In order to meet the increasing demand for separated CBD products, GenCanna is proud to provide premium CBG isolate wholesale in the US. However, what is isolated CBD wholesale really, and how can GenCanna differentiate itself in this market?
Notre huile CBD 1500mg LiveGood, à spectre complet “full-spectrum”, est naturellement riche en terpènes et en acides gras essentiels (oméga 3, 6, 9).
Chez LiveGood, nous sommes fiers de ne fournir que les produits de la plus haute qualité et les plus purs de la planète.
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Provenant uniquement des 1% des meilleures fermes de…
Notre huile CBD 750mg Livegood, à spectre complet “full-spectrum”, est naturellement riche en terpènes et en acides gras essentiels (oméga 3, 6, 9).
Chez LiveGood, nous sommes fiers de ne fournir que les produits de la plus haute qualité et les plus purs de la planète.
Et notre huile de CBD 750mg LiveGood représente cela au plus haut niveau.
Provenant uniquement des 1% des meilleures fermes de…
The Winchester, Kentucky-based company blamed a “failed capital commitment, which left the company unable to pay its creditors,” Atalo CEO Bill Hilliard said in a statement, adding that a confusing regulatory situation and “unforeseen market forces and other challenges” also contributed to current troubles. Atalo Holdings partnered with GenCanna Global last year and said at the time that it had received an investment from GenCanna, which also filed bankruptcy earlier this year. https://hemptoday.net/atalo-files-bankruptcy/ #atalo #ataloholdings #gencanna #cbdnews #cbd #hemp #hempcbd #cbdoil #hempoil #cbdhow #cbdreviews #bankruptcy #kentuckyhemp #kentuckycbd #cbdcommunity #hempcommunity #hempcbdoil #hempprocessing #cbdprocessing #cbdcompanies #hempbrands (at Louisville, Kentucky) https://www.instagram.com/p/B9w5rULhP3j/?igshid=l4kovidrlpp
GenCanna, Mile High Labs fired employees when hemp entered a difficult phase 2020 Hemp and CBD companies have fired workers in the past few weeks, Business Insider has learned.
Marijuana’s legal cousin is taking over the Bluegrass state.
[...] Across the rolling hills of Kentucky, which just two decades ago was the most tobacco-dependent state in the country, farmers are planting less of the crop after growing health concerns shrunk demand. Instead, they’re increasingly turning to hemp and have more than doubled sowings of the cannabis variety in 2016 to become the No. 2 producer in the U.S., trailing Colorado.
[...] Changing national views on pot can also give hemp a boost. Voters in Washington and Colorado were the first to approve recreational use of marijuana in 2012. Now, eight U.S. states and the District of Columbia have moved to legalize, permitting a fifth of Americans to consume weed freely in their home states. The Colorado initiative also included legislation governing the cultivation, processing and sale of industrial hemp.
[...] Kentucky’s first hemp crop was grown in 1775, and almost all of the nation’s production was grown in the Bluegrass region following the Civil War, according to the state’s agriculture department. The crop was included with federal legislation that outlawed cannabis harvesting in 1938, and output dwindled to practically nothing following the Second World War.
In contrast, U.S. tobacco farming started to climb in the early 1900s and topped 2 billion pounds in 1946 as cigarette consumption grew, according to the USDA. A federal quota system that supported prices ended in 2004 and national output dropped 3 percent in 2016, government data show. Kentucky remains the nation’s second-largest tobacco grower, trailing North Carolina.
Farmers are looking for alternatives as prices for other grains and commodities remain depressed and the tobacco market continues to decline, said Doris Hamilton, the industrial hemp program manager for Kentucky’s agriculture department.
[...] Total retail sales of hemp products in the U.S. reached $573 million in 2015, according to the Hemp Industries Association. Sales by conventional retailers are growing. Products can now be found at stores such as Costco Wholesale Corp. and Target Corp. in addition to specialty retailers, said Eric Steenstra, the executive director of the industry group.Most of the hemp products currently sold in the U.S. are imported from other countries and growers and processors have an opportunity to gain a foothold in the market as demand rises, Steenstra said.Farmer Shell planted his last tobacco crop in 2015. His neighbors are also trying to grow hemp, which Shell plans to buy and resell to GenCanna for processing.“There’s a lot of growers in this area that are trying hemp, and it all starts from the flailing tobacco market,” Shell said. “Hemp is taking off.”