HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Line Between Hemp and Marijuana Still Blurry to
Pubdate: Thu, 15 May 2008
Source: Lantern, The (OH Edu)
Copyright: 2008 The Lantern
Contact:  http://www.thelantern.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1214
Author: Olivia Radcliffe
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/industrialhemp
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana)

LINE BETWEEN HEMP AND MARIJUANA STILL BLURRY TO U.S.

Weed, pot, hash, grass, hemp - all have been used as nicknames for 
marijuana. As studies increase, however, it turns out hemp and 
marijuana might not have as much in common as people think.

While technically a single species, Cannabis sativa - better known as 
marijuana - has evolved over the years to present two very different 
plants: industrial hemp used for its fiber and typical marijuana 
harvested for its hallucinogenic properties.

The question being debated is whether or not the agricultural 
benefits of hemp are enough to tip the scale in favor of legalizing 
production of the specific form of Cannabis sativa.

"The seeds and stalks of hemp can be used for a million different 
things - from making clothing to carpets, foods, lotions, medicines, 
paper and even fuel," said Patrick Greeson, greenhouse manager at the 
William A.  Natorp Co.

A chemical analysis of marijuana shows the plant contains between 
three and 15 percent THC - the component that causes the 
mind-altering effects associated with the drug. Hemp, on the other 
hand, only has a .3 THC level, which makes obtaining a high from 
smoking hemp extremely difficult.

"If you tried hard enough you could probably get a bit of a buzz from 
smoking (hemp)," Greeson said, laughing.  "You're probably more 
likely to get emphysema first, though."

Plants harvested as marijuana typically consist of big, bushy leaves 
and an abundance of buds - the parts of the plant anatomy typically 
smoked, said Margaret McMahon, associate professor of horticulture 
and crop science at Ohio State. Hemp plants, however, are 
distinguished by their long stalks used for their fibers.

"It's a good crop," McMahon said. "It has a deep root system and is 
good for the soil structure. It doesn't suck the soil dry like cotton."

Adam Eidinger, a spokesman for the group Vote Hemp in Bedford, Mass., 
said he estimated the current market for hemp products at more than 
$275 million annually and increasing.

According to a U.S. Department of Agriculture report, however, the 
market for hemp in the U.S. will remain small because of hemp's 
competition with other more-established raw materials and 
manufacturing practices.

Today much of the hemp sold in the U.S. is imported from Canada, 
which in 1998 legalized the cultivation of Cannabis sativa with less 
than one percent THC.

According to the Hemp Industries Association, the U.S. is the only 
industrialized nation not to permit the production of hemp.

Many fear legalization of industrial hemp will provide cover for 
marijuana fields because of the similar plant structures. Eidinger, 
however, said cross-pollination between the two specimens would have 
detrimental effects on the marijuana plants and therefore would deter 
marijuana growers from mixing crops.

"If the economy was right, it could be a wonderful crop. (It) could 
help solve some problems," Greeson said.

"Politicians don't want to grow it because they have a fear they'd be 
growing the THC type instead of the fiber type," McMahon said. "We 
just have to get off our ignorant horse here, throw blind passion out 
of it and just look at the facts concerning hemp." 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake