Farming Archives - Horn Creek Hemp The Healing Power of Nature Sat, 09 Mar 2024 08:52:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://horncreekhemp.com/wp-content/uploads/cropped-Horn-Creek-Owl-Logo-black-32x32.png Farming Archives - Horn Creek Hemp 32 32 The Unique Advantages of Farming Hemp in Southern Oregon https://horncreekhemp.com/the-unique-advantages-of-farming-hemp-in-southern-oregon/ https://horncreekhemp.com/the-unique-advantages-of-farming-hemp-in-southern-oregon/#respond Wed, 10 May 2023 16:53:34 +0000 https://horncreekhemp.com/?p=62341 Benefits of Cultivating Hemp in Southern Oregon Southern Oregon Hemp Southern Oregon, with its pristine environment and optimal growing conditions, has quickly become a top destination for hemp farming. Located in the beautiful town of Jacksonville, we are proud to be a part of this thriving agricultural community. In this blog post, we’ll discuss the […]

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horn creek hemp farm

Benefits of Cultivating Hemp in Southern Oregon

Southern Oregon Hemp

Southern Oregon, with its pristine environment and optimal growing conditions, has quickly become a top destination for hemp farming. Located in the beautiful town of Jacksonville, we are proud to be a part of this thriving agricultural community. In this blog post, we’ll discuss the benefits and reasons why Southern Oregon is an ideal location for farming hemp.

Main Reasons why Southern Oregon is an ideal location for farming hemp.

Favorable Climate

It is difficult to say exactly what makes our climate work so well for both CBD-rich hemp.  Some places simply have the proper combination of sunlight, temperatures and nutrients for various plant cultivars to thrive.  Hemp loves heat, but not too much.  Also, our position near the 45th parallel ensures that we will experience significant changes in sunlight exposure.  It is the increase in daylight hours during June, followed by a sharp decline that triggers hemp flowering. 

Rich, Fertile Soil

Hemp prefers a sandy loam soil.  Clay can help with water retention, but we find that cannabis plants like soils that will drain easily.  Our portion of Southern Oregon was once a lake bed.  Millenia of organic matter settled to the bottom of the lake and created what is now the highly desirable sandy loam we farm on.  All that is required of us is to maintain the healthy living microbiome in our soil.  As long as we keep our soil healthy, vibrant and alive, those microbes will feed our plants.

Sustainable Farming Practices

Sustainability on a micro scale means simply watching our for the health of our farm’s environment.  We look out for soil health as well as the health of those naturally occurring plants that border our fields.  These seemingly minor presences have a huge impact.  Every plant, animal and insect population plays a role in the overall balance.  By nurturing these populations, we insure that no single microbe or pest will suddenly bloom and cause issues.  Biodynamic farming strives to maintain this natural balance.  Biodynamic practices prevent any one population from exploiting weakness to overpopulate.  Balance is essential.

Strong Agricultural Heritage

We are able to rely upon generational farming knowledge of our area.  Though hemp was not in the historical lineup of crops, farming practices translate quite well.  WE make every effort to learn from our predecessors.  They know the secrets to producing healthy crops in our valley.

Thriving Hemp Community

As the hemp industry continues to expand, Southern Oregon has become a hub for hemp-related businesses and research facilities. This strong community fosters collaboration, innovation, and a shared commitment to producing the best hemp products on the market.  The renewal of hemp farming meant that many of us were learning the same things at the same times.  A healthy exchange of ideas and best practices helps all farms produce quality material.  We are fortunate to have cooperative farmers, and especially to have the cooperation of Oregon State University’s Global Hemp Innovation Center.  OSU GHIC works with our local Research and Extension office.  We all are the beneficiaries of their studies in hemp.

Farm Direct Pricing

By farming hemp in Southern Oregon, Horn Creek Hemp can offer its customers farm direct pricing, ensuring that they receive high-quality products at the best possible price. This commitment to affordability is a key advantage of cultivating hemp in this region.  Very few opportunities arise for a new ag industry to form around farm-direct principles.  We think it is critical to know your hemp farmer.  This way you feel comfortable that your CBD hemp was produced in a healthy manner, and you get the economic benefit of buying direct.

Horn Creek Farms

Farming hemp in Southern Oregon offers numerous advantages, from its ideal climate and fertile soil to its sustainable farming practices and strong agricultural heritage. Horn Creek Hemp is proud to be a part of this thriving community, providing customers with top-quality CBD and CBG products.

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Farm Update March 2023 https://horncreekhemp.com/farm-update-march-2023/ https://horncreekhemp.com/farm-update-march-2023/#comments Tue, 14 Mar 2023 20:40:15 +0000 https://horncreekhemp.com/?p=60235 We find ourselves caught in second winter. After a brief window of warm spring weather we are once again in snow storms.  Great for skiing, poor for farming. So we are firing up the greenhouse grow.  It’s new to us.  The real sun is so much more fun, and straightforward.  Growing inside is a bit […]

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Views From Southern Oregon

Farm Update March 2023

cattle and pig on horn creek farmsWe find ourselves caught in second winter. After a brief window of warm spring weather we are once again in snow storms.  Great for skiing, poor for farming.

So we are firing up the greenhouse grow.  It’s new to us.  The real sun is so much more fun, and straightforward.  Growing inside is a bit like playing God.  That’s a heavy responsibility.

horse on horn creek farmsOur sungrown fields are dormant, at least for hemp.  Patrick, Johnny and Quincy are actively working the security and grazing detail.  We are diving into no-till this year.  Living soil is an environment unto itself.  It builds up an insect and microbe ecosystem.  Mycorrhizae networks are a mind-blowing fungal chain that is worthy of its own sci-fi show.

Discing and rototilling this all up each spring sets the biome back.  This year we are working with it.  We will also continue with our usage of straw for mulch beds.  If we don’t till the soil, weed management shouldn’t be as much of an issue.  We shall see.

osu researcher with horn creekAt this point we have released all 25 cultivars from our most recent harvest.  It was a tremendous learning curve.  Not all cultivars are so easy to grow.  We are diving back into an equally diverse genetics menu this year.

I’ve been appointed to the Oregon Hemp Commission.  We are working to stabilize the industry which is recovering from a boom/bust cycle.  It didn’t help that we had a wave of illicit grows.  The public doesn’t differentiate, and resulting legislation isn’t always on target.  But we shall get it right.  After all, some of our legislators are both fans and customers.  We all want this to work.

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Fall Research On The Farm https://horncreekhemp.com/fall-research-on-the-farm/ https://horncreekhemp.com/fall-research-on-the-farm/#respond Wed, 25 Jan 2023 20:51:31 +0000 https://horncreekhemp.com/?p=54580 From The Jacksonville Review – October 2022 Issue Fall comes on slowly, then all at once. We are approaching that transition. One morning I will be heading to the field, only to turn around to find a coat. And that smell. It must be the world responding to colder temperatures, trees preparing to bear fruit and drop leaves. […]

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hemp flower male

Fall Research On The Farm

From The Jacksonville Review – October 2022 Issue

Fall comes on slowly, then all at once. We are approaching that transition. One morning I will be heading to the field, only to turn around to find a coat. And that smell. It must be the world responding to colder temperatures, trees preparing to bear fruit and drop leaves. We all recognize it.

On a brisk-ish morning last week, the OSU Research Center hosted around 75 people from academia,
local government, water districts and Jackson County Building Department. Researchers came from OSU’s Global Hemp Innovation Center, UC Davis and Washington State. Other attendees were from building departments, the USDA and state legislators. They toured our farm, one other in Sam’s Valley, and the OSU experimental hemp grow site. Many had never been to a hemp farm— or at least a legal one.hemp flower up close

The OSU research station has been a tremendous asset to our farm. They are on the forefront of hemp agriculture research, and we are lucky to have them in our fields regularly. They are currently conducting three studies—Common Cannabis pests, diseases, and common pollen. We are pleased to be involved in all three studies. The research they are doing will be used around the country. Hemp farms have been making it up as they go. Careful research upon which to base decisions is something of a novelty.

Our fields are dense and almost ready for harvest. Each flower is stacking up cannabinoids. Hemp and all other cannabis plants are dioecious. This means there are males and females.

We only want female plants, of course because they work harder and are more pleasant. Truthfully, females produce the cannabinoid-rich flower. Males produce pollen, and we do not want pollen near our crop. Pollinated flowers stop producing cannabinoid content to focus on seeds.hemp flower male

Most hemp seed is feminized, which means 99.97% will be female. But sneaky males appear in the field, so we scout for them every day. Males and females look alike until August, when they begin to flower. Just like people, individual plants mature at different times. We’ve spotted them as early as late July, though most show up during August. Males appear
as a subtly different flower structure one day, then they flip seemingly overnight. Daily walks are essential, and they are a bit meditative. It forces one to walk slowly and methodically check each plant. It’s become our evening Zen walk.

hemp flower male plant
Male Hemp Flower Plant

Some plants are undecided. Monoecious, or hermaphrodite plants have both male and female flowers. These appear more frequently in newercultivars, perhaps because they aren’t as stable genetically. Stress makes this more likely. Water deprivation, heat, disease, or poor root systems add stress. One OSU researcher explained a theory in a way I could understand: A plant’s drive is to reproduce. Stress late in the season can prompt an unpollinated plant to react as though it may die without reproducing. The response is to convert a stem or two to male, to self-pollinate and thus extend its genetic line.

Incidental pollination has been a particular problem this year. Last year’s illegal grows were abandoned. Most had volunteer or feral plants this year,half of which are male. I recently walked through an abandoned adjacent field. I stopped counting the males I cut down after 600. This will become a problem in our valley, so the OR Department of Agriculture is looking into rules which will require landowners to remove any volunteer plants on a current or abandoned grow site.

In other news, we’ve been asked to travel to Thailand this fall to assist with the launch of a new farm there. Thailand recently legalized both hemp and marijuana. CBD products in Thailand can only be produced from material grown in-country so they are in a similar green rush as we were several years ago. Thai licenses are restricted somewhat, limiting entrants. In addition, laws are clearer about allowing CBD in food and edible products.

This subtle difference has had a huge impact on how the industry is developing. In the US, grey areas in regulations discouraged big players like Coca-Cola and Frito-Lay from participating. They are waiting until the USDA and FDA make clear rulings. Sidelining these corporations meant that small operations would define and develop the industry. That has been both good and bad. Most important, it has been different from typical product development. It’s been rough at times, but we are grateful for the opportunity.

Thailand is different. Many licenses were obtained by the larger consumer product, distribution and retail entities. They obviously know how to farm quite well. But they don’t have a cannabis background. Believe it or not, Oregon, particularly Southern Oregon, is the elder in the field. It will be fun to help farms bypass the mistakes many of us made.

This hemp venture has been a wild and entertaining ride. Market instability keeps us guessing every day. The Hemp Commission work we’ve been doing is facing a steep decline of farms. It is difficult to make plans when all the pieces are moving simultaneously. We’ve been operating as the temporaryCommission since April. The permanent Commission will be appointed this month. They will have their work cut out for them.

gary west logo

One last development I need to address is how our presence in Jacksonville is changing. Gary West Meats has been operating from Jacksonville since 1966. We are coming up on the end of that era. Gary and Dee West created a world- famous business, focused primarily on delicious smoked steak strips. They were sold around the globe, in Disneyland, Cabela’s, and many other locations. 

In 2003, they turned it over to their daughter, Whitney, and to me. We kept the smokers running until Covid dealt a final and fatal blow. Beef prices doubled. 

Worse was the unstable supply chain for beef. We could not guarantee to our seasonal customers that we would deliver their holiday gifts as requested and on time. So, we made some hard decisions. We ceased production entirely and transitioned to a bottle shop and CBD apothecary. We recently put our building up for sale. When that sale happens, we will maintain a presence in Jacksonville for our farm products.

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Farms Under Pressure From Illegal Pot – Mail Tribune Article https://horncreekhemp.com/farms-under-pressure-from-illegal-pot-mail-tribune-article/ https://horncreekhemp.com/farms-under-pressure-from-illegal-pot-mail-tribune-article/#respond Wed, 05 Oct 2022 18:45:59 +0000 https://horncreekhemp.com/?p=54182 Article written by Vickie Aldous. Published By Mail Tribune | Updated July 5, 2022 Vineyards, legal cannabis growers describe negative impacts. Paul Murdoch’s Horn Creek Hemp farm outside Jacksonville was ringed with illegal marijuana operations last year. “It was nuts. We were surrounded by illegal grows,” he said. Murdoch said two of the five illegal grows […]

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hemp flower field

Farms Under Pressure From Illegal Pot – Mail Tribune Article

Article written by Vickie Aldous. Published By Mail Tribune | Updated July 5, 2022

Vineyards, legal cannabis growers describe negative impacts.

Paul Murdoch’s Horn Creek Hemp farm outside Jacksonville was ringed with illegal marijuana operations last year. “It was nuts. We were surrounded by illegal grows,” he said. Murdoch said two of the five illegal grows got busted.

He thinks the 2021 law enforcement response, growers shifting to other parts of the country this year and an over-saturated market for marijuana may be having an effect. There’s only one grow still operating near him that he believes is illegal. Although most of the illegal grows are gone, Murdoch is still coping with negative impacts. He said thousands of marijuana plants sprouted on their own in an abandoned field near Horn Creek Farm. About half are male plants that produce pollen carried by insects and wind. That pollen could slash the value of nearby legal hemp and marijuana crops. Once they’re pollinated, female plants put their energy into making seeds. They produce less THC — prized by marijuana growers to get users high — or CBD, favored by hemp growers who want to make medicinal products.

“Pollen can decimate cannabis crops. It really harms agricultural operations,” Murdoch said. He has asked the landowner with the rogue marijuana plants to mow them down before they could contaminate his farm of hemp plants. Pollen is just one of the problems illegal grows pose for legal marijuana and hemp farms. Wine grape growers say they’re also being hurt.

Representatives from the wine industry and legal marijuana and hemp companies recently shared their concerns with the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission, which toured Southern Oregon. OLCC regulates alcohol and marijuana, while Oregon Department of Agriculture is charged with enforcing hemp laws. Legal operators said illegal marijuana growers compete with them for labor, steal water, intimidate residents and pollute the environment. Dennis O’Donoghue, owner of Celtic Moon Vineyards outside Eagle Point, said illegal marijuana is hurting the wine grape industry.

In 2021, he had to deal with a massive illegal marijuana grow planted on a neighboring farm just 20 feet from his driveway. “The farm right next to me was beautiful for many, many years. One day last year, I woke up and found 120 hoop houses sitting 20 feet off my fence line,” O’Donoghue said, referring to the plastic makeshift greenhouses that often shelter marijuana. “That quickly expanded to 210.”

Every day as he drove on his driveway to and from his vineyard, he said, armed men stared him down. They also intimidated a neighbor when she was mending her fence.

“Three armed men approached her and told her to back away from the fence and mind her own business. She was standing on her own property,” O’Donoghue said. The illegal marijuana growers didn’t follow water laws, which was especially troubling in 2021 when drought and low reservoir levels led to a short irrigation season. “We were facing an acute water shortage in Southern Oregon last year.

They were pulling water illegally out of the irrigation canals,” O’Donoghue said. When the water ran out and local irrigation districts had to shut down for the season in midsummer, the illegal growers started pulling water out of a creek with sensitive fish habitat. Hazardous chemicals from their operation washed into the creek and flowed downstream, O’Donoghue said.

The illegal marijuana grow next door was eventually busted and bulldozed by law enforcement. The neighbor who allowed the grow on her property was promised $400,000 for use of her 15-acre site, with $200,000 delivered up front. She didn’t get the remaining $200,000 because of the bust. She claimed she had no idea the growers were raising illegal marijuana, O’Donoghue said.

“We have to go after landowners, and we have got to hit them hard,” he said. He said the illegal marijuana growers are causing problems for grape growers, as well as for legal marijuana and hemp growers. “I’ve seen no issues with legal cannabis growers — whether it’s hemp or marijuana. They’ve been following the rules, and they’re trying to do the right thing. It’s very, very hard on them as well,” O’Donoghue said. He said he hopes OLCC, with its dual role to regulate alcohol and marijuana, can help bring the legal industries together to solve problems.

“The wine industry could be the economic engine that drives the economy in Southern Oregon. Can we coexist with cannabis? Not without regulation and enforcement of regulations,” O’Donoghue said. Brian Guber of Irvine & Roberts Vineyards outside Ashland said it’s hard for legal businesses to compete with illegal marijuana operations that lure workers away with promises of big money. Some of them never actually pay their workers.

The Unete Center for Farm Worker Advocacy in Medford told OLCC that some workers labor for months on end and are owed thousands of dollars — money they may never see. “The biggest impact we’ve run into is illegal grows,” Guber said. “Cash paid under the table — whether it’s paid or not — is doing a great job of sucking away all the workers that we normally pay.” The competition for labor comes at an especially bad time.

Last year, Guber’s grapes shriveled up due to lack of water, and about half the crop was lost. The business was also hurt by COVID-19-related drop-offs in tourism, especially when Oregon Shakespeare Festival shut down for 2020 and much of 2021.

Mason Walker, owner of East Fork Cultivars outside Cave Junction, grows marijuana and hemp. He said legal growers are under pressure from drought, wildfire, climate change and pests. The explosion of illegal marijuana growers in Southern Oregon led to labor exploitation and crime, and it worsened water shortages. “The family-scale farm growing hemp or cannabis in Southern Oregon is under dire threat right now,” Walker said. He said his farm offers living wages, paid leave, health insurance and retirement plans — but has to compete against illegal grows.

“We’re trying to do the right thing,” Walker said. Regulatory changes this year could help rein in some of the illegal activity, especially regarding illegal marijuana growers who pretend to grow hemp. Congress legalized hemp — marijuana’s nonintoxicating, lookalike cousin — in 2018 for the whole nation. Marijuana remains illegal on the federal level, although it’s legal in Oregon and many other states scattered across the country. Growing hemp comes with far fewer regulations, creating an incentive to grow marijuana illegally under the guise of hemp, then sell the marijuana at high black market prices in states where it remains illegal.

This year, ODA put a May 31 deadline on hemp license applications. That will stop illegal marijuana growers from harvesting their crop and then applying for a hemp license in the fall — after plants are gone and can’t be tested for high levels of intoxicating compounds that would prove they are actually marijuana plants. The earlier deadline also means ODA can hand lists of legal hemp sites to local law enforcement agencies by early summer, said ODA Hemp Program Manager Mike Odenthal. “Then we won’t have a question of who’s licensed and who’s not. That should make their life a lot easier,” he said of law enforcement agencies trying to untangle who is a legal grower and who is not.

Existing hemp growers have to apply for a license renewal each year. This year, ODA didn’t issue licenses to new hemp growers in Jackson, Josephine and Douglas counties after those counties declared marijuana emergencies. Those declarations triggered a new state law that allows for moratoriums on new hemp licenses in certain counties. ODA plans to continue inspecting and testing licensed hemp grows — and fining those operating illegally, Odenthal said. For safety, ODA inspectors will continue to use police escorts to visit sites, he said.

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Interview and Tour With Lonermob https://horncreekhemp.com/interview-and-tour-with-lonermob/ https://horncreekhemp.com/interview-and-tour-with-lonermob/#respond Fri, 23 Sep 2022 22:31:30 +0000 https://horncreekhemp.com/?p=54156 Check out Ian aka “Lonermob” as he hosts an interview with Paul at our family farm and packaging facility! This is the second time Lonermob has made it out to us for an interview, so if you missed the first one, be sure to check that out below. Lonermob is an experienced reviewer, interviewer, and […]

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lonermob interview and tour

Interview and Tour With Lonermob

Check out Ian aka “Lonermob” as he hosts an interview with Paul at our family farm and packaging facility! This is the second time Lonermob has made it out to us for an interview, so if you missed the first one, be sure to check that out below.

Lonermob is an experienced reviewer, interviewer, and a valued member of the hemp community. We always enjoy hosting Lonermob and we look forward to sharing more farming experiences in the future!

Don’t be afraid to reach out to him using his socials below, as he’s likely to respond to your questions!

2022 Farm Interview and Tour

2021 Interview and Tour

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Oregon Hemp Growers Face Uncertain Future – OPB Article https://horncreekhemp.com/oregon-hemp-growers-face-uncertain-future-opb-article/ https://horncreekhemp.com/oregon-hemp-growers-face-uncertain-future-opb-article/#respond Fri, 23 Sep 2022 21:34:00 +0000 https://horncreekhemp.com/?p=54135 Transcript and Interview from March 28, 2022. Listen to the Interview According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the market for hemp production in the U.S. was worth more than $820 million last year. Oregon is one of the top 10 hemp-growing states in the nation, with most of the cultivation taking place in Jackson […]

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hemp farm with red barn

Oregon Hemp Growers Face Uncertain Future – OPB Article

Transcript and Interview from March 28, 2022.

Listen to the Interview

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the market for hemp production in the U.S. was worth more than $820 million last year. Oregon is one of the top 10 hemp-growing states in the nation, with most of the cultivation taking place in Jackson and Josephine counties. But a moratorium on new licenses to grow hemp in those two counties and a crackdown by state lawmakers on illegal marijuana that has found to be grown on some licensed hemp farms have led some entrepreneurs to question the future of hemp in Oregon. Joining us to discuss the challenges their industry faces are Mason Walker, the co-owner and CEO of East Fork Cultivars, a farm in Josephine County which grows both hemp and marijuana, and Paul Murdoch, the owner and CEO of Horn Creek Hemp, a family-run hemp farm in Jackson County.

The following transcript was created by a computer and edited by a volunteer:

Dave Miller: from the Gert Boyle studio at OPB, this is Think Out Loud, I’m Dave Miller. It has been a turbulent few years for Oregon’s hemp farmers. Like many farmers, they’ve had to deal with drought, and fires, and the usual uncertainties that go with agriculture. But hemp growers have faced unique challenges as well. Prices still have not bounced back from a huge drop a few years ago. State regulations keep changing, and officials in Jackson and Josephine counties, who are worried about illegal cannabis grows, recently took advantage of a new state law to put a moratorium on new hemp licenses. For more on what it’s like to grow hemp right now, I’m joined by Mason Walker, co-owner and CEO of East Fork Cultivars in Josephine county, and Paul Murdoch, owner and CEO of Horn Creek Hemp, based in Jacksonville. It’s good to have both of you on Think Out Loud.

Paul Murdoch: Thank you.

Mason Walker: Thanks Dave:

Miller: Paul Murdoch first. So, both of your companies focus on growing hemp for flowers that have CBD, that’s as opposed to growing hemp for fiber or for seeds that you could use to make milk, for example. Is CBD where most of the money is being made from hemp in the US these days?

Murdoch: Currently, yes, that’s my understanding.

Miller: And especially so in Oregon?

Murdoch: Yes, I think the vast majority. There are some farms who are beginning to look at the other uses, but at this point, the vast majority is focused on high CBD content.

Miller: Mason Walker, how would you characterize the state of Oregon’s hemp industry today, compared to say three years ago?

Walker: Well, it’s certainly distressed. We’ve seen a pretty big pullback in planted acreage. In 2019, there was far too much floral hemp grown across the country, not just in Oregon. And that really turned the market upside down, and we’re still feeling the aftershocks from that major oversupply that popped up after that 2019 growing season. The big number is that we shrunk from about 60,000 acres in Oregon planted in 2019 to about 7,000 last year. So it’s been a pretty precipitous fall,

Miller: 60,000 acres planted, down to 7000?

Walker: That’s right, yeah. And, we could see another pull back this year. We’ll see where the data comes in, when the ODA reports its numbers, but I get the sense that there’s a pretty deep chill in the market right now. And a lot of our peers and farm friends have either drawn their acreage way way back, or gone away entirely.

Miller: So that’s an extraordinary drop. How do you explain it? What was happening before 2019?

Walker: So the lead up is pretty simple. As Paul mentioned, most of the hemp grown in Oregon and across the country is still towards flowers that are high in CBD, and CBD of course caught a craze, sort of a fad moment, in late 2018 into 2019, and that drove a lot of speculative hemp plantings that year. And unfortunately, that speculation was far outside of demand, and we wound up with an almost ridiculous amount of extra hemp across the country.

Miller: Paul Murdoch, is that glut of CBD from 2.5 years ago still being seen in the market?

Murdoch: Well, hemp has a shelf life in most forms. It has impacted the extract market. Potency tends to continue if the material is stored properly. There’s still flour in reserve for extraction use from 2019 and 2020. I think it’s getting worked through fairly well, but CBD hemp for flower use needs to be replenished about once a year, so it’s not really impacting that.

Miller: Do you feel, Paul, that the kind of gold rush mentality from a couple of years ago is over? That the farmers who saw a way to get rich quick, but maybe didn’t totally know what they were doing, that they’ve left the business?

Murdoch: Yeah, I think they’ve all sobered up. There were countless farms that were coming in, amazingly enough, without any agricultural experience, and they were overly optimistic thinking they would grow 50 or 100 or 500 acres. Those folks had a hard reality check. Even growing 20 acres is quite an undertaking, and those folks that were at that level have had stuck around more more successfully.

Miller: What is the challenge? How much of it is the growing of hemp, and how much is the harvesting and processing?

Murdoch: Well, that’s a great question, and I think a lot of people made an error in that area. So growing, planting, putting seeds in the ground, that’s the easy part. Harvesting, drying, you would have been amazed to know that there were people that planted 50 acres, and did not know how they were going to harvest, did not have their facilities reserved. That is really the difficult part. It’s a huge amount of material, but most importantly, just drying it is not the full tale. As Mason can tell you, for a really good quality product, it has to be dried and cured, and it’s a long process and it takes a lot of space.

Miller: Mason, are the people who got into this and then got out, how many of them actually had agricultural experience, just not with hemp or not at that scale? And how many were completely new to this and got in way over their heads?

Walker: The way I’ve described this in the past, particularly in 2019 which was the mad year, there were three types of growers that year. There were cannabis expats or people with cannabis cultivation experience, usually in the garden scale. There were actual farmers, people with farming agricultural experience that we’re just growing a new crop in their mix. And then there were speculators, those folks that got way over their skis with no experience, the folks that Paul described well. And we’ve definitely seen the speculators almost entirely disappear, and those experienced farmers and cannabis gardeners and farmers have stuck around, the savvy ones have stuck around, they’ve just gotten a lot smaller and grow far less of a crop, and focus, like Paul outlined, on that fresh flower that needs to be replenished each year.

Miller: Mason, what does supply and demand look like to you right now? Obviously in 2019 there was a gigantic mismatch. But markets sometimes have a way to correct themselves. Sometimes it’s painful for people who are involved in those markets. But what do you see as the balance right now?

Walker: We’re starting to see a bifurcation moreso, which is promising from my perspective. We’re seeing a split between the true commodity of hemp, versus craft expressions, folks that are growing small acreage for high quality that go into different craft products. And that bifurcation has been really satisfying, particularly because us and a lot of our peers, we would describe ourselves more in that craft space, and we’re seeing a little bit more consumer sophistication and nuance being requested in the market, and rewarding those smaller growers now.

Miller: I feel like I have some sense for beef as a commodity, where commodity could end up anywhere, in frozen beef patties in a supermarket or in fast food places, and then fancier beef that has all kinds of of names attached to it, of a place or of growing practices, could be three times more expensive and could be in fancy grocery stores. What are the equivalents for commodity CBD, and the kind of craft CBD that you’re talking about?

Walker: Well, the analogy you gave is spot on. With any consumer product, you’ll naturally have the split where you can get, for instance, your milk from the very large dairy for $2 a gallon, or you can get the organic milk grown by the co-op that was grown, and those cows weren’t treated with hormone for instance, and pay $4 per gallon.

Now we’re seeing that in hemp, the only difference is that the commodity is upside down right now. Because of that long oversupply we’ve had since 2019, commodity hemp, for instance, sells for about $1.50/lb of flower. That’s one of the types of commodities. And it costs at least $4 to $5, even at commercial commodity agriculture scale. The commodity is still upside down, and that commodity serves as an index for craft producers. So the entire market is still stressed, because that commodity is so upside down.

Miller: I mean stressed is one way to put it. But Paul Murdoch, it seems like an impossible business still. If it’s so much more expensive still to grow hemp cheaply than it is to buy existing stockpiles of hemp flower, how can this business continue?

Murdoch: Well, I think that’s a really good point on the commodity side. I don’t know the exact numbers, it’s hard to get exact numbers in this industry, but I have a feeling that the reserves are diminishing. And so I think that that price for commodity hemp, or hemp that’s going to be used for extraction, I think those prices will come up, and I think there will be room primarily for the skilled agricultural folks that have a farming background. The craft product has really maintained our business through this storm, and that’s where we’re going to continue to focus. That’s a lot more fun.

Miller: What’s fun about it?

Murdoch: Oh, wandering out amongst the plants. It’s a really fascinating plant. Learning how people are using it. There’s a far greater array of uses than I ever imagined when we first started this. And candidly, working with our family. Going through the field in the evenings, checking for males, doing all those farming things. It really helps me understand why the family farm was such a popular thing when it was more viable in the mid century.

Miller: Can you remind us why, given the way you want to grow hemp, you want to check for the males and get rid of them?

Murdoch: So, the hemp plant and the cannabis plant has males and females. You do not want seeds in your flower supply. Seeds do a number of things. They’re sort of a hallmark of quality. People are looking for the absence of those. And when a flower is pollinated and starts producing seeds, it focuses on seed production rather than CBD production.

Miller: Mason Walker, my understanding is that your company has about nine acres of hemp, what we’ve just been talking about, but also one acre of marijuana for the recreational market in Oregon. Why operate in both these markets that are really different?

Walker: That’s right. They’re not so different on our farm. And it’s really fun when we have visitors come, we can stand in the middle of our field, and if you look left, you see our one acre of adult-use cannabis. In that market, we grow high CBD-

Miller: …We’re going to see what happened to Mason Walker, we lost you for a second.

Paul, to go to you for a second, one of the biggest issues facing the hemp industry in Oregon isn’t exactly about hemp per se. It’s the fear that illegal cannabis growers are using the profusion of hemp farms as a kind of cover for their illegal operations. In response to that, lawmakers have been tightening restrictions on legal hemp growers. House Bill 3000, which lawmakers passed last year, was part of that. Can you give us a sense for what it did?

Murdoch: Well, House Bill 3000 was a reaction to the proliferation of illegal grows. And I’m talking not just about those that were under the guise of hemp farms, but also just blatantly illegal grows. It gave all of the agencies that were negatively impacted the resources that they needed desperately to battle this. And this was not an unwelcome thing for the legitimate farmers as well. The illegal grows have caused us immeasurable harm, both in terms of resources like water and that sort of thing, but also in PR, because the public tends to lump us all together, and it makes everybody look bad.

Miller: Mason Walker, where have you seen the effects of illegal growth? Both in terms of PR as Paul is talking about, and in terms of ecological or labor or any other issues?

Walker: Yeah, last year was really tough for our community in Southern Oregon. It was pretty apparent that the measure and scale of organized crime really elevated. We saw a lot of water theft. We saw human rights abuses with large immigrant workforces being asked to stay in squalid conditions and greenhouses without bathroom facilities. We saw people cutting trees down in riparian zones, and really just not following any basic state laws, and destroying the ecology of Southern Oregon. It was a rough year for the community, and as we’ll be discussing here I’m sure, a number of new laws were passed in response to that, that will have pretty significant impacts on the hemp industry.

Miller: One of the most recent ones was a state law that then commissioners in both of your counties, Josephine and Jackson counties, took advantage of earlier this month. They declared an emergency, which led the state to say okay, we will not grant any hemp growing licenses for 2022. Mason, what effect do you think that’s going to have?

Walker: Well, unfortunately, I don’t think it addresses the root of the problem in Southern Oregon. I think the folks that go through and get their legitimate hemp growing license with the Department of Agriculture are not, in large part, the bad actors that we’re talking about, the folks that are completely occupying space outside the law and abusing our environment and people’s human rights. And so unfortunately, I think it’s a little bit of a misguided law. I’m a little disappointed that it happened, because it does feel like a step back for the legitimate hemp industry, and just being treated as a federally legal beneficiary, and instead being vilified.

Miller: Paul, I’m curious, as Mason was saying, he’s saying it’s both unfair and unhelpful, that it’s not fair and it’s not going to work. Do you have a solution you think would work to prevent these illegal grows without cracking down on legal ones?

Murdoch: Well, I wish I had the answer. I will say that last year, it was very apparent which the illegal grows were. I mean they were not hiding, they were right next to the highway. It was clear from licensing GIS Maps who had a permit and who did not. And we didn’t even have the ability to go after those folks, by the water master, by code enforcement, they’re of course putting up structures without any permitting. And so I think 3000 is really the one that should get things done if everything comes together, and gives the agencies the resources that they need.

Miller: That’s House Bill 3000 from last year, that among other things, it would have them go in and do testing of the cannabis plants to test for THC levels.

Murdoch: That’s correct. And last year, I do know that there were some hemp farms that were fronts for cannabis, and it was just a matter of tightening up the testing. So when they show up at our place, any legitimate farm is going to say fine, go test, do what you need to do. The illegal ones did not allow them access. And so the agencies had to go through an administrative search warrant kind of process, which took time.

Miller: What would you like to see, Paul, at the federal level, from the FDA or whoever, to help boost the market for your products?

Murdoch: Well, I think the biggest challenge for us currently is the amount of THC that’s allowed. If you’re going to grow high CBD hemp, it’s gonna typically come in well below the 0.3% for Delta-9 THC, but there’s another component, THCA, which is somewhere around 0.5% to 0.7%. So not enough to be any sort of psychotropic effect, but it really is part of the plant. And currently they’re restricting everything to 0.3%, and I think a 1% would be much more reasonable.

Number two is to really change the laws to reflect how people are using it, which is that they are consuming it in food, even though that’s not currently allowed in terms of the law.

Miller: Mason Walker, what do you hope and what do you fear the hemp industry in Oregon could look like 10 years from now?

Walker: Well, I think the most optimistic vision would have hemp be a major provider of economic activity and living wages in the generationally impoverished rural parts of our state. I think it really can be an incredible agricultural resurgence platform. That would be my most optimistic view 10 years down the road, where hemp is the new timber or something like that for the state of Oregon.

A more pessimistic view would have a series of maybe well meaning but misguided regulations really stack up, like the more recent moratorium that was allowed to go in place in Josephine and Jackson County, and other sort of layered rules that just make it impossible for Oregon have farmers to compete in what is a global commodities market. And that would be possible both through regulation, but also through uncertainty. Uncertainty is really difficult for businesses, and we have a lot of uncertainty in this market still, even though we’re five years into the federally legal market for hemp. And I’d love to see just a little bit more stability and predictability in the market.

Miller: And Paul Murdoch, to go back to where we started, what about the possibility of Oregon farmers going big on hemp not for flower, not for CBD, but for fiber or seeds?

Murdoch: Well, I think there’s a lot of interest in that currently, especially in the larger agricultural areas, with much more acreage. And unfortunately, I think that the legislation kind of put a kibosh on that for a bit. And I understand why it was put in place, but I think it undermines what could be a really great crop for Oregon,

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Flowers Are Prettier Than Plastic https://horncreekhemp.com/flowers-are-prettier-than-plastic/ https://horncreekhemp.com/flowers-are-prettier-than-plastic/#respond Thu, 22 Sep 2022 16:12:58 +0000 https://horncreekhemp.com/?p=54001 From The Jacksonville Review – August 2022 Issue Years ago, we reviewed the environmental impact of hemp farms. We all found it wanting. They were ugly. Plastic littered the fields and greenhouses. Many were unkempt and an obvious eyesore to neighbors. Few wanted to live next door. We identified several areas in which we thought […]

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flowers in horn creek farms

Flowers Are Prettier Than Plastic

From The Jacksonville Review – August 2022 Issue

Years ago, we reviewed the environmental impact of hemp farms. We all found it wanting. They were ugly. Plastic littered the fields and greenhouses. Many were unkempt and an obvious eyesore to neighbors. Few wanted to live next door.

straw instead of plasticWe identified several areas in which we thought we could improve. The first and most glaring is overuse of plastic. No one likes plastic. We all try to move away from it in daily use. But the US is addicted it seems and farming is no different. The most controversial is the use of plastic film barriers on soil beds.

Plastic mulch is used in farming for three reasons—weed control, insulation, and water retention. Plastic films do reasonably well at all three. They keep weeds at bay adjacent to plants, where you can’t mow. Film barriers also warm the soil, meaning you can plant earlier. While warmer soil is initially listed as an advantage, we find that it easily overheats the soil, causing other problems. Mulch is highly effective at reducing evaporation. Studies show up to 70% reduction in irrigation evaporation. In our current drought, that is a huge advantage.

We first pivoted to biodegradable starch-based mulch film. It certainly feels better, but it didn’t address all the problems. Bio film costs about 3 times as much. It does degrade, given time. But from the road, no one knows it is biodegradable. So, the perception of harm remains with the public. When other farms see its use, they don’t know either if it is biodegradable. The presence of film tends to beget others doing the same.

Film can also be a detriment to plant and soil health. On some sunny days, we recorded soil temps below the film of 140F! That kills many of the healthy soil microbes and fungi which feed plants. If we add water during the day, hot and humid conditions around the roots encourage pythium and other root rot problems. When we pulled the film back, we found packed, overheated and barren soil. We began to wonder if use of film mulch was a net advantage at all.

For a solution, we went back to the name. What is plastic “mulch,” but an effort to replicate real mulch such as that in your garden? Composted material that is placed around plants for weed mitigation, insulation and evaporation control is not new. It is tried and true. It doesn’t easily scale, but it can be done.

hemp flower in the field
We brought in 17 tons of straw on a semi-truck. Learning as we went, we developed a technique for building the beds, planting the starts, then protecting young plants while another team spreads a thick blanket of straw over each bed. The results have exceeded our expectations.

Our plants are healthier and more robust than previous seasons. As we pull back the mulch, we find vibrant soil environments at cooled temperatures. We are getting everything the film mulch barriers promised and none of the negative impacts of impermeable film. There are also some disadvantages. Straw is twice the cost of biodegradable mulch film and 6X that of conventional film. It costs more to apply. It is not as effective against weeds. But is it worth it? Absolutely. Plants are larger. We have no pythium. And the fields look so much nicer. The field has a completely different feel.

A concurrent challenge was how to extend that clean and healthy feel to something neighbors could enjoy from a distance. We needed something that would make both neighbors and insects happy—flowers. Sunflowers, Calendula, Zinnia and Dahlias work well. We plant them at the end of our rows, and on a solid berm along adjacent roads. We add pumpkins and squash for vigorous ground cover, and because a pumpkin patch is a treat during fall harvest.

These flowers oases serve many purposes beyond esthetics. They become “Beetle Banks,” where beneficial insects live and thrive. Clouds of these bugs leave the banks each evening to go to work on harmful insects in our fields. Diverse plants provide dining alternatives to our cash crop. Cucumber beetles once gorged on our youngest plants. Now they cluster on young pumpkin leaves. I rarely find them on hemp plants.horn creek hemp flowers

In a time when bee populations are dwindling, these flowers are a respite. By September, the sunflowers are full grown. They are covered with bees sporting thick leggings of pollen. The hedges become home to all manner of fauna, including rabbits and a pair of foxes. I don’t know where these bees and friends were living and eating before, but they clearly enjoy the buffet.

Neighbors like it. We get more positive feedback about those sunflowers than anything else we do. Initially they seemed superfluous. Now they are an essential part of the mix. As we evolve our practices each year, I’m pleased to see how balanced and regenerative farming can be. Esthetics must be essential to life. If it weren’t we wouldn’t care what the landscape looked like. But we do. And flowers are prettier than plastic.

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Why Loam Soil Is Important When Growing Hemp https://horncreekhemp.com/why-loam-soil-is-important-when-growing-hemp/ https://horncreekhemp.com/why-loam-soil-is-important-when-growing-hemp/#respond Thu, 17 Dec 2020 07:30:28 +0000 https://www.horncreekhemp.com/?p=2718 Making sure your soil is the right soil for the job is key to success when it comes to growing any crop. It’s no different when it comes to hemp. It grows best in sandy loam soil which is lucky for us, our farm is located on an ancient lakebed that has created the perfect […]

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Loam Soil

Why Loam Soil Is Important When Growing Hemp

Making sure your soil is the right soil for the job is key to success when it comes to growing any crop. It’s no different when it comes to hemp. It grows best in sandy loam soil which is lucky for us, our farm is located on an ancient lakebed that has created the perfect environment for growing hemp.

But what exactly is loam soil and why is it always the soil of choice when it comes to growing hemp?

Loam Soil:

“Hemp can be grown anywhere.”

This has become the commonly accepted idea with hemp farming.

The truth is though, that’s not the case. While hemp is a hardy plant and can deal with a lot of adversity, there are always going to be circumstances the lead to an unsuccessful crop.

So it’s all about providing the best environment for the hemp to grow in, and it starts with the soil.

The soil is where the plant is getting all of the nutrients and what it needs to grow and thrive. Hemp does need the right soil to really see it be a successful crop.

That’s where loam soil comes in. This is like the holy grail of soil because it is a perfect balance.

The idea behind it is finding the right balance for the soil to work the best. It combines the 3 major components that make up soil in sand, silt, and clay, and creates a balance benefiting the plants growing in it.

The ideal loam soil will contain less than 52% sand, 28%-50% silt, and 7%-20% clay. This is also soil that’s nutrient-rich and has a pH of about 6.0-7.5.

All of these factors contribute to the right balance for hemp plants. It’s able to hold plenty of water but also drains well and allows adequate aeration for the plant’s roots.

Growing Hemp:

A successful hemp crop takes a bit of coordination to produce plants with high CBD content. And the methods for growing plants for CBD differ from growing for seeds or fiber.

The region where our farm is located is perfect for growing hemp. We are lucky enough to be located in beautiful Southern Oregon. And our farm is located in what used to be an ancient lake bed making the loamy soil perfect for our hemp plants. This creates a soil environment that’s very deep and well-drained.

And we do our part to make sure the soil is in the best possible shape to grow our crops on.

We do this by never using pesticides and taking a biodynamic approach to our farm to make sure everything we do is in the best interest of our plants. Whitney is our plant whisperer. She works tirelessly to make sure our plants are getting exactly what they need from the soil.

And our emphasis on sustainability helps to keep our soil in great shape so we can grow healthy plants year after year.

We realize the soil is the foundation of everything we do here on the farm. It’s the most important aspect for us in making sure we can cultivate and harvest a great crop.

This is not to say one cannot grow quality hemp flower in other types of soil.  Clay soils hold water better, but one risks root rot and other fungal conditions.  Sandy soil also works very well as a medium that drains water.

However, neither clay nor sand encourage soil health.  We often see a sharp drop in plant health after year one.  Sand and clay can serve as mediums to which one can add nutrients.  But to truly build a healthy soil ecosystem, a sandy loam is the quintessential starter.

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What leads to quality CBD oil? https://horncreekhemp.com/what-leads-to-quality-cbd-oil/ https://horncreekhemp.com/what-leads-to-quality-cbd-oil/#respond Thu, 12 Nov 2020 07:30:45 +0000 https://www.horncreekhemp.com/?p=2709 CBD oil has become more prevalent than ever with changes to rules around growing, harvesting, and selling hemp across the nation. Now that it’s easily accessible for most, creating good, high-quality CBD products are more in demand than ever before. That process starts with growing sustainable and organic hemp plants which in turn allows for […]

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hemp farm fields with blue skies

What leads to quality CBD oil?

CBD oil has become more prevalent than ever with changes to rules around growing, harvesting, and selling hemp across the nation.

Now that it’s easily accessible for most, creating good, high-quality CBD products are more in demand than ever before. That process starts with growing sustainable and organic hemp plants which in turn allows for high-quality CBD oil to be extracted and put to use.

So let’s start at the base: soil.

Why Is Soil So Important?

This is where it all begins. Soil is what feeds the hemp plant and allows it to flourish and grow. Making sure the soil will properly nourish the plants is vital to yielding a successful crop.

Hemp grows in a variety of soils, but it does its best work in loose, deep, and nutrient-rich soil, meaning you want soil rich in organic materials for the plants to feed upon. Lucky for us, we are located in what once was an ancient lakebed in the beautiful Rogue Valley. The sandy, fertile loam is ideal for our hemp plants to flourish.

Another thing to take into account is looking into what types of toxins could potentially be present in the soil. Soil has to not only be rich, but clean as well.

Hemp is tremendous at removing toxins from the soil it’s grown in and hold on to them, including heavy metals—a process called bioremediation. So, while hemp is a fantastic field cleaner, it’s not ideal to have heavy metals in the crop you are producing if your goal is to create a high-quality CBD product.  That is why we test each zone multiple times every year.  We’ve never had a positive test but we must stay diligent.

The rich soil on our farm is a huge part of the success of our plants. We take extra steps to ensure the hemp is not only grown organically but biodynamically.  Our ‘plant whisperer’, Whitney has been growing this way for years.

On top of the fertile soil, we also utilize the power of insects to keep our plants safe. We use predatory insect populations to keep other insects in check that could potentially harm the hemp. This is just another step we take to make sure the plants are free of potentially harmful chemicals.

All of this work goes into making sure our crop is premium artisan hemp flower, producing top of the line CBD oil when extracted.

This is exactly what we’re after—a premium and beneficial crop that will yield a high-quality CBD oil.

How Is CBD Oil Utilized?

There are so many ways CBD oil can benefit consumers. This natural oil is most effective when used properly.

CBD oil is extracted from the hemp flower, as it is high in CBD and very low in delta9 THC, (the THC content is less than 0.3%) which is why the hemp plant has quickly grown in popularity for its natural healing abilities.

The hemp flower, after it’s dried, can be beneficial on its own as well.

Putting in the extra effort on the front end of the product creates better CBD oil and hemp products. And in the world of CBD and hemp, this is something that can be hard to come by. This plant has so many fantastic uses, we take pride in making sure we are growing top of the line products you can rely on.

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Biodynamic Farming At Horn Creek Hemp Farms https://horncreekhemp.com/biodynamic-farming-at-horn-creek-hemp-farms/ https://horncreekhemp.com/biodynamic-farming-at-horn-creek-hemp-farms/#respond Thu, 08 Oct 2020 15:07:50 +0000 https://www.horncreekhemp.com/?p=2702 Biodynamic CBD Farming At Horn Creek Farms Our passion for the hemp plant runs deep. We believe in the health benefits it can provide. The goal is to grow the best hemp flower possible so we’re able to extract the best possible CBD. This means we embrace biodynamic farming with our plants, creating a sustainable […]

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hemp farm fields with tractor

Biodynamic CBD Farming At Horn Creek Farms

Our passion for the hemp plant runs deep. We believe in the health benefits it can provide. The goal is to grow the best hemp flower possible so we’re able to extract the best possible CBD. This means we embrace biodynamic farming with our plants, creating a sustainable and organic farm yielding the best crops possible.

This all sounds great when you talk about it, but there is a lot more than meets the eye with this approach to farming. It takes tremendous dedication, time, and resources to make sure the best crops possible are harvested.

So what exactly does it take to have a farm that is self-sustaining and that yields organic crops?

What Is Biodynamic Farming?

At its core, the idea behind biodynamic farming is a sustainable approach. This happens by looking at the entire farm as a single organism, working together to grow organic crops, where everything is interconnected and plays a role in the success of the plants.

This is not a new idea. In fact, it was nearly 100 years ago in Europe when this theory of farming really started to take hold.

People across Europe were growing crops at a higher rate than ever before. And to keep up with the increase they were using chemicals to help sustain those crops. After a few years, those farmers started to see the effects chemicals can have on the sustainability and lifespan of a farm. They needed a more sustainable solution.

Enter, Rudolf Steiner.

In a nutshell, Steiner’s philosophy was to treat the farm as a living organism, allowing for the soil, plants, animals, and humans to work together to create sustainable, organic crops. The idea being, all four of those elements play a role in the health and vitality of the farm. By cutting out chemicals and using natural alternatives, the farm can thrive.

This is an idea and practice still in place today. In fact, more than ever, people are interested in where the products they buy are coming from and how they are created. Sustainable practices are becoming more prominent because of this way of thinking.

A major tenet of biodynamic farming is to use the resources on your farm as a priority.  We try not to bring new elements to the farm if we can avoid it.  The natural elements thrived here for a reason and to replace them or add new items may be upsetting a natural balance.

How We Put Biodynamic Farming Into Practice

Okay, so what does this look like when it’s put into place on a farm?

The soil is one of the first things we want to make sure is taken care of. The soil is the foundation of everything on the farm. If you care for the soil your plants will naturally benefit. If you focus only on the plants, you may not be providing your soil what it needs for longevity.  Hemp plants extract a great deal from the soil so one must take care to be sure the soil rejuvenates.

We are lucky to be located in a former lake bed, here in the beautiful Rogue Valley of Southern Oregon. Whitney is our plant whisperer.  She has an extraordinary talent in knowing what they need. She is able to provide the hemp plants with some of the best natural nutrition they could possibly have.

And because we want to make sure that we are keeping the plants alive sustainably, we also use bugs to make sure our hemp plants stay safe. Yep!—by nurturing a resident population of predator bugs we are able to keep down the population of other problem bugs that are natural predators to the hemp.

And on top of all of that, we make sure we’re using natural suppressants to take down any other predators the plants may face. We use a kelp and subtilis mixture to fight off any harmful fungus and prevent rotting.

All of it’s done in an effort to make sure the farm stays sustainable and healthy.

As the caretakers of the land, we make sure to do our part to be sustainable. What we do is our passion. It’s a part of who we are and we take great pride in making sure we’re doing our part to keep the farm healthy for years to come.

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