The United States currently bans the cultivation of industrial hemp in most places, but most people don’t realize the true history of the surprisingly controversial (and highly beneficial) crop that has countless, incredible uses in both industry and health.

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While hemp and cannabis are seen as a novelty to some people, and even potentially dangerous to others, the plant is actually quite native to the natural world here, as evidenced by one woman’s recent photo journey documenting it growing wild all over her native Nebraska (scroll down to see photos).

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Considering that hemp has been grown by George Washington and other major historical figures and is a highly lucrative business for Canadian farmers, it goes without saying that it has tremendous value — and we need it now more than ever.

Showing the natural side of hemp (and shattering the myth that it’s used to get high like THC-containing marijuana) was a big reason for Diana Sunshine Wulf’s unique photos of the plant growing wild.

“I just want people to learn why it is NOT about getting high, and this is my way to educate,” she said to the online magazine Toke of the Town. “I want people to realize everything made with toxic petroleum can be totally replaced with this nontoxic weed.”

Wild Hemp Grows Everywhere in Nebraska (Photos)

The United States used to be a thriving hub for hemp production, with livestock grazing on feral hemp, enriching their milk with relaxation-promoting CBDs that are missing from today’s livestock fed an unnatural diet of GMO corn and soy.

While today’s milk, meat, and even the farm animals themselves are as about as unhealthy as it gets, that could all change with the help of hemp — its potential is now being studied by the Colorado Agriculture Department as a means to raise healthier animals.

Already one study out of Sweden, published on the U.S. National Library of MedicineNational Institutes of Health’s website, resulted in higher milk yields among cows whose diets were supplemented with hemp.

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Will we ever return to the time where hemp grew everywhere and was used to supplement animal feed in ways that improve the health of both animal and people alike?

That remains to be seen, but one thing’s for sure: hemp is a hidden part of our history that’s far bigger than we’ve been led to believe, and Diana’s photos are proof:

The U.S. Must Recover Its Hemp Growing Roots 

While over $600 million of hemp sales were recorded in the United States according to a 2017 congressional report by U.S. agricultural specialist Renée Johnson, the U.S. market is almost entirely dependent on imports from places like China and Canada.

Canadian hemp is used in everything from industry to the health food market, where companies like Manitoba Harvest have gained a huge foothold in the U.S. market with products like organic hemp seeds and even hemp protein shakes.