© 2021
In touch with the world ... at home on the High Plains
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Hemp Farmers Race The First Freeze

The view of the Spanish Peaks from the Hoehne Hemp Farm in Las Animas County before the cold weather hit.
Tracy Wahl
/
91.5 KRCC
The view of the Spanish Peaks from the Hoehne Hemp Farm in Las Animas County before the cold weather hit.

As temperatures plummet, some hemp farmers in Southern Colorado are worried about how the first freeze will affect a crop that is especially sensitive to cold. 

At the Hoehne Hemp Farm in Las Animas County, farmers are working around the clock to harvest 80 acres of hemp. It’s their first year growing the crop.   

Long time area farmer Joe Veltri leases them the land. "With all the money invested in the work, it’s a risky crop and I hope it don’t hurt them, this heavy frost," he said.

These plants are harvested for CBD, a popular pain treatment. It’s not clear just how many farmers are growing the crop in the region since numbers for the current year aren’t available.

Fall's first full blast of freezing temperatures has warnings and advisories. National Weather Service - Pueblo, Thursday 10/10/19 10:18 a.m.
Credit National Weather Service
Fall's first full blast of freezing temperatures has warnings and advisories. National Weather Service - Pueblo, Thursday 10/10/19 10:18 a.m.

Nick Spinosa is one of three partners at the Hoehne Hemp Farm.

"We’ve worked this hard for this," he said earlier this week. "This is the final stretch and we have to bring it home.” 

Spinosa said there were more than 30 people harvesting the hemp to beat the freeze.

A freeze warning was in effect until 9:00 a.m. Thursday for Hoehne and most everywhere east of I-25. Temperatures Thursday night are expected to be well below freezing, as they were Wednesday night for many in Southern Colorado.

Copyright 2019 KRCC

In her nearly 20 years at NPR, Tracy Wahl has established herself as a champion for innovation in the newsroom. She was among the first at NPR to embrace social media as a way to engage audiences and deepen our journalism through crowd-sourced reporting. She launched Morning Edition's first Twitter account, and led the program's early ventures into multi-platform storytelling.