the modern home-composting movement in the early 1990s, successfully sued the USDEA to keep hemp imports legal in 2001, and has founded three  nonprofit ecological groups. To learn more about John Roulac and Nutiva, visit www.nutiva.com/articles/.

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The Thai cabinet agreed to promote the
growing of hemp as a new economic plant for Thailand.

Another country takes a positive step forward in creating new rural jobs utilizing the amazing hemp plant. It’s a non-drug crop yet the US government still bans it’s growing in America. How many more years before the US government jumps on the hemp bandwagon?

Writer: BangkokPost.com
Published: 22/09/2009 at 05:11 PM

The spokesman said the cabinet agreed to set up a committee to implement the plan.

The cabinet on Tuesday agreed to set up a committee to promote growing of hemp as a new economic plant on high land, as proposed by the National Economic and Social Development Board, deputy government spokesman Vachara Kannikar said.

Mr Vachara said the NESDB submitted a proposal for planting and growing hemp on high land from 2009-2013 to the cabinet. The plant was already being grown by various royal projects aimed at generating supplementary income for farmers.

The NESDB  had concluded that hemp can be used to produce textiles, food, furniture, health products, and cosmetics.

However, there were limitations on growing hemp since it is categorised as a No 5 narcotic plant in the form of  marijuana.

Therefore, farmers have to grow it secretly, despite the fact that hemp is an economic plant.

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By Kat Kerlin

To begin, a little refresher: Hemp is marijuana’s straight-laced cousin. Marijuana and hemp come from the same species of plant but from different varieties of it. It’s a bit like how a house cat and mountain lion are related and yet are rather different. Specifically, there is not enough of any psychoactive ingredient in hemp to get you high.

It’s currently illegal to grow hemp without a permit from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, which tends to view hemp as undesirable, in part because growers could mask their marijuana operations with hemp crops, since they look so alike. Britain,Germany and Canada have lifted similar bans. And while 16 states have passed pro-hemp legislation for industrial hemp production, it’s still illegal in most of this country. Many hemp advocates and environmentalists think this is a shame since hemp is so versatile (see below).

Some, such as Hemp Global Solutions and USA Hemp Museum founder Richard Davis, advocate planting hemp on a wide scale to reduce climate change. They claim that a ton of hemp grown represents 1.63 tons of carbon dioxide absorbed from the atmosphere, though we’ve found no scientific studies to back up that figure.

What is well-established is that hemp grows quickly with little need for the pesticides and herbicides; it’s best planted in rotation, which is a more sustainable growing method than mono-cropping; and nothing need go to waste with a hemp plant—everything from it’s stalk to its seed oil can be used for industrial production. It is legal to use products made with industrial hemp, a number of which can be found at natural foods stores. Here are a few of the ways you could use hemp:

1) Stash your cash in hemp wallets and purses.

2) Keep your pants on with a hemp belt.

3) Knit your grandma a sweater with hemp yarn

4) Go eco-chic. From sweaters to pants to sandals, hemp fibers are often blended with silk, cotton or wool for a wide range of clothing.

5) Sleep with it: hemp bedding, from pillowcases to sheets and comforters.

6) Pucker up with hemp lip balm.

7) Burn it as biomass used for fuel, or make biofuel or ethanol from hemp seed oil.
8) Drive your cat crazy with a hemp mouse toy stuffed with catnip.

9) Play tug with your pup with a hemp rope chew toy.

10) Start the day off right with hemp-fortified waffles or pancakes.

11) Sling on your guitar with a hemp guitar strap.

12) Write on it: hemp paper.

13) Make a hemp necklace or bracelet (as if you weren’t hippie enough with your hemp sandals and waffles).

14) Make a vinaigrette. Reap the benefits of Omega 6 and Omega 3 essential fatty acids with the nutty taste of hemp seed oil.

15) Drink it: There’s hemp beer, wine, vodka, brandy, rum and other forms of alcohol to be found.

16) Build a house: From hempcrete to hempbales and hemp-lime construction materials, hemp is popping up as an alternative building material.

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This month Maine Governor John Baldacci signed into law LD 1159, the Maine hemp farming bill. The bill establishes a licensing regime for farming industrial hemp, though the licensing is contingent upon action by the federal government.

A joint resolution was passed by Vermont urging Congress to recognize industrial hemp as a valuable agricultural commodity.

Read the whole story.

Nutiva® 1% donations helps support VoteHemp in the hemp industry’s efforts to grow hemp once again in the USA.

Hemp Factoid:
The 1913 Yearbook of the U.S. Department of Agriculture called hemp “the oldest cultivated fiber plant,” mentioned how the crop improves the land, and said that it yields “one of the strongest and most durable fibers of commerce.”

More amazing facts on hemp history.

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Posted By: Jane Wells

CNBC – View original article on Hemp

What if Americans could buy cigarettes but were banned from growing tobacco? Buy bread but not allowed to grow wheat? That is the case with industrial hemp, a product in everything from car doors to milk…legally.

Hemp farming was banned in the U.S. decades ago as part of the earliest drug wars. Hemp contains THC, like marijuana. But hemp is not marijuana. “It’s like a Chihuahua versus a Saint Bernard,” says David Bronner, President of Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps, which sold $29 million in hemp-related products last year. The THC in industrial hemp is so minute that “the only thing you will get from smoking it is a headache,” says Gregg Baumbaugh, CEO of FlexForm Technologies, which uses hemp in car doors for Dodge Vipers. Both companies import their hemp from Canada or France, adding 10 to 15 percent to costs.

>> Continue reading on CNBC

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