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How To Grow 3 Pounds of Weed Per Light

How To Grow 3 Pounds of Weed Per Light

Josh Haupt’s story is one of humor, hard work and humility. When he was 22, he had an epileptic seizure and his six medically licensed marijuana plants were confiscated by the police. The following Monday morning, he received a dreaded phone call from the DA. She left a voicemail saying he should pick up his plants so they don’t die. When he went to the station, he watched as a trail of cops helped him carry his cannabis plants to his truck. Today, Josh is growing 6,000 plants. He authored the book Three A Light, started Success Nutrients. Josh has been a grower for over 15 years and has become one of the most well-known cannabis cultivators around because of his unique growing methods and his massive yields.

Itunes | Stitcher | Soundcloud

Connect with Josh Haupt: Facebook | Instagram
Connect with Three A Light: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter
Connect with Success Nutrients: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter

This podcast is brought to you by Cutting Edge Solutions. I’ve had the pleasure of knowing John, the founder of Cutting Edge Solutions for over 25 years. He’s an expert horticulturalist and a great guy all around. I truly stand behind his products as a grower and as a wholesaler and retailer.  As a grower, you know when a nutrient line has been developed from extensive research at real farms throughout Northern California.

This podcast is also brought to you by Cultivate Colorado. Cultivate is one of the largest indoor horticultural suppliers in Colorado with two stores in the Denver Metro Area and free delivery from the Front Range to Pueblo. They are the place that commercial and personal growers go to for a wide variety of high quality soil, lights, hydroponics and expertise. They have everything you need to grow your dreams and cultivate your legend.

This podcast is also brought to you by Growers. Growers is a Colorado owned and operated soil and nutrient company, established in 2015. After 15+ years of experience as growers, they know how to make a consistent and effective line of soils and nutrients in an environmentally conscious way.

Show Notes

  • Josh describes why he is first and foremost a family man and where he came from (02:00)
  • Of his six entrepreneurial endeavors, one of Josh’s services is consulting big investors on where to put their money to make the biggest return (02:50)
  • Josh describes the process for authoring the book, “Three a Light,” which tells growers how to achieve three pounds per light (03:00)
  • Chip asks Josh about his commercial grow experience, where he came from, how he got into it (04:07)
  • Josh discusses his two grow facilities in Denver and Aurora that cumulatively produce 1100 pounds of cannabis per month (04:50)
  • Josh describes his successful plan for wholesale commercial growing and how he started to grow “shit tons of weed.” (07:30)
  • Josh tells you why he thinks the world needs more weed (08:02)
  • Why Josh always focuses on quality and wants to be the “grey goose” of weed (08:52)
  • What Josh and Chip mean by the “white collar” or “pink shirt people” (10:00)
  • Chip identifies the biggest problem with the private cannabis industry in the past (11:12)
  • Why the consistency of canopy size in Josh’s grow is the deal breaker (12:52)
  • What Chip thinks are the top most frequent mistakes people make in their grow rooms (14:13)
  • How Josh yield 100 grams of boutique cannabis per square foot in his grow (15:23)
  • Josh challenges listeners to the “Burkle” strain challenge (16:48)
  • The method for figuring out how to know what strains will grow best using Josh’s method (17:19)
  • Why weed isn’t all about the THC level according to Chip & Josh (20:00)
  • Why Josh thinks reinvesting cannabis tax revenue into the community is so crucial (22:04)
  • Chip tells you what his favorite strain of all time is and why (23:39)
  • Josh tells you about why and how he started Success Nutrients and why his formula guarantees quality and quantity (24:27)
  • The origins of the Chem Dawg strain (30:00)
  • For the first time publicly, Josh announces the development of his new growing app that will change the lives of home growers forever (32:43)
  • Josh reveals his growing efficiencies, tips, tactics and methodologies that he has brought to the industry (36:37)
  • Josh discusses the “circle of life” growing tactic and invites you to take a tour of his facility where he’ll walk you through every single cycle of their growth (41:32)
  • Chip & Josh dissect the “linguistic culture” that has emerged within the cannabis industry (45:39)
  • Josh reveals the top three problems he encountered when building his company over the past 18 months (48:16)
  • The bottom line about what makes this all worthwhile for Josh is not actually the bottom line at all (52:36)
  • The best weed story of all time – Josh tells you how he watched police officers carefully return his plants to him after nearly being arrested (53:35
The First International Hemp Marketplace

The First International Hemp Marketplace

For Adrian Zelski, cannabis is a spiritual guide. It has helped him overcome alcoholism, excel as the front man of a successful band and land a successful career in the emerging hemp industry. Adrian is probably most commonly known for being the front man for the Athens, Georgia based band, Dubconscious. But, in addition to being a talented musician and cannabis connoisseur, Adrian is the Director of Operations for the brand new International Hemp Exchange aka iHEMPx. iHEMPx is based in Boulder, Colorado and is kind of a big deal for many reasons. It’s one of the first online portals that connects buyers and sellers of all things hemp. Think Etsy or Ebay, but with hemp. IHEMPx has both a retail and wholesale component and is growing quickly in popularity and with the media. But many people don’t fully understand the difference between hemp and cannabis that gets you high. Find out if the hemp industry is as lucrative as you think it is and what the future of hemp has in store on this episode of The Real Dirt with Chip Baker.

Itunes | Stitcher | Soundcloud

Connect with Adrian Zelski: Facebook | New Earth Muziq | Facebook New Earth Muziq | Instagram
Connect with iHEMPX: Facebook | Instagram

This podcast is brought to you by Cutting Edge Solutions. I’ve had the pleasure of knowing John, the founder of Cutting Edge Solutions for over 25 years. He’s an expert horticulturalist and a great guy all around. I truly stand behind his products as a grower and as a wholesaler and retailer.  As a grower, you know when a nutrient line has been developed from extensive research at real farms throughout Northern California.

This podcast is also brought to you by Cultivate Colorado. Cultivate is one of the largest indoor horticultural suppliers in Colorado with two stores in the Denver Metro Area and free delivery from the Front Range to Pueblo. They are the place that commercial and personal growers go to for a wide variety of high quality soil, lights, hydroponics and expertise. They have everything you need to grow your dreams and cultivate your legend.

This podcast is also brought to you by Growers. Growers is a Colorado owned and operated soil and nutrient company, established in 2015. After 15+ years of experience as growers, they know how to make a consistent and effective line of soils and nutrients in an environmentally conscious way.

Show Notes

  • Adrian describes what the International Hemp Exchange is (02:00)
  • Adrian & Chip discuss the difference between marijuana & hemp. (02:50)
  • How the War on Drugs changed how industrial hemp was perceived by the public (04:36)
  • The complexities and multiple uses of hemp (05:32)
  • The federal regulations on hemp CBD & THC (06:17)
  • The benefits of full spectrum cannabinoid use (08:43)
  • How international hemp exchange works (10:00)
  • The difference between distillate & isolate CBD (11:41)
  • Colorado’s place in producing CBD (14:10)
  • The differences between industrial hemp & CBD hemp (14:56)
  • Piloting the growth of industrial hemp seeds in the US (16:18)
  • Different techniques for industrial hemp & CBD hemp growing (16:48)
  • On the importance of documenting hemp growing techniques, consumption, uses, etc. (19:23)
  • How The Emperor Wears No Clothes changed Chip Baker’s life (20:15)
  • What kind of money can be made from hemp – the hemp marketplace isn’t stable yet (22:33)
  • What Adrian does at IHempX (24:00)
  • Why Adrian thinks growing tons of flower is the golden ticket (25:20)
  • Chip & Adrian’s opinion about the recent DEA initiative about making CBD a Schedule 1 drug  (27:11)
  • Why “Hemp is beyond reproach” is one of Adrian’s favorite things to say (29:31)
  • How Adrian’s events give a platform to music & cannabis companies (31:18)
  • Why Adrian thinks The Cannabist saved The Denver Post (33:01)
  • 420 events in Denver for 2017 – what’s 420 On the Block? An expo meets a concert, meets a party, meets a cannabus scene. (34:02)
  • If you’re getting into hemp, you’ve got to attend the NoCo Hemp Expo – biggest hemp expo in the country on March 31st & April 1st (38:30)
  • Listen to Adrian’s weed story (39:49)
Hemp CBD: The $90 Million Market You’ve Never Considered

Hemp CBD: The $90 Million Market You’ve Never Considered

You’ve probably heard of it, you may have even tried it, and there is definitely a product made with it on shelves in your local organic grocery store. But just what is hemp CBD?

How is it different than cannabis CBD? And what kind of market is there for hemp CBD-based products? Let’s start with the basics.

What is CBD?

You may have really started hearing about CBD after Dr. Sanjay Gupta’s CNN special, Weed, where he reversed his previous opinion on the medical efficacy of cannabis.  Or maybe you’ve heard of “Charlotte’s Web”, a CBD-based cannabis strain created by the Stanley Brothers with sick children in mind.

CBD is a chemical compound found in cannabis that is most known for its medical properties and lack of psychoactive, or “high”, effects. CBD has become somewhat of a medical marvel since its discovery. CBD shows  promise in reducing cancer cell growth, reducing the amount and severity of elliptic seizures, reducing inflammation, alleviating pain from Multiple Sclerosis, reducing anxiety and depression, and much more. 

Since the “high” effects from CBD are little to non-existent, some medical practitioners and patients feel better using it as a form of medicine. This rings especially true in the mind of elderly patients and parents of sick children.

What is the difference between hemp CBD and cannabis CBD?

According to an International Association of Plant Taxonomy’s study from 1976, a plant is considered to be hemp when it has less than 0.3% THC and considered to be cannabis when it has more than 0.3% THC. For those keeping track at home, Tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, is the chemical compound responsible for the high feeling cannabis consumers experience. Whether the percentage chosen seems arbitrary, it is still the main distinction in hemp CBD vs. cannabis CBD in the eyes of the law.

CBD that comes from hemp plants has a lower potency and much less THC than its cannabis-derived sister. This means hemp CBD products have little to no psychoactive side effects, and a much more diluted CBD potency…a positive or a negative depending on who you ask.

How do you grow Hemp CBD?

In order to grow hemp, you have to start with seeds that are CBD-rich and fall under the 0.3% THC mark. But don’t let that fool you into thinking growing hemp is easy. Hemp plants grow to be very tall and aren’t as inclined to thrive indoors as cannabis plants. And since the concentration of CBD in hemp is significantly lower, it takes a lot of plant matter to get a little CBD.

If the practicality, or lack thereof, doesn’t scare you away from growing hemp, maybe the law will. It is completely illegal, save for a few research-based exceptions, to grow hemp in the United States for commercial purposes. Oddly enough though, it is technically legal to process and distribute hemp CBD products in all 50 states and 40 countries, so long as the CBD used abides by the 0.3% THC rule and is made from the seed or stalk of the plant, not the leaves.

What is the market for hemp CBD products?

With the ability to sell hemp CBD products in all 50 states and 40 countries, the hemp-derived CBD market has exploded in the last couple years at a compound annual growth rate of 59%. According to The CBD Report by The Hemp Business Journal, the hemp CBD market grew from a niche and negligible market to $90 million in 2015.

Since the growing of hemp is illegal in the United States, much of the entrepreneurial opportunity is in the processing and distribution of hemp CBD-based products. From hemp CBD tinctures, to lotions, to pills, to salves, to oil…there is no shortage of innovative product lines to be made for the patients and consumers looking for CBD products.

The International Hemp Exchange, hemp’s first digital marketplace, is a perfect example of a company that has taken advantage of the distribution possibilities for hemp CBD and other hemp products. By connecting wholesale and retail buyers to the cultivators and processors around the world where hemp is legally grown, they serve as the middle man in a burgeoning industry.

Companies like the International Hemp Exchange are making it easier for patients living in states that do not allow or allow CBD for medical use but have not set up any sort of CBD commerce laws, to get medicine that may help.

With the amount of hemp CBD market growth we are witnessing, there’s plenty of room for more entrepreneurs to participate.

Hemp Industry Insights w/ Adrian Zelski

Hemp Industry Insights w/ Adrian Zelski

On an upcoming episode of The Real Dirt with Chip Baker, Chip Baker had a chance to sit down and have a smoke with hemp entrepreneur Adrian Zelski. Adrian works with the International Hemp Exchange, the world’s first online marketplace and digital exchange for buyers, sellers and growers of hemp.

America’s hemp industry amnesia

“Everyone knew it before the drug war. Around the world, you just look, and it’s been thousands of thousands of years of recorded history of civilizations, of ancient people, indigenous people, and they were all using it for medicinal reasons, for building materials, for ink, stuff like that. Stuff that was absolutely purposeful.”

America is a nation with Amnesia. For centuries, early colonial settlers grew hemp, mostly at the order of the crown. As a textile, hemp and the hemp industry was ideal for rope, cloth, and burlap. Its cultivation and use continued unfettered  As it posed great competition for burgeoning textile industries, the political tide turned and the hemp industry ended up outlawed with marijuana in the Tax Act of 1937. By the 1950s, the introduction of cheap synthetic fiber was the final nail in hemp’s coffin. A 2014 law gave new hope that hemp could one day serve as the backbone of a new textile industry. Since then states have implemented test programs and expanded industrial hemp farmers ability to grow their crop without fear of prosecution.

What are the regulations around the hemp industry?

“The regulation in America, according to the Industrial Farming Bill in 2014, is any hemp that is going to be produced and used in America has to be under .3% THC. Some of that is changing.”

Hemp farmers have been restricted to producing hemp with .3% THC or under. For textiles, this poses no obstacle, however, for medicinal use, the reality is that hemp should contain high enough levels of THC in order to fully activate the CBD contained within. Cannabinoids enhance each other’s properties in what is known as the Entourage Effect. In a nutshell, in order to maximize the medicinal effect of CBD, THC has to be present in sufficient quantities. The low THC limit has come under fire, and efforts are currently under way to change the law.

What’s the future of the hemp industry?

“That’s where hemp is beyond reproach; that’s one of my favorite things to say. It’s not something you can sit there and judge, like alcohol or smokeable cannabis. It’s something where you can say, “Actually, I’m gonna rub this on my kid’s foot and he’s gonna stop having seizures.” That’s not an arguable thing from anybody, really … even Donald Trump, I believe.”

It is hard to deny the incredible results we have seen from patients using CBD oil made from hemp. As more and more people are swayed by the science, it becomes harder and harder to hide behind the politics of the matter. The only thing holding hemp back from reaching its potential in the market place is the current legal structure. As the benefits of hemp become further realized, more and more money is bound to flow into the hands of researchers and farmers. Find out what’s really going on behind the scenes and hear it from Adrian himself, on his episode of The Real Dirt with Chip Baker coming to iTunes, Stitcher, Soundcloud and anywhere you get podcasts on 5.22.17.

Hemp – From Illicit to Internationally Used

Hemp – From Illicit to Internationally Used

On a trip to Amsterdam around a dozen years ago, I was overwhelmed by all the hemp based products they had on offer, the icing on the cake being a digital scale that was made of hemp plastic. When I mentioned it to the clerk, he remarked, “Even the lucky grower has his grow room made entirely of hemp these days.”

A hemp powered history

The earliest traceable examples of hemp fibers being used, go back twelve millennia where early Chinese people used hemp. Development of hemp in pottery, clothing, ropes, and early versions of paper followed for thousands of years.  In this time the healthful, medicinal and recreational elements of the plant were being explored as well. Some have even theorized that it’s psychotropic qualities are what helped Cannabis sativa make its migration west to the rest of the world.

As humanity took to the sea, hemp was there, billowing in the sails and hauling up the anchor.  Hemp was with Columbus as he opened European eyes to a larger world. As Ben Swenson noted, it is “estimated the English fleet that defeated the Spanish Armada in 1588 donned 10,000 acres of cultivated hemp” in it’s sails.

We have all seen a dollar bill with the cartoon bubble “I grew hemp” stamped over Washington’s mouth.  Which in fact he did, as just about every other smart agriculturist of the day. Virginians were even at one point allowed to pay taxes with hemp.  In the 1930’s, Henry Ford began to experiment with plant based plastics in his effort to blend agricultural raw materials into industrial applications.  Amazingly, his plastic car prototype of 1941 had panels made of soybean and hemp and was even designed to run on a hemp based fuel.

So what happened?

The dreaded “Marihuana Tax Act of 1938” put an end to all cultivation of Cannabis Sativa. Since then, proponents have vigorously demonstrated that certain strains and styles of horticulture provide us with plant almost devoid of THC. Any serious article you read today about industrial hemp or hemp food production feels the need to add the caveat that “this will not get you high”.  This stigma and lack of understanding has been nearly impossible to shake, but now that attitudes and laws towards recreational cannabis use have shifted, so have attitudes to all uses of the plant.

Hemp’s place in technology

Hemp has continued to prove its usefulness in some high tech spheres. The BMW i3 which shaved 10% of it’s weight using hemp plastics over other low weight materials.  In home and building construction use hemp can be used a cheap and light insulation material, a particularly “green” material as it can be made with the leftover material from hemp processing.

In the world of super capacitors (think: fancy and fast batteries) hemp has been found to be a cheap and viable alternative to graphene which is, as described at asme.org, “a carbon nanomaterial, is considered to be one of the best materials for supercapicitor electrodes. Graphene is, however, expensive to manufacture, costing as much as $2,000 per gram.”  Whereas “a process for converting fibrous hemp waste into a unique graphene-like nanomaterial that outperforms graphene…can be manufactured for less than $500 per ton.”
Hemp plastic is also being deployed in the exciting new technology of 3D printing, providing a strong and light finished product used in biodegradable packaging, sunglasses and even drones.

What’s the future of the emerging hemp industry?

In the present of climate of legalization and progress some innovative new services and products are beginning to emerge.  The International Hemp Exchange is,“a platform for buyers and sellers of hemp goods and services to connect and transact.”  Basically, it’s a digital marketplace for all things hemp. While another company, Pure Hemp Botanicals, is purporting to have a new process to be able to economically process and refine multiple different parts of the hemp plant. Hemp refineries take in whole hemp plants to produce the intermediate products and chemical building blocks for manufacturing countless consumer and industrial products. Just the fact that two such services have opened their doors is a huge boon for the hemp industry.

Whole plant hemp extracts are a new development in the health and wellness industry.  Hemp provides a high source of protein, omegas -3 -6 -9, linoleic acid, gamma linoleic acids (GLA).  Not to mention the 85 cannabinoids which have been identified by the US Government (of all groups!) as neural protectors. Even Joe Rogan eats this stuff everyday.

The future of Cannabis Sativa is varied and exciting.  Everything from body lotion to cars to nanotechnology are within hemp’s scope.  As we grow, so the industry grows, so does the diverse application and appreciation of this wondrous plant.  In the words of the late great Bill Hicks, “It grows naturally on our planet, serves a thousand different functions, all of them positive. To make marijuana against the law is like saying that God made a mistake!”