STANDING in a quiet field a Home Office-mandated distance from the road, thousands of hemp plants tower above my head, thriving in this warm south-facing dimple in the north-rolling folds of Strathmore.
Hemp has been grown across Scotland for 6000 years, with evidence of its use found in archaeology and ancient pollen analysis.
Place names such as “Hempriggs”, near Wick, and “Hempland” in the Lowther Hills of Dumfries and Galloway show the plant was widespread and valued. Hemp was such an important crop that Henry VIII ordered all of England’s farmers to put a portion of their land into growing the plants.