openthc 4 days ago

Another thing that happens to outdoor grown cannabis is pesticide contamination. Even if your farm is a good distance from some commercial agriculture, if they spray it can, and does, contaminate your crop -- which for regulated cannabis requires destruction. Literally burning (or composting) thousands of dollars of product.

And if the pesticides test are hot on the cross-contaminated cannabis; how much is on those apples three fields over?

  • snypher 4 days ago

    Residue levels are researched and regulated, along with drift trespass lawsuits and crop damage insurance.

    I guess my answer to cannabis is that if the zero-tolerance remains a factor then it's a business risk decision to grow outdoors vs indoors.

  • to11mtm 4 days ago

    Wouldn't composting risk having the pesticides go into the next crop further contaminating?

    Although, to your point, they can just sell it to the nearby farms growing stuff we eat that isn't tested the same way...

    • openthc 4 days ago

      Typically, and USA specific, the rules are to grind it up, mix with equal parts existing dirt/compost and then it's OK. So that dilutes it by half; then this compost is spread around and, like you said, can be used for other crops. Also, as the material sits in the compost pile, which should be agitated, the pesticides will leach out/break down.

      I just got a message from WA-LCB today with updated pesticide information, working with WSU, so here's some details -- https://agr.wa.gov/departments/cannabis/pesticide-use

      And here's the Action Limits defined in WA law: https://app.leg.wa.gov/WAC/default.aspx?cite=314-55-108

    • waldothedog 4 days ago

      Many asterisks here but there are methods for remediating herbicide and pesticide contamination. Not saying it’s universally solved, but its not universally unsolvable either.

      Edit: I meant to speak specifically in terms of compost production.

  • ajross 4 days ago

    > which for regulated cannabis requires destruction

    Which regulation is this that requires destroying a nearby crop... instead of the one the pesticide was actually applied to? I'm confused here. Pesticides don't "contaminate" crops in that way, they're literally intended to be use on the food.

    • schwartzworld 4 days ago

      In fairness you can’t wash a dried pot flower like you would an apple.

      • rolph 3 days ago

        systemic pesticides are actually taken into the plant, and dont wash out.

    • InvertedRhodium 4 days ago

      I live in NZ where there are medical standards applied to legal cannabis - only recently have I seen dispensaries advertising non irradiated cannabis, presumably because the manufacturing facilities have progressed to no longer require it.

      It might be something similar?

    • anamexis 4 days ago

      I’d imagine that there are different standards applied to things intended to be eaten vs things intended to be inhaled.

    • dzink 4 days ago

      Big nope - pesticides are there to repel or kill bugs. A lot of times the recommendation is to wash fruit before eating it to remove pesticides or lead from fuel burned by cars in the vicinity, etc.

      • bitexploder 4 days ago

        Uhh, no cars are emitting lead anymore? AV gas, maybe, if the field is near an airport that is a potential risk.

        • jajko 4 days ago

          I guess he meant general soot from burned fuel, as much if not more toxic than lead itself.

    • wahnfrieden 4 days ago

      cannabis aint food

      • cess11 3 days ago

        Really? I'll mention that to the birds in my neighbourhood.

        The seeds and oil are quite nutritious, and the leaves sometimes have a tinge of turpentine that fits well in a vinaigrette salad. It's also common to make cannabis butter for culinary as well as cosmetic uses.

        • konfusinomicon 3 days ago

          these brownies are strictly for cosmic, err, cosmetic usage only officer

        • wahnfrieden 3 days ago

          The regulations are because it’s inhaled. That it can be eaten is secondary

          • cess11 3 days ago

            What's food is a matter of regulation now?

      • bregma 4 days ago

        Well, sometimes.

  • lm28469 4 days ago

    How bad is smoking pesticide vs eating pesticides?

    • dzink 4 days ago

      The eaten one goes through your stomach acid and can be flushed out naturally through the system. The inhaled particles may get stuck in your lungs or worse: absorbed. Lungs are not a through channel. Things absorbed there go to the brain, blood stream, a lot faster. The stuff you spray on plants is usually meant to kill or repel bugs and critters. So won’t be friendly to lung or brain tissue. Possible cancerous too.

      • fransje26 4 days ago

        These pesticides are a bit like the magical Chernobyl radioactive cloud, which, thanks to some miraculous high pressure and low pressures zones, neatly avoided some countries by flowing along their borders.

        Here, the pesticides are magically contained by our stomach acids, and never pass the gut barrier to enter our bodies, making them absolutely safe.

        • kortilla 3 days ago

          That’s a stupid comparison because country borders don’t have physical differences.

          The stomach is nothing like the lungs. Inhale a glass of water and let us know how fake that difference is.

        • dzink 3 days ago

          The produce you buy at safeway comes from all over the place and spraying sometimes is done with a a crop-dusting air plane.

          Nobody claims they are contained in food. Just possibly less absorbable than via lungs.

    • rolph 3 days ago

      some chemistry occurs as a result of burning. dependent on substance it can be worse, or more immediate.

      e.g. benomyl [fungicide] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benomyl

      will produce cyanide as combustion product.

squirrel6 4 days ago

The fact that cannabis is so genetically unstable is very interesting. The root cause of the problem is that the level of CBD or THC produced by the plant in the resin is a result of polygenic expression— in other words, even if you have two strains of CBD-dominant crop, pollination can still result in increased THC in the next generation of the plant.

  • digdugdirk 4 days ago

    Fascinating. But there's a level of scientific understanding to your comment that I just don't understand. Do you have any recommendations for learning resources to better grasp what you're talking about?

    • robertlagrant 3 days ago

      It just means that multiple genes contribute to the outcome, so it's not a binary flip of THC or CBD depending on a single gene - if it were like that, then two parents who had the CBD gene would almost certainly produce CBD kids. Polygene means that it's a more complex interaction, and you can't assume that two CBD parents will result in a CBD child.

    • ikekkdcjkfke 4 days ago

      Dude with 3 eyes screws a girl with 1 eye and births someone with 2 eyes

      • dkdbejwi383 3 days ago

        A closer result to the above would be a child born with 17 eyes to the same couple.

kramer2718 4 days ago

This is a largely political problem. Cross pollination does not affect the utility of commercial help-only its legality. You can study wind dispersal, etc, but at the end of the day, the problem is a bunch of clueless old men.

  • jknoepfler 4 days ago

    I live in a state that 'inadvertently' legalized THC products when trying to pass hemp legislation in 2022, so... yeah. Not that I'm complaining, mind you. It was followed closely by actual legalization because nobody in their right mind was going to try to roll it back and stay in office.

  • brutal_chaos_ 4 days ago

    Isn't it also a problem for breeders? I would think pollenation could cause issues for indoor as well as outdoor crops, especially specific strain breeding and understanding pollenation patterns would help mitigate some of that.

    • olyjohn 4 days ago

      It's not a very popular opinion, but I don't think any grower really knows what strain they are growing anyways. I think the strains have been so mixed and matched, and probably some growers will call theirs a specific strain just to sell more of it. And with how long Marijuana growing was underground, the sources of the seeds are totally undocumented. It's basically like a big game of telephone at this point.

      • ralusek 4 days ago

        AFAIK they mostly grow from clones, and thus, would be completely unaffected by pollination. Unless I misunderstand plants, pollination impacts the seeds produced, and therefore the subsequent generation. So long as it keeps being cut and propagated, rather than grown from seed, you could be relatively certain of near identical genetics.

        • worik 4 days ago

          Clones are good. But it is not possible to keep a clone line going indefinitely.

          Periodically you need males and females doing their wonderful thing and mixing it all up from seed

          • bregma 3 days ago

            For example, every apple variety out there. Every potato variety out there. Every garlic variety out there. Grape varietals. All gone because their clone lines expired. Not being able to propagate clone lines is why we can't have seedless oranges or watermelon or grapes.

            • ralusek 3 days ago

              What makes clone lines no longer able to propagate?

          • ralusek 3 days ago

            > But it is not possible to keep a clone line going indefinitely

            What is the mechanism that prevents this?

            • worik 3 days ago

              I am no botanist

              But I think the DNA degrades over time

              Mēh! What we do not understand about genetics matters more than what we do....

              I am no botanist

        • conductr 4 days ago

          I think hemp farmers use seed more than clones, which are more popular in the THC supply chain

      • Vegenoid 4 days ago

        There is also little evidence that the strain has any effect on the pharmacological effects of cannabis, beyond the amount of THC per gram of flower (potency). Although it can greatly influence the smell/taste, which is meaningful.

        However, if you’ve tried the “same” strain from multiple growers you’ve likely found that the smell can vary significantly, and (as a consumer) there’s really no way to know what the flower’s aroma (and appearance) will be without direct observation. This is aligned with your hypothesis.

      • squirrel6 4 days ago

        I never thought about this. It would be interesting to run mass spec on resin samples from different growers to see the interval of genetic variation

      • finnh 4 days ago

        And yet Headband really did feel like you were wearing a headband =)

        • HKH2 4 days ago

          The motor cortex goes across the brain like that.

  • diggan 4 days ago

    > This is a largely political problem

    Is it? "leading to contaminated seeds, reduced oil yields, and in some cases, mandated crop destruction" sounds not like a political problem, or you mean the causes for those things are political?

    • mholm 4 days ago

      These issues at least partially stem from the politics surrounding cannabis. 'Mandated crop destruction' is absolutely a political problem, because it's just driven by seeds cross pollinating into plants that exceed the arbitrary political limit. Oil yields and contaminated seeds are not specified, but might be due to similar arbitrary restrictions, rather than actual issues with the product

      • uhhhhhhh 4 days ago

        Yields are real impacts from cross pollination and has zero to do with politics.

        CBD only strains with THC, vice versa. Lower strengths etc. All impact product quality and impact.

    • tastyfreeze 4 days ago

      The labeling of seeds as "contaminated" is a political issue. Its not like seeds being pressed for oil are not good for that purpose if they are arbitrarily determined to be contaminated. I suspect the reduced oil yields are the result of the destruction requirements not because the plant made less oil.

jcarrano 4 days ago

Yet corn hybrid production, which requires strict controls on pollination, is made to work. Is there a difference with hemp pollen or is the problem on the regulatory side?

redwood 4 days ago

The reverse problem here means it'll be harder and harder to avoid fertilizing females plants grown for flower outdoors!

worik 4 days ago

It is really really annoying

contingencies 4 days ago

Nature's gonna nature.

The fallacious line of thinking that one can fully isolate an outdoor planting is the more interesting issue this touches on, a skeptical take is that this fallacy continues to exist in regulation only for its utility of abuse by large companies seeking to profit from the commercialization of sterile GM crops.

I'm sure the upper echelon of commercial weed growers typically have a far higher education in landscape ecology than the captured regulators.

  • beardedwizard 4 days ago

    But the cannabis industry is mostly large companies capturing regulators and litigating genetics, so I'm not sure the distinction is accurate.

    • PaulHoule 4 days ago

      In New York the cannabis industry is still largely grey market.

      I have been trying to quit, we finally cut up the plants that we had from last year and put them in jars and sent them away but then somebody shows up with a jar of something they grew.

      I don't think I'll ever buy weed from a dispensary because between being able to grow a few plants for myself and getting weed from friends who also grew it for themselves as well as knowing people in the industry (leaders in the trade association) it keeps showing up.

    • bregma 3 days ago

      Why do my cannabis-sector ETFs keep going down then?

  • lukan 4 days ago

    "The fallacious line of thinking that one can fully isolate an outdoor planting"

    Who thinks that? It is about reducing unwanted pollination. So if you know the wind will come strong from this area and lots of hemp field are there, you can maybe protect your plants some time of the year, or know beforehand, that an area is not a good spot for you.

    • indrora 4 days ago

      Monsanto, at one level or another. While they pinky-promise to not sue, if their corn gets into your corn and you replant the seeds, they've fought about it in court to mixed results.

      • colechristensen 4 days ago

        Almost nobody replants their own corn. Almost all corn planted is an F1 hybrid, the first generation of a cross between two varieties. Subsequent generations perform very much worse. This is a natural thing not an engineered thing, many plants on the first generation cross between two varieties perform much better.

        Most corn is also patent encumbered, but that is less of the reason.

        Soybeans are actually different and before all of the patented genetics people did sometimes replant their own grown seed.

      • cyberax 4 days ago

        > While they pinky-promise to not sue

        They will not only "not sue", but they will compensate you for the cost of the contamination.

        The only court cases where Monsanto (now Bayer) got damages involved farmers knowingly and intentionally replanting Monsanto's seeds.

      • to11mtm 4 days ago

        I thought Canola (which is a disturbing plant in general for food use) was their big hitter for that sort of thing?

samr71 4 days ago

[flagged]

  • pixelpoet 4 days ago

    Yeah we really just need to demand scientific, evidence-based policy and be fine on this topic.

    It's going to be weird being "boomer" / old af ourselves (I'm in my 40s) telling people about the days when it was illegal, the way it'd be boomer af for someone to tell us about Prohibition days.

    On the other hand, western society seems to be swinging more authoritarian again, e.g. abortion laws in the US, AfD here in Germany, despite cannabis legalisation efforts in both. So who knows, humanity seems to have infinite ingenuity and appetite for self-inflicted horrors rolling eyes

    • yunohn 4 days ago

      My view is that legalization is only occurring due to their greed for the sweet sweet tax revenue it brings to the government.

  • forgotoldacc 4 days ago

    Younger generations are less interested in cannabis and there's growing pushback against it. Younger generations are seeing a rapid conservative swing in general.

    The world won't be sunshine and rainbows when boomers are wiped from the earth. There will always be someone hating (thing) and wanting to ban (thing) and it comes in cycles.

    • itomato 3 days ago

      Younger Generations that are subjected to increasing conservatism are potential victims to be saved.

  • mulmen 4 days ago

    Boomers were young once. That's when they voted for the war on drugs at all costs. They may have made some poor decisions but they don't have a monopoly on them. There's no guarantee that the future is progressive.

    • bregma 3 days ago

      Young people don't vote. Boomers were still young and just past the "turn on, tune in, and drop out" hippie summer of love when their elders passed the War on Drugs legislation. Now that they're the ones voting and sitting in legislative chambers those laws are being rolled back.

      One should regularly examine one's prejudices.

      • mulmen 3 days ago

        I was thinking more of the Reagan years but you’re right that the boomers didn’t start the war on drugs.

        > One should regularly examine one's prejudices.

        Yeah that was my point too.

  • aurareturn 4 days ago

    Don’t legalize it because it’s more addictive and more damaging to health than the current perception.

    Check out r/leaves

    • danielbln 4 days ago

      Not saying there are real issues about psychological addiction around weed, but r/leaves is an echo chamber that where people blame every single thing wrong with their life on weed, that's nothing representative at all.

      Plus, keeping it illegal does nothing to curb use.

    • pyth0 4 days ago

      Check out your local AA chapter. This is not a reason against legalization.