Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 
This Month
December 2005
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Search
View Article  Can Hemp Save U.S. Farmers?
On December 19, 1606 three small ships commanded by Captain Christopher Newport, departed London, England bound for America, where 120 persons established the first permanent English settlement in what is now the United States at Jamestown, Virginia. For years the settlers struggled to make a go of it. Food was scarce and the colony was nearly abandoned.

Eventually they established farms, growing much-needed crops. One of these crops was hemp. In 1619 Jamestown made growing hemp a mandate for farmers. If a farmer refused, he was thrown in prison.

Today, farmers are thrown in prison if they do grow hemp, even industrial varieties. In fact, the U.S. is the only developed nation that has not established hemp as a crop, the Congressional Research Service says. But ideas are blooming in Congress as lawmakers look at industrial hemp as a cash crop that could save many US farmers.
   more »
View Article  Support for Insustrial Hemp Takes Root in Congress
When Sex and the City's Sarah Jessica Parker sported an outfit made from hemp, many people took note. Yes, sales of hemp products is booming, increasing by 50 percent per year. Industrial hemp is finding its way into food, clothing, paper, and cosmetics. The increased demand is great news for farmers, if they're not from the United States. It's legal to import hemp seeds and fiber into the U.S., but it's illegal for U.S. farmers to grow industrial hemp. But this may be changing. Support for industrial hemp is taking root in Congress...

To listen to the 2-minute audio article, subscribe to my podcast feed (so you can open the attachment below) or simply listen here to the mp3 audio file.  [NOTE: Information for this article originated from USA Today (November. 22, 2005) and Organic Producer magazine.]

1 Attachments


How to Stay in Touch:

Subscribe to my UpBeet Gardener ezine (above) and to this blog to automatically receive updates. To subscribe this blog, you have 2 choices:

1) Click on this icon if you use a feed reader, or

2) For email updates,
Another Way To Stay In Touch:

Listen to my podcasts!

My UpBeet Gardener radio shows are available as podcasts. They're fun, entertaining and only 2 or 3 minutes long.

Click on the UpBeet Gardener Podcasts on the list at left to read the article and listen to the audio, or if you have iTunes: Go to the iTunes podcast directory and do a search for Acorns.

You can also download a free program for Windows and Mac. Just click on this icon:>


For FAQs about iPodder and podcasting: Click here



I'm Marion Owen and I live on Kodiak Island, Alaska where I pull weeds, write, photograph, and produce my UpBeet Gardener radio shows and international newsletter. My husband and I operate Galley Gourmet dinner cruises. I conduct workshops and keynote addresses and produce PlanTea organic fertilizer. My main site is at plantea.com