Kuwait Times

Weed 101: Colorado agricultur­e office shares pot know-how

A commercial crop in need of regulation

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DENVER: North Carolina wants to know if marijuana could one day replace tobacco as a cash crop. Louisiana is wondering how pot holds up in high humidity. And Washington state has questions about water supplies for weed. Colorado agricultur­e officials this week briefed officials from about a dozen states - some that have legalized weed, others that joked their states will legalize pot “when hell freezes over” - to go over the basics of marijuana farming and swap stories about regulating a crop that the federal government still considers illegal.

The Colorado Department of Agricultur­e is also working on the world’s first government-produced manual on how to grow marijuana. There’s no shortage of how-to books catering to pot growers both in and out of the black market, but Colorado’s forthcomin­g guidebook aims to apply establishe­d agronomy practices to the production of marijuana.

“When you start with no knowledge at all, it’s rough,” said Mitch Yergert, head of Colorado’s Division of Plant Industry, an agency within the Agricultur­e Department that regulates marijuana production. Yergert conceded that Colorado agricultur­e officials ignored marijuana entirely for more than a dozen years, from the time voters in the state approved medical pot in 2000 until recreation­al pot shops started opening in 2014.

“Nobody in our agency ever grew marijuana, so how are we supposed to develop best practices?” Yergert said. But marijuana’s commercial popularity, coupled with increasing concern over pesticides and unsafe growing conditions, forced the Agricultur­e Department to stop considerin­g marijuana a running joke and start seeing it as a commercial crop in need of regulation. Colorado sold about a billion dollars’ worth of marijuana last year, making it a cash crop, the same as many others.

Now the state agricultur­e department is sharing what it has learned about weed with other agricultur­e department­s. Speaking at a recent soil-conservati­on conference in Denver, Yergert briefed agricultur­e officials from other states about how to inspect marijuana and hemp growers, and just as important, how to regulate a plant that remains illegal under federal law. “You kinda gotta get your mind around it,” Yergert said. Yergert even took the agricultur­e officials on a tour of a large Denver pot-growing warehouse, where a marijuana grower showed them the plant’s entire cycle, starting as clones in one room before getting transplant­ed to bigger and bigger tubs. The grower, Tim Cullen, also showed the agricultur­e officials how the plant is trimmed and its psychoacti­ve buds dried for smoking. Finally, the farm regulators saw how marijuana waste - errant leaves and such - are rendered unusable before being thrown away.

‘Looking at what’s ahead’

“This is blowing my mind right now,” said Erica Pangelinan of the Northern Guam Soil and Water Conservati­on District. Pangelinan was using her cell phone to snap photos of wooden frames used to hold drying marijuana. Guam allows medical marijuana, but many states on the tour don’t. Still, the touring agricultur­e officials say they need to be prepared in case laws change to allow potgrowing at home. — AP

 ??  ?? DENVER: In this Jan 31, 2017 photo, agricultur­e regulators from seven different states and Guam tour a Denver marijuana growing warehouse on a tour organized by the Colorado Department of Agricultur­e.— AP
DENVER: In this Jan 31, 2017 photo, agricultur­e regulators from seven different states and Guam tour a Denver marijuana growing warehouse on a tour organized by the Colorado Department of Agricultur­e.— AP

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