“The beverages are infused with Delta 9 THC derived from hemp, extracted and formulated using Bayou City Hemp Company’s innovative CO2 extraction and proprietary nano-emulsion technologies.”
It’s so wild to me the speed with which the Hemp derived D9 products are hitting all markets. FWIW it works like cannabis derived D9, but can feel less potent, depending on the milligrams in the product. It is often created via a chemical conversion rather than via extraction, but it can also be done via extraction and that is how BCH is creating their products, by running CO2 over hemp to extract the cannabinoids. As only .3% THC is allowed in dry weight hemp, on scale you can extract and create the products you all are seeing across the country. And fortunately, brands like these end up producing products that you can trust in a market that is developing too quickly to know whom to trust.
Again, these are big beer brands in Houston and in Texas and they are moving quickly in the last big state market via this angle, and it’s going to work. Texas is a beverage state. I wouldn’t be surprised once it is saturated with hemp derived products that legislators move to open up to cannabis too for tax revenue. It will be later to that game than many other states, but this farm bill loophole has opened the floodgates and in my opinion, Texas could use a change over from alcohol to hemp/cannabis derived products. People drink hard in Texas, so something a little easier on the body is a good thing.
If you want to learn more about the differences and the loophole within the farm bill, links below.
https://joyorganics.com/blogs/news/the-difference-between-hemp-derived-and-marijuana-derived-thc
https://www.acslab.com/compliance/retail-legal-delta-9-how-is-it-made-and-how-is-that-possible


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