HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Possibilities Are Endless For Newest Crop
Pubdate: Mon, 14 May 2007
Source: Intelligencer, The (CN ON)
Copyright: 2007, Osprey Media Group Inc.
Contact:  http://www.intelligencer.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2332

POSSIBILITIES ARE ENDLESS FOR NEWEST CROP

Dazed and Confused, Cheech and Chong .... Dude, have  you seen my crop?

You'll have to excuse Grant Moorcroft if he tells you  he's heard 
every pothead joke around. And with good  reason, he is, after all, 
one of the area's most  accomplished growers of a strain of hemp 
that's all  about industrial as opposed to recreational.

With 30 acres of the crop, Moorcroft works hard for the  fibrous end 
product, and for that any farmer of any  crop would surely doff his 
or her cap to the him.  Anyone who's tried to take off a crop before 
the fields  turn to slop or the rains make the product 
unsalable  knows what a challenge farming can be.

Add to those inherent hurdles of agriculture what must  be an 
endlessly annoying task of explaining and  clarifying his crops for 
the uninitiated - that and  keeping dummies who think you can smoke 
this hemp out  of his fields - and Moorcroft's got his work cut out for him.

He recently received a regional Premier's agricultural  innovation 
award worth $5,000.

"(Hemp) is really tough stuff," he said.

No understatement there, as he explained to  Intelligencer reporter 
Samantha Craggs.

He's now helping develop a technology that separates  the hurd from 
the fibre - a difficult task that sends  many hemp farmers packing in 
the stalk-born product for  an easier crop.

Currently, the possibilities of hemp are greater than  the technology 
and marketing available for it. It can  be used to make everything 
from milk to clothing.  Moorcroft's crop is used exclusively for a 
new environmental wave; the tightly-packed bales are  stacked and 
covered in mortar to form the walls of  straw bale houses.

Moorcroft knows he's sitting on possibilities. Hemp can  be used to 
reinforce recycled plastic and cardboard,  but no one has paved the 
way in Ontario yet.

Its hurd can be used as an eco-friendly dietary  supplement. Its 
tough fibre can make rope, clothing and  carpets. But researchers and 
hemp growers themselves  are still figuring out exactly how to 
efficiently separate the two.

Turns out Moorcroft's rocky land north of Madoc was  getting 
increasingly tough for a dairy farmer. Ask  anyone who's tried to 
carve out such a living on the  Canadian Shield north of Highway 7 
and you'll get the  picture. Moorcroft is to be applauded for finding 
a crop that's suited to that farmland and one that  presents economic 
potential for farmers facing similar  challenges or who possess the 
same amount of innovation  and drive to succeed.

The crop proved easy to grow, he found, but when he  tried to harvest 
it, he hit a roadblock. The fibre was  so tough that the usual farm 
implement blades couldn't  cut it, and it simply wrapped around the equipment.

"The first time I did it with the old combine, and it  took four days 
to combine four acres," he said. "It's  the toughest plant in the world."

Moorcroft modified his equipment - part of the reason  why he won the 
innovation award. He and a western  Ontario hemp grower are also 
building a machine that  will automatically separate the hurd from 
the fibre by  running the straw through a machine called a decorrelator.

This is the kind of collaboration and innovation the  provincial 
government needs to continue to recognize,  nurture and promote.

After all, Ontario has only about 55 hemp growers and  about 700 
acres of the crop. Manitoba, by comparison,  has 30,000 acres of hemp 
being grown by dozens of  farmers.

There still remains a Cheech and Chong stigma about  hemp growing - 
something that should, in an informed  society, have long exhausted 
itself - and it would be  wise for Health Canada to start looking at 
loosening  restrictions on growing the crop.

The products that can spin from a field of hemp are as  limitless as 
the imagination of those who incorporate  the fibrous plant into 
their agriculture plan.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman