I went into this video honestly thinking it would be some kind of parody, a two-minute SNL skit for a fictitious agricultural college, studying this tall grass as a doubly-powerful subspecies of THC cannabis; an innocuous plant, but hardy, simple to care for, naturally microbe- and pest-resistant...and livestock love it! (And, when fed to heifers, the plant works wonders on their milk and cream, with greater yields, higher quality, and bright, glow-in-the-dark, near-hypnotic neon colors, a different one for each teat milked.)
Excellent research project Matthew. It would be nice to see Camas and other native bulbs in big box stores instead of Daffodils.
I went into this video honestly thinking it would be some kind of parody, a two-minute SNL skit for a fictitious agricultural college, studying this tall grass as a doubly-powerful subspecies of THC cannabis; an innocuous plant, but hardy, simple to care for, naturally microbe- and pest-resistant...and livestock love it!
(And, when fed to heifers, the plant works wonders on their milk and cream, with greater yields, higher quality, and bright, glow-in-the-dark, near-hypnotic neon colors, a different one for each teat milked.)