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Yes, You Can Smoke Hemp. And Yes, It's Gaining Popularity

A woman cuts a plant.
Emily Corwin
/
VPR
Kelsy Raap of Green State Gardner cuts some hemp flowers for smoking.

When Congress legalized hemp farming at the end of last year, CNN’s Harmeet Kaur wrote: “... if you try to smoke hemp, you'll probably just end up with a headache.”

Kaur may not be spending enough time in Vermont.

Advocates have been at pains to differentiate marijuana, the psychoactive cannabis flower people smoke, from hemp, marijuana’s non-psychoactive relative. But increasingly, Vermonters are smoking hemp buds in the same way Americans have smoked marijuana buds for a hundred years.

“Oh my gosh, they did not do good research,” Kelsy Raap said when I told her about the CNN story.

Raap and her family own Green State Gardner, a cannabis garden store and CBD retailer. There, employees carefully cultivate hemp flower specifically for smoking. That old headache myth? Raap said that’s a relic from the days when hemp plants were only cultivated to make fibers for textiles.

(Having now tried a hemp joint, I can confirm: it didn't give me a headache.)

"It's sold out...we keep having trouble keeping up with the demand." — Kelsy Raap, Green State Gardener

At her store in Burlington, Raap gestured to the display case, and apologized. She was out of hemp flower.

“It’s sold out,” she said. Even after doubling their growing capacity, Raap said, “we keep having trouble keeping up with the demand.” Raap did have pre-rolled hemp joints for sale.

A container of hemp flower sold at Green Leaf Central on Church Street in Burlington, Vt.
Credit Emily Corwin / VPR
/
VPR
Hemp flower sold at Green Leaf Central on Church Street in Burlington.

There are three reasons Raap said her customers smoke hemp.

Some mix it with today’s extra-potent marijuana to mellow it out, which Raap called “a salad.”

Others desire the purported therapeutic effects of CBD, such as relief from insomnia and anxiety. Smoking, Raap said, offers a faster delivery of CBD than digesting extracts. (Research on CBDs is still early days.)

And, Raap said, many people long for the “ritual of the smoking,” and appreciate that hemp is neither addictive nor psychoactive.

Outside Joey Verga's hemp store Green Leaf Central in Burlington, hemp farmer Fred Morin said he smokes hemp flower in order to relax.

"If I wanted to smoke pot, but I don't want to be [high]," Verga said, he'd smoke a hemp joint instead.

Joey Verga of Green Leaf Central smokes a hemp joint next to a hemp plant in an alley.
Credit Emily Corwin / VPR
/
VPR
Joey Verga of Green Leaf Central smokes hemp flower next to the plant he harvested it from.

Whatever the motivation to smoke, Vermont's hemp retailers agreed: business is good.

Jonathan Miller is general counsel for U.S. Hemp Roundtable, a national hemp lobbying group.

“Smokeable hemp is a very small part of the hemp and CBD marketplace,” he said, “but it seems to be the one that’s growing most rapidly.”

"Smokeable hemp is a very small part of the hemp and CBD marketplace, but it seems to be the one that's growing most rapidly." — Jonathan Miller, U.S. Hemp Roundtable

If a cannabis plant is .3 percent THC (the psychoactive chemical) or greater by dry weight, it’s marijuana, according to the Agricultural Improvement Act of 2018; anything lower is hemp. And while Vermont has not legalized marijuana for sale outside of medical dispensaries (yet), it is legal to sell hemp, and to smoke it.

It’s also profitable.

“My name is David Hull and my company is VPR.”

That’s what David Hull said when I asked him to introduce himself for the radio. To be clear, Hull is not a colleague.

“Vermont Pre-Rolls is a company that makes an herbal joint out of Vermont hemp,” he explained.

Packages of pre-rolled hemp joints for sale at Green Leaf Central in Burlington, Vt.
Credit Emily Corwin / VPR
/
VPR
Pre-rolled hemp joints for sale at Green Leaf Central in Burlington, Vt.

Hull rolls and packages the joints in Brattleboro, then sells them around Vermont and out of state. He said he is increasingly selling to cafes and boutiques in New York, and bars and clubs in Florida, where you can still smoke indoors. Although about a half dozen states have banned smokeable hemp, it’s legal in most states.

“It was an explosive start,” Hull said. Since then, it’s been steadily growing.

Both Hull and Raap say they started their smokable hemp products in part as placeholders -- a way to get a foothold before marijuana is legal for retail. Both were surprised by the degree of demand.

"I'd like to think I'm helping some people smoke less pot, and fewer cigarettes." — David Hull, Vermont Pre-Rolls

Both also feel conflicted about selling combustible products designed to be inhaled. The research is pretty conclusive: smoking is bad for health.

“It doesn’t feel great but it doesn’t feel horrible,” Hull said. He noted he feels no worse selling hemp joints than he did in his last job, raising animals for slaughter. The meat tasted great, he said, but it was bad for the animals who died, bad for the environment, and not exactly healthy for his customers, either.

At least with hemp, he said, “I’d like to think I’m helping some people smoke less pot, and fewer cigarettes.”

Emily Corwin reported investigative stories for VPR until August 2020. In 2019, Emily was part of a two-newsroom team which revealed that patterns of inadequate care at Vermont's eldercare facilities had led to indignities, injuries, and deaths. The consequent series, "Worse for Care," won a national Edward R. Murrow award for investigative reporting, and placed second for a 2019 IRE Award. Her work editing VPR's podcast JOLTED, about an averted school shooting, and reporting NHPR's podcast Supervision, about one man's transition home from prison, made her a finalist for a Livingston Award in 2019 and 2020. Emily was also a regular reporter and producer on Brave Little State, helping the podcast earn a National Edward R. Murrow Award for its work in 2020. When she's not working, she enjoys cross country skiing and biking.
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