

We know our hemp--from start to finish, seed to consumer. And that kind of care is what makes our products premium. We start growing our quality, southern CBD hemp genetics on our family land where crops have been farmed for 4 generations. We take pride in never using pesticides, ensuring our hemp grows naturally. Once ready for harvesting, we carefully hang our plants to air dry in optimal conditions keeping the terpenes and cannabinoids well preserved. Then we extract full spectrum hemp oil at our state of the art, supercritical CO2 extraction facility. This extraction method preserves all of the compounds from the whole plant that contribute to the "entourage effect"--terpenes, cannabinoids, flavonoids, and fatty acids. This is what we call FULL SPECTRUM. From there oil is ISO lab tested, formulated into product, and ISO lab tested again before being placed in the marketplace. Coming from a family of farmers, horticulturists, PhD scientists, designers, and creators, we have the experience and passion to create the products you can trust to start living your best life today.
Our CBD & CBG hemp flower is expertly dried and cured to preserve the individual, intense terpene profiles. Try our new varieties today!
Founder of The Hemp Mine and The Cannabis Research Center and Coalition, Dr. Allison Justice, PhD, sits down with the BIOS team to discuss the challenges of commercial horticulture and her mission to create a library of cannabis research for farmers everywhere.
Long before Dr. Allison Justice was a scientist, she was a farmer.
Daughter of an ornamental farmer and a granddaughter of cotton farmers, Allison did not fall far from the family tree. Since graduating from Clemson University with a PhD in Plant and Environmental Science in 2014, she has, among a long list of accomplishments, conducted groundbreaking research into the photobiological advantages of LEDs over traditional lighting technology and founded the Cannabis Research Center and Coalition, a partnership between her alma mater and the Hemp Mine, her family cannabis farm and research center.
From their state-of-the-art grow laboratories, Allison and her team tailor their research to the questions and needs of growers everywhere, many of whom lack access to the kinds of insights that can help them succeed. Her goal is to unite cannabis farmers and help them improve their businesses with high-quality, unbiased scientific research.
Founder of The Hemp Mine and The Cannabis Research Center and Coalition, Dr. Allison Justice, PhD, sits down with the BIOS team to discuss the challenges of commercial horticulture and her mission to create a library of cannabis research for farmers everywhere.
Long before Dr. Allison Justice was a scientist, she was a farmer.
Daughter of an ornamental farmer and a granddaughter of cotton farmers, Allison did not fall far from the family tree. Since graduating from Clemson University with a PhD in Plant and Environmental Science in 2014, she has, among a long list of accomplishments, conducted groundbreaking research into the photobiological advantages of LEDs over traditional lighting technology and founded the Cannabis Research Center and Coalition, a partnership between her alma mater and the Hemp Mine, her family cannabis farm and research center.
From their state-of-the-art grow laboratories, Allison and her team tailor their research to the questions and needs of growers everywhere, many of whom lack access to the kinds of insights that can help them succeed. Her goal is to unite cannabis farmers and help them improve their businesses with high-quality, unbiased scientific research.
See that shimmer? That's where all the magic happens in the hemp plant. Those little glistening diamonds are actually trichomes. They are the powerhouses of the hemp plant, producing cannabinoids like CBD & CBG, and terpenes. Within the trichome, they create the formula that distinguishes one strain from another in both aroma and effect. Hemp flowers abundant in trichomes yield the most fragrant terpene profiles. The development and preservation of terpenes in hemp depends on variables such as plant genetics, environmental factors, as well as harvesting, curing and post processing methods. Terpenes are very volatile and can degrade with harsh conditions. Time, temperature, light, & exposure to the elements can all play a factor in degradation. This is why The Hemp Mine takes extra care to ensure our hemp produces and retains the frost, start to finish.