Country Zest and Style Autumn 2021 Edition

Page 24

Hemp Farming Offers a Feel Good Story

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By M.J. McAteer

uke Greer wanted to be “the first car up the roller coaster” after the Commonwealth legalized the growing of hemp in 2018. By 2019, he already had his car in gear, climbing that first hill. He had visited hemp organizations and cultivation operations and applied for a license. “You have to jump through a lot of hoops,” Greer said about getting the go-ahead to grow hemp from a daunting array of regulators. Still, after once training on a trapeze, he apparently had the necessary agility. By last year, he harvested his first hemp crop and started selling hemp-derived items on his web site, Northern Virginia Hemp Company. On a recent steamy afternoon, with dark clouds threatening, Greer showed off his hemp field, located on the family farm in Purcellville, not far from his father Nick’s antique furniture restoration workshop. From the single acre he’s put under cultivation, he explained he could harvest 150-200 pounds of hemp, enough for 1,500-2,500 one-ounce bottles of CBD (cannabidiol oil) along with a handful of other products such as CBD gummies and skin cream. These products, Greer stressed, will not cause a high. By law, the levels of THC, the psychoactive component of cannabis, must be kept very low, and the plants must be tested repeatedly for compliance. Many believe the CBD in hemp is useful in treating anxiety and chronic pain in humans and some animals. Greer said many clients buy his offerings for

Photo by M.J. McAteer

Luke Greer and his growing hemp. their dogs and horses to help with problems such as seizures (dogs) and cribbing (horses). Greer is not allowed to make any claims about medicinal benefits for his products. If he did, the authorities could come knocking. On this sultry day, Greer’s current crop had grown to about thigh-high. Most plants are of a variety called Painted Lady, which smells like citrus and lavender. Greer said before planting his first crop, he walked the hemp field at Virginia Tech’s research facility and

sniffed every single plant. “Painted Lady smelled the best,” he concluded. Happily, the deer disagree and shun the Ladies, while a cooperative flock of wild turkeys help keep down the insect damage. “The potency is at the top of the plant,” Greer explained, fingering the sticky hairs the female plants produce. Male plants are banished from the field because pollination leads to more seeds and fewer flowers that are the source of CBD products. His Painted Ladies can handle Virginia’s humid heat, and by harvest in October, will have grown to 5 to 8 feet tall and be nearly as big around. He’ll then send his harvest to an extractor, who processes and packages the final products. Before starting his hemp business, Greer had been working as a heritage and conservation photographer, documenting historic sights that have been vanishing so rapidly from western Loudoun County. He’s now able to focus on his field because, even as a start-up, this one-man business has proven profitable. Greer, 43, is living in the house where he grew up and has made a commitment to provide locally sourced and sustainably grown products. His company has been growing almost as rapidly as his plants, and he now gets about 15,000 visitors a month to his Web site. Greer plans to gear up again when the commercial cultivation of marijuana becomes legal in the Commonwealth in 2024. He’ll apply for a license in 2023, the better to be among the first back in that car, safety bar down, ready to climb the first hill on his next roller coaster ride.

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24

Go Green Middleburg | Autumn 2021


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Articles inside

Cup of COFFEE: Another Summer in Saratoga: Hello and a Long Goodbye

3min
page 58

Lynn Wiley: A Real Estate Love Affair

5min
pages 56-57

Book Excerpt: Still Horse Crazy After All These Years

3min
page 54

The 35th Running of the West Virginia Breeders Classics

2min
pages 52-53

Perspectives on Childhood, Education, and Parenting Mission Impossible: Predicting a Child’s Long Term Future

2min
page 51

Zoom or the Classroom: Living with Virtual Reality

2min
page 50

Pleasant Vale Farm is Long on Legacy

2min
pages 48-49

Up, Up and Away with a High-Flying Friend

2min
page 47

Middleburg’s Seven Loaves Fills a Great Need

3min
page 46

Vineyard View: Firefly Cellars

3min
page 45

The Community Music School

3min
page 44

Fauquier NAACP Making an Impact

3min
page 43

A Stamp of Approval for Retiring Middleburg Postmaster

3min
page 42

Out & About: HERE and THERE

1min
page 41

OPINIONCOUNTRY MATTERS: Uncertainty in Upperville

3min
page 39

At This n’ That, An Amish Touch

2min
page 38

Music to my ears: GlORIA’S BRINGING BACK THE BANDS

2min
page 37

Goose Creek Association Celebrates Fifty Big Ones

1min
page 36

Linking Present and Past at Clarke County’s Blandy Farm

3min
page 34

It’s Play Time in Middleburg’s PLAYroom

3min
page 32

ROOTS & SHOOTS IN UPPERVILLE

1min
pages 30-31

FINE FEATHERED FRIENDS

1min
page 28

Celebrations

1min
page 26

Modern Finance: Show Me The Money

1min
page 25

Hemp Farming Offers a Feel Good Story

3min
page 24

Dolphin Quest Facilities Have Roots in The Plains

6min
pages 22-23

Carry Me Back: Rummaging For a $6 Coat

2min
page 21

The Potter’s House Aiming to Build a New Future

2min
page 20

IN FULL BLOOM

1min
page 18

Celebrating at Great Meadow

1min
page 17

Ready to Ride?

2min
page 16

Recalling Fauquier County’s 100 schools

4min
pages 14-15

BOOKS

1min
page 13

It’s Oh Thank Heaven at Marshall 7-11

2min
page 12

Doubling Their Antique Pleasure, and Maybe More

2min
page 11

The Sound of World Class Music at Emmanuel

2min
page 10

At Millwood: Putting the Country in Country Club

4min
pages 8-9

Doc5 Comes Alive in Second Season

1min
page 7

Marion duPont Scott Equine Medical Center for Equine Athletes

2min
page 6

of NOTE - Happy Anniversary

2min
page 4

For Sheila Whetzel: Time to Close the Book

2min
page 3
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