New growth industry for RI's agriculture
By Colleen Cronin / ecoRI News staff
Among
the horse barns and turf fields of South County lies an agricultural endeavor
looking to provide high-quality cannabis crops that won’t get you high.Lovewell Farms in Hopkinton is the only certified-organic
hemp farm in Rhode Island. (Colleen Cronin/ecoRI News)
Lovewell Farms, Rhode Island’s only certified-organic hemp farm,
produces a wide range of cannabidoil (CBD) products under a model of education,
sustainability, and advocacy.
Since
the company started in founder and co-owner Mike Simpson’s Providence kitchen
about four years ago, Lovewell has invested a lot of time sharing information
about the benefits of and debunking the myths about CBD.
Traveling
to farmers markets around the state is part of the company’s marketing and
sales strategy, and Simpson said he’s seen the look of bewilderment in people’s
faces when they start to approach Lovewell’s booth and realize he’s selling a
cannabis product.
“I
say it all day long to people… ‘It’s not pot. It’s cannabis, but it’s not
THC,’” said Colette Chisholm, Lovewell’s regional wholesale manager.
CBD
is only one of about 100 cannabinoids produced by the cannabis plant. Unlike
THC, CBD is a non-psychoactive drug. After the passage of the federal 2018 Farm Bill Act, hemp became legal to cultivate and
sell in all 50 states.
Even
though they look exactly alike and even smell similar during harvest season,
THC plants and hemp plants have different chemical compositions. Hemp has
higher levels of CBD concentration and less than 0.3 percent THC, so the
products they produce likely won’t get a user high.
But they can still help someone feel good. CBD can reduce users’ physical and mental pain, according to the workers at Lovewell and a growing body of scientific research.
“It’s
a drug just as much as, like, coffee,” chief operating officer and co-owner
Emily Cotter said of CBD. Cotter said that through conversations with their
consumers, they’ve been able to provide them with information about the safety
and benefits of CBD and build trust in Lovewell’s products.
Lovewell
sells CBD in several different forms, including balms, salves, oils, tinctures,
and dried flowers which can be cut up and smoked. All the products are all
manufactured in-house.
Although CBD products are becoming more
popular and hemp growing skyrocketed after
2018, Lovewell is unique in the way it grows its product.
Cotter
and third co-owner Ryan Plante both studied horticulture at the University of
Rhode Island and promote sustainable farming practices on the less than two
acres of land Lovewell rents in Hopkinton. Lovewell is the only hemp producer
of five in Rhode
Island with a United States Department of Agriculture organic certification.
Plante, who is also Lovewell’s director of horticulture at the farm, doesn’t use harsh chemicals on the plants to keep away pests, which can feel like a gamble when he only has about 1,000 plants under his care.
Because
they are such a small operation, “if we have a crop failure, that’s going to
affect us for years to come,” Cotter said.
That
means when the harvest comes at the end of September, Plante treats the hemp
plants like they’re his “newborn baby” and makes sure cultivated plants are
drying under the right temperature and humidity.
After
the plants are first placed in a temperature-controlled room, which sits in an
old garage on the property, the humidity can hike up to 99 percent. But over
the course of six to eight hours the humidity starts to lower to 50 or 60
percent. Anything higher than 60 percent humidity can start to grow mold
spores, while drying too quickly can burn up the cannabinnoids in the flowers.
Though
the former poultry farm that Lovewell rents has a deep well that got them
through the summer’s drought, the buildings on the property don’t have the best
electrical capacity, so the power sometimes goes out, something Plante has to
deal with even in the middle of the night.
“I
might just camp outside this year,” he said.
To
help make the harvesting process easier this month, Plante decided to plant
Purple Emperor and Painted Lady strains of hemp, which are harvested a few
weeks apart, so that the team won’t be cultivating all 1,000 plants at once.
“The
issue that we face as New England growers is that the genetics that are created
don’t suit the climate,” Plante said, because the cannabis industry is so
focused on the western part of the United States. But the new seeds he’s been
working with this year have done much better because they’ve come from a
company that works with farms around the country.
While
growing outside comes with the challenges of fickle mother nature, the folks at
Lovewell said that they prefer it to indoor growing because of environmental
and financial benefits.
“The
electricity bill alone, having to pay that…” Simpson said. “We use the big
light in the sky, the sun. We use the rain, when it comes, if it does.”
That
electricity bill and the cost of using a climate-controlled environment for the
whole growing process also increase indoor growers’ carbon emission, according
to a 2021 Colorado State University
study, which estimated that shifting growing outside lowers
emissions by 80 percent.
The
ecological and fiscal need to keep growing outside is also one of the barriers
Simpson said will prevent Lovewell and many other small growers from getting
into the THC business. After Rhode Island’s new recreational cannabis law goes into effect, THC cultivators
who are able to receive a license will only be able to plant inside for
security purposes.
Outdoor
growing is the “twin flame” of being both environmentally friendly and more
equitable, Simpson said, and is something he will continue to advocate for in
future cannabis legislation. Both Simpson and Cotter have been heavily involved
in the movement to legalize recreational THC in Rhode Island and were happy to
see it pass this year.
For
now, Lovewell has moved into the THC market by selling their CBD products to
THC makers who can mix the two compounds together for what some consider a more
pleasurable high.
Cotter
hopes they’ll keep growing their customer base and that Lovewell will become a
name that is associated with quality.
“When
ideally we can move into the THC market,” Simpson said, “they’re already
familiar with the brand.”