A Most Amazing Plant!




      Hemp (Cannabis Sativa), because of its vigour and adaptability, was amongst the first plants cultivated by humans and has been used and grown by many cultures for thousands of years. It produces nature's longest, strongest and most durable fibre and even the earliest civilizations used it to produce cloth, rope, paper and other necessities of daily life.

      It was hemp that was used to make the sails and ropes that rigged the ships of Cook and other British maritime explorers (an average ship in those days carried 70 tons of hemp). And, with the American colonies in revolt, it was the need to find secure land to grow more hemp that motivated much of the early drive to colonize this land. Although its hardiness assisted its adaptation here, hemp processing involved labour intensive methods which eventually helped caused it to fail to become a prominent crop in sparsely populated Australia.

      The advent of synthetic fibres and the development of pesticides to aid the cotton crop, without any accompanying hemp technology development, further marginalised its agricultural standing.

      Now after a long absence, the plant is once again being cultivated in this country. We can soon expect to see Australian homegrown hemp being used as:



        FIBRE
      Hemp cloth is softer and warmer than cotton, has 3 times its tensile strength and is many times more durable, does not harbour bacteria (which makes it perfect for medical uses), and does not require anywhere near the same amount of agricultural chemicals and pesticides needed for cotton. China and the Russias are the world's largest hemp producing nations.

        PAPER
      Paper made from hemp is stronger, has more wet resistance than wood pulp, is less likely to tear, is 7 times as recyclable and is grown from an annual plant thus saving forest resources. It can produce a wider range of papers as wood pulp whilst only using a fraction of the dangerous chemicals used in processing wood pulp. No dioxins are produced and less water and energy is used. Hemp fibre can be mixed with other fibre pulp (wheat, bagasse, kenaf etc) to strengthen paper.

        FUEL
      Hemp produces far more biomass suitable for conversion to methane than almost any other plant. This renewable biomass fuel contains no sulphur and whilst growing helps remove CO2 from the atmosphere via photosynthesis. Fossil fuels can stay in the ground.

        FOOD
      The cannabis hemp seed is a complete source of easily accessible protein. It is available in the form found in human blood plasma, the fluid portion of blood that supplies nutrients to tissue. Hemp seed is lower in saturated fats than other cooking oils and hemp seed extracts can be used to make bean like curd and margarine. It can be ground into meal or can be sprouted and used like other beans and seeds. It was a staple diet in many countries.

        ROPE, FIBRE, CORDAGE & CANVAS
      Until this century, about 80% of all rope and twine was made from hemp until replaced by synthetic petro-chemical fibres. 90% of all sails were made from hemp and the word canvas derives from the greek word for cannabis. In Britain in the 17th and 18th centuries it was law that farmers sow 10% of all arable land to hemp!.

        PAINTS & VARNISHES
      For thousands of years all good paints and varnishes were made with either hemp or linseed oil grown specifically for that purpose. This use has been almost totally replaced by petro-chemical derived oils. Hemp's inner hurds yield industrial cellulose and is an excellent basis for plastics and glues.

        MEDICINE
      Cannabis was one of the most prescribed medicines in the 19th century along with the opiates and cocaine. Between 1850 and 1937 cannabis was advised as a primary medicine in over 100 separate illnesses or diseases in the US Pharmacopeia. It has a pertinent proven modern use as a diuretic relieving nausea in AIDS and cancer therapy. It has been used with success in treating glaucoma, asthma, epilepsy, mood disorders and arthritis. It increases the appetite, promotes sleep and relaxation, and relieves stress and migraines.

        BUILDING MATERIALS
      Hemp produces 4 times the cellular fibre of trees and is perfect for pressed board, particle board and concrete formwork, longer lasting and more flexible than currently used materials. It has excellent sound and thermal insulating qualities. It is used as a strong rot resistant backing for carpets.

        ARCHIVAL MATERIALS
      Hemp is the perfect archival substance outliving all other competing materials. The strong lustrous fibre is heat, mildew and insect resistant, and is not damaged by light. Hemp canvasses (including Van Gogh, Rembrandt and Gainsborough) have stayed in fine condition for centuries, whilst hemp paper far outlasts other papers.

        LIGHTING OIL
      Until the 19th century hemp seed oil was the most used form of lighting oil. It was replaced by whale oil until the latter part of the century when it was totally replaced by petroleum based fuels

      Hemp has been used as a soil conditioner of overworked and compacted soils. It sends a 12 inch root in 30 days compared with a 1 inch root on most grasses. This breaks up pan development and helps restore soil structure and aeration. It is an ideal farm rotation crop, and has been used to bind topsoil against floods.

      It is estimated that if just 6% of all our arable land was planted in hemp (or other biomass plants) it could supply us with all our fuel, gas and oil needs.

      This is a plant that could save the world!

        The problem is- its illegal.

      For thousands of years the hemp plant has also been used as a euphoriant and a means of changing consciousness. We know of it most popularly as marijuana, a name given to it by the US Narcotics Bureau earlier this century in order to emphasize its connections with the mexican/latino population. Officially illegal in Australia since 1926 (Australia had signed an international Opium restriction treaty which had included a ban on "Indian Hemp" inserted by request of South Africa's colonial government of the time) though it was not until the 1950's and the post-war pressures being applied by the US Drug Enforcement Agencies that the laws were actively prosecuted in Australia.

        PRIVILEGE
      In the USA in 1937, the Congress there, in what amounted to a virtual prohibition, made commerce in hemp impossible by the imposition of a massive tax. It was a decision that had been engineered almost entirely by US Drug Enforcement Czar Harry Ainslinger, backed by companies and individuals with interests in opposition to the hemp industry: synthetic fibres and chemicals (du Pont) and in paper processing and publishing (William Randolph Hearst). Ainslinger had extolled the "menace of reefer madness- the assassin of youth" by way of outrageously untrue horror stories which were spread by the gullible press throughout the country.
        PREJUDICE
      This law was based in the prejudice of the times and provided the authorities with another way of harassing and controlling the Mexicans and other latino immigrants, the American blacks and the white jazz musicians who consorted with them and who just happened to smoke the flowers of the hemp plant. In the same way the turn-of-the-century Australian laws against smoking opium were based more on fear of the heathen Chinese than on any opposition to the use of opium- white Australia consumed gallons in patent medicines which were still widely available despite the ban on smoking opium
        POWER
      Prohibition and the drug laws provided the perfect moral justification for punishing "bad" attitudes. Use of a restricted substance indicated both a sign of the devil in the drug and a moral bankruptcy on the part of the user and thus a total discrediting of them as individuals with civil rights. From the opium smoking chinese on to drunk "abos" and the pot smoking hippies of the '60's, such groups were reviled, marginalised and discredited as much because of their attitudes and potential threat to the dominant society as due to the use of "dangerous drugs" of their choice. Prohibition became the big stick in the totalitarian armoury. It remains so today.

      Power building bureaucrats fought for control of the "drug trade". Emotionalism, fear and political expediency dominated the debates on Prohibition. The drug laws became self-justifying. Any increased use of prohibited substances only led to harsher and harsher penalties. This caused prices to go up and a ruthless organised element to dominate the trade. The trade in illegal drugs finances terrorist wars and arms purchases, and amounts in cash terms to the second largest item in international trade.

      Over the years the only research funded by governments and health agencies were those that sought to find the health disadvantages of illegal substance use in order to provide vindication for the laws. Much research was tainted and limited by official preconceptions as to render it useless. It has infected drug education with useless platitudes. Its become hard for ordinary people to know what to believe. The old maxim, "In war the first casualty is always truth" holds true as regards the Drug Wars as well.

      Hemp has been used over the centuries by countless tribal societies and cultures as a means of changing and heightening ordinary consciousness. In many it is used as a religious or spiritual enhancement. It is a comparatively safe substance with little likelihood of anything approaching overdose and there are no verified deaths reported from hemp use alone.