Hemp Farm Day at Winona's Hemp on May 8th with Alex White Plume and friends

Artwork by Sarah LittleRedfeather Design. Products coming soon with this design.

Artwork by Sarah LittleRedfeather Design. Products coming soon with this design.

New Green Revolution: Pre Party

- Farm Day at Winona's Hemp on May 8th.

Here is the New Green Revolution.

Roman, Alex White Plume, Winona and George. This was a historic day for Winona’s Hemp & Heritage Farm. Standing in front of the new hempcrete green house at Anishinaabe Agriculture Farm.Photo by Keri Pickett

Roman, Alex White Plume, Winona and George. This was a historic day for Winona’s Hemp & Heritage Farm. Standing in front of the new hempcrete green house at Anishinaabe Agriculture Farm.

Photo by Keri Pickett

Mid May’s New Green Revolution Pre Party went well. Alex White Plume, known as the “Hemperer” took a road trip with grandson Mato White Plume to rural Osage. Alex White Plume’s work in hemp restoration has been inspirational towards many projects nationally and a number of people were very happy to see him in northern Minnesota. Winona’s Hemp and Anishinaabe Agriculture in Osage, sponsored the gathering to learn about construction and paper making with hemp.  

An informal gathering of about 50 people from the region including, Michigan, South Dakota and beyond, came to the educational event. Red Lake, White Earth, Sisseton, Nett Lake and other tribes were represented, as well, many local people came to visit and see the work.    Hemp was featured in foods, salves,  paper and construction materials.  The word canvas comes from cannabis, and hemp indeed as the potential to transform the building, materials and textiles economies.  


That’s why it’s called the New Green Revolution.  

White Plume served as a co-host of the gathering, sharing stories of his work in hemp, community healing, and offering suggestions as the various projects were demonstrated.  White Plume built a house in rural Manderson in the l990s out of hempcrete, had the Drug Enforcement Agency seize his crop and is now heralded as the 

“Hemperer” as the plant is part of a renaissance. “ 

I liked seeing the work of  our relatives and how this plant is making a come back.”

Roman Vyskocil finished off a hempcrete greenhouse, putting some plaster on the outside of the greenhouse, dug into a hill . “I’m really pleased with how it turned out”, he told us, and then tracked down Alex White Plume for another picture. The greenhouse was sponsored by the West Central Minnesota Foundation.     

Hempcrete, is a valuable alternative to concrete in many forms of construction, and produces about four times the amount of fiber in a fraction of the time of wood.  That has good opportunity and potential for not only construction, but also the pulp and paper industry. This spring. the cost of framing lumber, OSB plywood and other materials has increased steeply, adding an average of $36,000 to the home. That’s causing the building industry to take another look at the centuries of hemp building, and new innovations in hempcrete blocks which add structural integrity as well as create a reduced carbon house.  

“We have been working to decarbonize the construction sector for 10 years now and we remain 100% convinced that the hemp block has a crucial role to play,” Charlotte De Bellefroid, spokesperson for Belgium-based IsoHemp, wrote in an email to Hemp Build Mag. The company manufactures 1 million hemp blocks per year and will increase production to 5 million blocks per year with a new robotic factory to keep up with demand. It will be "impossible" to halve U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 "without rapid decarbonization of the building sector," Alliance to Save Energy (ASE) President Paula Glover said in a statement last week. 

Henry Red Cloud of Oglala on the Pine Ridge reservation sent along a hempcrete block maker, and the participants worked with various block making composition. The hope is to make an adobe like block for construction. Red Cloud  called in over the phone and gave instructions. With the more glamorous cousin-cannabis sativa, in recreational and medical form, going through major expansion, industrial hemp has been sidelined.  

That’s about to change.

“According to the research study, the global Industrial Hemp Market was estimated at USD 5 Billion in 2019 and is expected to reach USD 36 Billion by 2026. The global Industrial Hemp Market is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 34% from 2019 to 2026”. Anishinaabe Agriculture is interested in making sure that Native farmers have a place at the table, not on the menu. 

George D. Weiblen,the Science Director, at the University of Minnesota’s  Bell Museum came to the conference, to meet Alex White Plume, and other Native farmers in the region.  White Plume is a hero to the museum director.  Weiblen has been working on hemp and cannabis varieties for the past decade, and is keen on building new collaborative relationships with tribes, starting at Sisseton, where his department has helped the Sisseton Oyate with their hemp work, and another colleague, has been working with Red Lake.  Indeed, Weiblen  represents a new era of collaboration between universities and Indigenous peoples.

That’s what the hemp economy represents well- the need to learn together and work together,  An integrated hemp and cannabis economy represents a multi billion dollar industry, which is a brand new industry- a brand new pie.   That is a game changer. 

Hemp is considered a carbon sink, meaning that the plant grows so quickly ( up to twelve feet in four months), that it absorbs huge quantities of carbon. More than that, the plant can replace carbon intensive manufacturing from plastics to concrete, creating a new carbon friendly economy. Add to that the legalization of cannabis, state by state, and that’s a brand new multi billion dollar economy.   

That’s what we need to survive the decades ahead, and hemp can be a part of that- the New Green Revolution.  

The New Green Revolution Pre party was this spring, let’s see what the fall brings to the north country for the hemp economy. 

Posted by Winona LaDuke on Sunday, May 23, 2021

Standing Silent Nation trailer

Meanwhile .. Our Spring Hemp Update

Our hemp harvest of perfectly field retted hemp... grateful to our team, Darren Klarer, Ron Chilton, and Max Klarer, at Akiing and 8th Fire Solar.

This is the new green revolution.

Our hemp harvest of perfectly field retted hemp... grateful to our team, Darren Klarer, Ron Chilton, and Max Klarer, at Akiing and 8th Fire Solar. This is the new green revolution. #winonashemp #anishinaabeagriculture

Posted by Winona's Hemp and Heritage Farm on Tuesday, May 25, 2021
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Products with this artwork by Votan coming soon. Copyrighted to Winona’s Hemp ©2021

Products with this artwork by Votan coming soon.

Copyrighted to Winona’s Hemp ©2021

Winona's Hemp Women's VNeck TShirt - Organic Hemp Fabric
Sale Price:$25.00 Original Price:$30.00

Official Winona’s Hemp Vneck TShirt for supporting members, and subscribers for limited time and inventory.

Garment is 60% Hemp 40% Organic Cotton Jersey with new Winona’s Hemp logo printed in water-base cream ink.

FEATURES: Sustainable And Environmentally Friendly. Silky Soft And Great Drape.

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Winona's Hemp High Potency CBD Pain Balm - Anti-Inflammatory
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PAIN BALM (CBD ANTI-INFLAMMATORY Featuring TBazz Botanicals. Terri LaDuke, a renowned herbalist from our community. She is making these salves for us processed with love.

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