One of 10 growers granted hemp licenses this year from the Nebraska Department of Agriculture was forced to shred their crop Nov. 26 because of the too-high THC level it produced.
The licensed growers, Justin and Hilari Courtney, are from Richardson County.Ìý
The department reported that of the other nine licensees, six completed the harvest, one did not plant a crop this year, one donated the plants to a university to finish the project and one was given an extension to finish up.
The Richardson County growers grew a crop focusing on hemp that produces CBD oil near Rulo in southeastern Nebraska, and also farm in Kansas and Missouri. The family also has a hemp permit in Kansas.Ìý
Christin Kamm, spokeswoman for the ag department, said state officials told growers Aug. 1 it wanted a 30-day notification prior to harvest of the plants to allow time to schedule sampling dates. Samples were to be taken within two weeks of the projected harvest date.
People are also reading…
The harvest date for the Courtneys' hemp was originally to be Oct. 25, and the department sampled the crop on Oct. 10, Kamm said. Both varieties tested were well below the legal threshold for THC, the psychoactive drug in marijuana. But the Courtneys then requested an extension of the harvest date, because they didn't want to harvest with the low level, she said.Ìý
The department agreed, and the new collection of samples was done Nov. 13. The sample results were delayed while the lab waited for the Courtneys to pay the lab fee, which family member Steve Johansen said was done out-of-state and cost $1,000.
The second sampling, Kamm said, showed one sample at 0.496% THC, and the other at 0.38% THC. The legal limit is 0.3% or lower.Ìý
The department ordered the destruction of the crop and staff was present Nov. 26 when the growers shredded it, Kamm said.
Johansen said the family spent hundreds of hours on the crop and made some mistakes it will never make again. He said when a crop is nearing harvest, and the THC is increasing as the oil content is getting higher, it needs to be tested one to three times a week. Testing is more limited and much more expensive with the Nebraska department, he said.Ìý
"It was an excellent crop. It was beautiful," he said. "But it is what it is. ... And today's another day and I have to worry about today and tomorrow."
CBD seeds can cost upward of $5 a seed, but the department would not allow the family to keep the seed produced, even though it contains no THC, Johansen said.Ìý
He said the family had tens of thousands of dollars in the crop, for planters, seed, plastic, irrigation, hose and other elements. The family had participated in the hemp program for a source of income. It has 1,600 acres of farmland under water from this year's flooding, and is working 14 to 15 hours a day to survive that, he said.
Annette Wiles, whose Midwest Hop Producers business in Plattsmouth is growing several hundred hemp plants in four varieties purchased from Front Range Biosciences, was granted an extension to January to harvest her business' plants.
The growers had changed the soil and the plants needed time to destress before moving to the next stage, between vegetation and flowering, Wiles said. The crop is progressing well.
Licensee Allan Jenkins, from Buffalo County and a University of Nebraska at Kearney economics professor, donated about 20 of his high-CBD plants to Doane University, and destroyed about 184 that were left.Ìý
Doane has a hemp certification program, with online classes for people who want to learn how to grow hemp, process, market and develop products.
It was the middle of July before he and the others working with him got authorization to participate in the program, so by the time they planted, the thousands of naturally growing hemp plants were already starting to mature. They were not going to be able to keep them from being pollinated, he said. And the seeds would have had no commercial value.
He planted the hemp in a farm building, but not one that was completely air-filtrated and light-controlled.
"We just chalked it up as, 'Well we learned some things about how to grow it,' and we'll see what the future holds," Jenkins said. "I'm not a one-and-done kind of person. ... We do plan on applying for another cultivation license."
Getting started earlier will help, he said.Ìý
A 2020 Nebraska hemp plan is apparently in the works.
The 2018 farm bill legalized the production of hemp as an agricultural commodity while removing it from the list of controlled substances. And on Oct. 29, the USDA released its interim final rule for regulations establishing a domestic hemp production program, based on that 2018 bill.
An email sent Dec. 2 from the Nebraska Department of Agriculture said it plans to submit a state plan to the USDA before Dec. 31, the deadline imposed by the Nebraska Hemp Farming Act. The USDA will then have 60 days to approve it or suggest changes.Ìý
If approved, the department said, it will issue applications for 2020 shortly after that.Ìý
The department is also seeking applicants for regulatory hemp testing for 2020, the email said.Ìý
State government reporter JoAnne Young's memorable stories from 2019
JoAnne Young's most memorable: Worries in the hills
The Sandhills covers close to 20,000 square miles in north-central Nebraska, with spring-fed rivers, scenic highways and country roads, unobstructed night skies, diverse wildlife, migrating birds, forestland, high vista sunsets.
This story tells about the people who live there and their views on the need to both safeguard the area from the intrusion of big business, in the form of wind farms and power lines and pipelines, and the need to find ways to stay afloat financially to protect their businesses.
JoAnne Young's most memorable: Life of birds
For eight decades, Paul Johnsgard has shared the stories and science of birds, waterfowl and wildlife in drawings, photos, papers and books from his unique perspective of Nebraska, but also the world.
As he turned 88, his 100th book was published, and he’s still sharing his love of nature and his views on how Nebraska fits in to that culture.
JoAnne Young's most memorable: Welfare of state's children
The state’s inspector general for child welfare has a critical mission to track and report on deaths, serious injuries, suicide attempts of children who are in some way involved in the Nebraska child welfare system or juvenile justice system.
Twenty-six child deaths were reported to Rogers' office in the past year. Julie Rogers also makes recommendations to the state Department of Health and Human Services.
JoAnne Young's most memorable: Crisis conditions for girls
The Youth Rehabilitation and Treatment Center for Girls went through a crisis this summer in both facilities and programming, and treatment of the youths that were housed there, which led to major changes that the state Department of Health and Human Services and lawmakers are still trying to work on to revamp the entire system of youth offenders and those with mental health issues.
JoAnne Young's most memorable: The toll of childbirth
With pregnancy-related deaths and serious complications rising in the United States according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, this column talks about the toll childbirth can take on women, either temporarily or permanently, and is a much needed look at not only the joys of motherhood, but also the importance of prenatal care and critical nature of bringing children into the world.