P
PickleVick
- 5
- 1
The recent agricultural / Industrial Hemp law that passed in the federal government allows for all hemp products containing below 0.3% d9-THC, & distinguishes these products as hemp not cannabis. However this law makes no mention of thc-a. I realize concentrations of THC-a vary throughout the life cycle of the plant and on its own is not psychoactive but if we could figure out how to selectively breed hemp plants to have a high concentration of thc-a and other cannabinoids while falling below the 0.3% d9thc requirement, there might just be a huge loophole that was written into the bill and cannot ever be reversed without an amount of effort that would make it a logical to attempt
I realize this type of selective breeding would take 10 or 20 Years to reach an appreciable level of THC a, and at that point cannabis will probably be federally legal in the US, but it can't hurt to start trying got it?
-V (1st post!)
I realize this type of selective breeding would take 10 or 20 Years to reach an appreciable level of THC a, and at that point cannabis will probably be federally legal in the US, but it can't hurt to start trying got it?
-V (1st post!)