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<blockquote data-quote="Hpacres440p" data-source="post: 1649117" data-attributes="member: 39347"><p>Yep-that's where the backup is-testing labs. Also, here in Texas, where hemp has been ok'd but cannabis is not, drought and heat can change THC concentration in the plants to convert legal hemp to illegal, non-sellable cannabis. It's not a slam dunk crop for sure. We lived in CO for a few years right after legalization happened (poor timing). Rental houses were being destroyed by renters who were growing the "legal" number of plants, but would re-wire the houses to have capacity to carry heat lamps, and create mold problems from the high humidity rooms. The water requirements alone can really put a big load on local water supplies. Not an innocuous, "no one hurt" legal crop.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hpacres440p, post: 1649117, member: 39347"] Yep-that’s where the backup is-testing labs. Also, here in Texas, where hemp has been ok’d but cannabis is not, drought and heat can change THC concentration in the plants to convert legal hemp to illegal, non-sellable cannabis. It’s not a slam dunk crop for sure. We lived in CO for a few years right after legalization happened (poor timing). Rental houses were being destroyed by renters who were growing the “legal” number of plants, but would re-wire the houses to have capacity to carry heat lamps, and create mold problems from the high humidity rooms. The water requirements alone can really put a big load on local water supplies. Not an innocuous, “no one hurt” legal crop. [/QUOTE]
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