Pubdate: Fri, 02 Aug 2002
Source: Rapid City Journal (SD)
Copyright: 2002 The Rapid City Journal
Contact:  http://www.rapidcityjournal.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1029
Author: Heidi Bell Gease

MANDERSON AREA FAMILY HARVESTS HEMP CROP

MANDERSON -- The third time was a charm for Alex White Plume and his
family as they quietly harvested their first crop of industrial hemp
this week.

"It really felt good," White Plume said Friday. "Just like a sense of
relief."

This was the third straight year the White Plume family planted hemp
on their land near Manderson. Two years in a row, federal agents
confiscated the plants before they could be harvested, although the
U.S. government did not file any charges against any of the White
Plumes, who planned to produce and sell hemp oil and other products
from the plants.

This time, family members beat government agents to the punch. They
harvested most of the 3.5-acre crop Monday night.

"They weren't that tall, but they were done pollinating," White Plume
said. "So we took some out, we cut it and it's dried."

The dried hemp already has been sold to Madison Hemp & Flax Co. of
Lexington, Ky., which joined with the Kentucky Hemp Growers
Cooperative Association to ship a trailer full of Canadian hemp to the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation after the White Plumes' first crop was
confiscated in 2000. That hemp was to be used for bricks in a hemp
house.

Industrial hemp is a form of the cannabis sativa plant, also known as
marijuana. Unlike marijuana, hemp cannot be smoked to get high. But it
can be used to make everything from rope to paper to cloth to soap to
animal feed, and itrequires little water. White Plume said the seeds
they planted contained little or no tetrahydrocannabinol, the
ingredient in marijuana that produces a "high."

Federal laws do not distinguish between hemp and marijuana, making it
illegal to grow either one (although hemp can be legally imported).
But in 1998, the Oglala Sioux Tribal Council voted to legalize hemp.
Tribal members say that because the Oglala Sioux Tribe is a sovereign
nation, its laws should apply on the reservation.

The Kentucky buyers will visit the White Plumes on Wednesday, Aug. 14,
to pick up the hemp. That same day, the public is invited to attend a
harvest celebration and symbolic harvest of one small hemp plot.

All are welcome, White Plume said, and thanksgiving ceremonies will
begin about 10 a.m. He has already heard from people all over the
country who are interested in attending. "I can't figure out how they
hear about it," he said. "Somebody's spreading the word."

This year's hemp crop was not as impressive as in years past, when
plants grew to 12 or 13 feet tall. The drought kept this year's plants
to half that size.

But White Plume pointed out that tall prairie grasses grew only about
a foot this year, so the hemp plants "still outgrew everything around."

"I think they were meant to be here," he said.

White Plume would not say how much hemp was harvested, but he said it
was basically a symbolic amount.

"This was a contract between our family and that company from
Kentucky," he said. "We just wanted to keep our word that we could
deliver. It took a long time, but we kept our word."

There was at least one benefit to the raids of 2000 and 2001. When it
came time to harvest this year's crop, the White Plumes knew what to
do. "I used a Weed Eater," White Plume said. "I learned that from the
Bureau of Indian Affairs and the FBI."
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MAP posted-by: Derek