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Allison Justice is the Founder and CEO of The Hemp Mine, a 30-acre hemp farm in South Carolina that supplies premium hemp genetics bred in-house across the US. The Hemp Mine produces a wide array of consumer products ranging from smokable flowers to topicals to tinctures of different concentrations for humans and animals. Allison also co-founded the Cannabis Research Coalition, a professional group dedicated to addressing the cultivation and postharvest issues that challenge today’s cannabis industry.
Allison recently co-authored an article in Cannabis Science and Technology titled “Reading the Leaves: Adventures in the Leaf-level Physiology of Cannabis” which takes a deeper look into how cannabis plants respond to light and CO2.
We discuss:
- The difference in cannabis photosynthesis rates during vegetative and flowering stages
- The possibility that during flowering, leaves in the cannabis flower take over the photosynthesis
- Why cannabis growers may want to reduce light intensity and duration 6 weeks into flower
- How maximizing light during flower can increase yield but reduce quality
- Possible varietal differences in photosynthesis rates
Thanks to This Episode’s Sponsor: Cannabis Science and Technology
Cannabis Science and Technology is your educational resource for all things on the legal cannabis industry. It covers the latest developments and trends in analytical testing, quality control/assurance, extraction, cultivation, and processing/manufacturing. The brand furnishes all this information into a monthly print magazine and also on their website that includes webcasts, eBooks, podcasts, and more. You can subscribe for free on CannabisScienceTech.com
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