Edible Voices

Joel Bedard, Hemp Hero

By / Photography By | August 15, 2018
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Joel Bedard, CEO of Vermont Hemp Company in Jericho Center, Vermont with his hemp plants.

Hemp may grow like a weed, but it takes significant intellectual and financial capital to get hemp from seed to field to shelf, plate or glass. Joel Bedard, founder and CEO of the Vermont Hemp Company, works with farmers and other business partners to bridge those challenges. An engaging agroecologist with an encyclopedic knowledge of rules and regulations, Bedard is dedicated to unlocking the myriad potentials of one of our nation’s oldest cultivated crops. We sat down for an hour conversation over a beer and stood up three hours later…

For all its benefits, why is hemp so controversial?

Hemp was identified as a national security food product—a vital food source—by Bill Clinton’s administration back in the ’90s. It’s hard to fathom that we are still battling to get seeds and to grow and process it 25 years later. We import 75% of Canada’s hemp. We should be growing that domestically.

However, much of the public confuses hemp with marijuana and doesn’t understand it’s the non-psychoactive cousin. Hemp contains cannabinoids, or CBD, whereas pot contains THC. Hemp farming isn’t the same as growing marijuana. It’s not snip, trim and bag the buds and make a wad of cash. To enter this arena, you have to understand the basics of taxation, legalities and ethics. To go from seed to a bottle of tincture or marketable shelf-stable product requires hundreds of thousands of dollars in equipment not to mention technical capabilities and knowledge. There’s a false narrative out there that you can make a ton of fast money growing hemp.

How did you get to where you are today?

I grew up in New Hampshire and graduated from UVM in 1990. I had a self-designed major in the College of Ag that allowed me to study plant and soil sciences, resource economics, forestry, geology and environmental science. After college, I worked field and lab jobs with natural resources and fisheries, primarily in the Pacific Northwest. I’ve always been interested in engineering, so I moved back to New England and worked in IT for 15 years until I started Vermont Hemp in 2014.

Explain the genesis of Vermont Hemp Company.

The 2014 federal Farm Bill allowed for the cultivation of industrial hemp within certain parameters. Vermont Hemp Company is a pharmaceutical research firm, and we have all the levels of compliance and permitting in place. We don’t have an indoor cultivation facility; we focus on applied research and development. Dr. Brian Voigt, a research professor at the Gund Institute for Ecological Economics at UVM, and I decided to partner on some projects. He’s a worldclass mathematician and an economist, so we study pollen drift, microclimate modeling, tech innovation, proprietary harvesting devices, extraction methods and pharmacological protocols. We know what will grow best and how to harvest and process it.

Describe the services you provide.

We’re a farmer-facing organization. We offer genetics, consulting, advice about compliance and guidance on cultivation, processing, marketing and more. Two dozen farms are currently working with us in Vermont alone. Rye Matthews is our operations manager, and we’re trying to do as much as we can for as many people as we can. Hemp is labor intensive. Right now planting and harvesting are mostly manual and not terribly efficient. We’re coming up with solutions. NOFA VT has been extremely helpful, and Heather Darby and her team at UVM’s Northwest Crop Program do a phenomenal job. They are pure scientists performing agronomic studies. Their research helps advance the prospects for everyone.

What are some of your products and projects?

We work with Kimball Brook Farm and Green Mountain Organic Creamery to produce our own brand of CBD chocolate milk, iced tea and hemp butter. J.D. and Cheryl DeVos have been terrific partners in this process. We’re also developing some maple products.

We’ve partnered with Stone Corral Brewery in Richmond. We supply the hemp flowers and they hemp, as opposed to hop, a beer called Saisanja. Hops and hemp are different genuses of the Cannabaceae family, and both have piney, citrusy flavors. We also supply hemp flowers to Green Empire Brewing of Colchester for their Chill Session beer, and Prohibition Pig will have a 420 special menu with some of our product.

Hemp being grown by Joel Bedard at Vermont Hemp Company in Jericho Center, Vermont.
Joel Bedard, CEO of Vermont Hemp Company in Jericho, Center Vermont with his hemp plants.

And you recently took over the Full Sun oil processing facility in Middlebury?

We jointly invested in Full Sun’s operation in January 2018 in conjunction with Victory Hemp of Kentucky. Victory has ownership, while we will serve as a production front-end. The facility has a massive cold press, one of the largest in Northeast, and we didn’t want that equipment or Netaka White’s [co-founder of Full Sun] knowledge to leave the state. We’re working with farmers in the Northeast to generate sufficient hemp for pressing later this year.

The process works like this: You can cold-press hemp seed and extract high-quality food-grade hemp oil. It’s more nutritious than the best extra-virgin olive oil. You can also expeller-press the seed for non-food-grade oil that can be used as biodiesel. After pressing, you end up with the tailings, or the cake, and that can be converted into hemp protein isolate or dry further and grind into a dense but gluten-free flour. Our business partner, Chad Rosen of Victory Hemp, has a patent for hemp protein isolate, which directly displaces soy protein isolate. Lastly, you can dehull the seeds and get the hemp hearts. You can use every part of the plant for something profitable, provided you have the equipment and capability.

Hemp can also be used for soil remediation, right?

Yes. Cannabis is a “mop” plant, a bio-accumulator, which means it pulls toxins from the soil in which it grows. Thus the condition of soil directly impacts the condition of the end product. That’s why it’s so crucial to cultivate a crop in healthy, clean, non-toxic soils.

What’s happening at the State House level?

Vermont is one of 13 states that have passed hemp regulations. However, we never reconciled them with the federal Farm Bill. I spend a lot of time in Montpelier on the compliance end of the argument. I’ve worked with Senator John Rodgers to update and reconcile the language to make Vermont federally compliant. I love being involved in the political process and working with intelligent people. I don’t mind intense debate because people are passionate and tenacious here and stand behind what they believe.

What keeps you awake at night?

I want to do this responsibly. I’d rather close my business than put it, and my farmers and partners, in a compromised position. I’m not going to risk what we’ve built for someone who’s not going to listen.

And inspired?

The farmers and the agroecology aspect. I also work with some fantastic people who understand the potential of hemp products, including Bob Escher, an architect in Dorset who works with hempcrete; my business partner Chad Rosen of Victory Hemp in Kentucky; Mike Lewis, the founder of Growing Warriors, who works to bring stable and certified hemp seed to farmers; and other leading experts on hemp and CBD. We’re just trying to move the needle forward.

Five Rapid Fire

Breakfast today?

If I eat breakfast, it’s usually eggs from Jericho Settlers Farm or Flower Power Farm.

Favorite childhood meal?

As a soccer player, I carb-loaded: big bowls of buttered noodles.

Cake, pie or cookies?

Raspberry-infused chocolate cake with white icing.

Guilty indulgence in food or drink?

Vermont craft beers.

Late-night snack?

Cashews or peanuts.

Vermont Hemp Company | @vermontcbdhempcompany
Gund Institute for Ecological Economics at UVM
NOFA VT 
UVM’s Northwest Crop Program
Kimball Brook Farm | @kimballbrookfarm
Green Mountain Organic Creamery
Stone Corral Brewery | @stonecorralbrewery
Green Empire Brewing | @greenempirebrewing
Prohibition Pig | @prohibitionpig
Full Sun Oil Company
Victory Hemp | @victoryhemp
Growing Warriors | @growingstatewarriors
Jericho Settlers Farm | @jerichosettlersfarm
Flower Power Farm | @flowerpowervt

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