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Functional cookies

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Preference cookies

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Privacy Policy - Royal Queen Seeds

To ensure a safe online environment and guarantee adequate data protection, we strictly comply with all legal requirements. In this privacy statement, we provide information about how and for what purpose data is collected, safety measures, storage periods and contact details.


COMPANY NAME: SNORKEL SPAIN, SL (hereinafter ROYAL QUEEN SEEDS)

C/ Vilar d'Abdelà, 5 (nave 1) CP: 08170 de Montornès del Vallès

+34 937 379 846

[email protected]


The present Privacy Policy sets out the terms on which we will treat personal data at ROYAL QUEEN SEEDS; this includes any personal data collected through our website https://www.royalqueenseeds.com/ as well as any other data we process in the course of our business activities.

ROYAL QUEEN SEEDS collects the following personal data for the purposes listed below:

SECTION 1 – PERSONAL INFORMATION WE COLLECT

1.1 Account purchases

Account purchases can only be made if you are in possession of a personal account. When you create an account or purchase something from our shop, as part of the buying and selling process we collect the following personal information that you provide to us:

  • First and last name
  • Home and billing address
  • Telephone number
  • Gender
  • IP address
  • Email address
  • Date of birth

This information is required for delivery. In addition, when you browse our shop, we automatically receive the Internet Protocol (IP) address of your computer. Based on this information, we can optimise your online experience and at the same time protect our online environment.

Purpose of data collection

We collect and store account-related data for the following purposes:

(a) to carry out obligations arising from any contracts between you and us, and to provide you with information, products and services that you may request from us;

(b) to set up, manage and communicate with you about your account and your orders;

(c) to conduct market research and analysis;

(d) to confirm your age and identity, and to detect and prevent fraud.

1.2 Newsletters

With your explicit permission, we may send you newsletters about our shop, new products and other updates. We send newsletters based on your explicit consent. In the event that you purchase a product, and in accordance with current regulations, we may send you commercial communications in accordance with the legitimate interest of our company, always about products or services similar to those you have purchased or contracted. In any case, you may exercise your right of opposition through the channels announced in this Privacy Policy. The following information is collected in relation to the newsletter:

  • First & last name
  • Gender

We do not need to know the sex of the person in order to send the newsletter (data minimisation: by law we must ask for data that is strictly necessary to provide the service, and in this case knowing the sex is not necessary to send the newsletter).

  • Email address

Purpose of data collection

The data collected is used to:

(a) personalise our emails, including your name and gender;

(b) provide gender-specific content.

You can withdraw your consent at any time by using the link provided in the newsletter or the contact information provided in section 2.

1.3 Customer service and contact form

In order to provide appropriate support, our customer service employees have access to information related to the account. Consequently, their support will be highly effective and friendly. The data provided in our contact form is used by our CRM provider, SuperOffice. We will only use your details to respond to your message.

SECTION 2 – LEGITIMATE INTEREST

If you have purchased any of our products, please note that we may process your personal data for promotional purposes, based on Royal Queen Seeds' legitimate interest only to offer you products or services from our company and about products or services similar to those you have purchased. You may exercise your right to opt out of future messages by the means set out in this Privacy Policy or through any notification you receive.

2.1 How do you withdraw consent?

If you change your mind, you can withdraw your consent for us to contact you for the purpose of collecting, using, or disclosing your data at any time by reaching out to us at: [email protected].

SECTION 3 – DISCLOSURE

We may disclose your personal information if we are required to do so by law or if you breach our Terms of Service.

SECTION 4 – HOW LONG DO WE KEEP YOUR DATA?

At Royal Queen Seeds, we will not retain your data for longer than is necessary for the purposes described in this Policy. Different retention periods apply for different types of data; however, the longest period we will normally hold any personal data is 10 years.

4.1 Account information

Data relating to the account remains relevant for as long as the consumer is in possession of an account. Therefore, the data remains documented for as long as the account exists. When our customers delete an account, the associated data will be deleted within a reasonable period of time. Requests regarding the inspection or correction of stored personal data or the deletion of an account can be sent to [email protected].

4.2 Newsletters

In the event that you give us your consent to inform you about our products or services, we will keep your data until you express your wish not to receive any further communications from us. However, we regularly (every month) carry out a relevance check. Registered customers (and their personal information) will be deleted whenever customers do not reply to our request. In addition, our newsletter mailing has an opt-out feature. Consumers can withdraw their consent by using this opt-out feature.

SECTION 5 – COOKIES

Cookies are small information files that notify your computer of previous interactions with our website. These cookies are stored on your hard drive, not on our website. Essentially, when you use our website, your computer displays its cookies to us, informing our site that you have visited before. This allows our website to function more quickly and remember aspects related to your previous visits (such as your username), making your experience more convenient. At Royal Queen Seeds, we use two types of cookies: functional and analytical.

5.1 Functional Cookies

Functional cookies are used to enhance your online experience. Among other things, these cookies track what is added to your shopping cart. The use of these cookies does not require prior authorization.

5.2 Analytical Cookies

Analytical cookies are used for research and market analysis. The data collected with these analytical cookies is anonymous, making it unusable for third parties. The use of these cookies does not require prior authorization.

SECTION 5 – THIRD-PARTY SERVICES

Third-party services are required to conduct transactions and provide our services. In general, the third-party providers we use will only collect, use and disclose your information to the extent necessary to enable them to perform the services they provide to us.

However, certain third-party service providers, such as payment gateways and other payment transaction processors, have their own privacy policies regarding the information we must provide to them for your transactions.

We encourage you to read the privacy policies of these providers so that you can understand how these providers will handle your personal information.

In particular, certain suppliers may be located or have facilities located in a different jurisdiction than yours or ours. Therefore, if you choose to proceed with a transaction involving the services of a third party, your information may be subject to the laws of the jurisdiction in which that service provider or its facilities are located.

Once you leave our website or are redirected to a third-party website or application, you are no longer governed by this Privacy Policy or the Terms of Service of our website.

Web analytics service (anonymous data)

On this website we have integrated an element of a web analytics service (with anonymisation functionality). Web analytics can be defined as the gathering, processing and analysis of data about the behaviour of visitors to websites. An analytics service collects, among other things, data about which website a person came from (the so-called referrer), which sub-pages they visited or how often and for how long they visited a sub-page. Web analytics is mainly used for website optimisation and for a cost–benefit analysis of internet advertising.

Courier service

To complete deliveries we use a courier service. This courier service carries out the delivery between our company and the consumer's home. To complete these logistics, the company requires access to the consumer's name and address information.

Mailing service

Royal Queen Seeds uses a third-party mail service provider to send its newsletter. This provider has access to limited account information related to opt-in consent (e.g. email address).

Marketing services

Royal Queen Seeds has the support of a company that specialises in marketing and communication activities. Their access to personal information is very limited and mostly anonymous.

Payment services

At Royal Queen Seeds we use external payment services to handle our transactions (e.g. credit card payments).

SECTION 6 – SECURITY

To protect your personal information, we take reasonable precautions and follow industry standard best practices to ensure that it is not inappropriately lost, misused, accessed, disclosed, altered or destroyed.

If you provide us with your credit card information, the information is encrypted using secure socket layer technology (SSL) and stored using AES-256 encryption. Although no method of transmission over the internet or electronic storage is 100% secure, we follow all PCI-DSS requirements and implement additional industry standards that are commonly accepted. Information related to the account is protected with a hashing method. This method transforms the information into a generated hash. As a result, confidential information is protected and invisible, even to us. In addition, our databases are exceptionally protected against unauthorised access. For example, access to the database is only possible and permitted via approved IP addresses (e.g. from Royal Queen Seeds headquarters). Other attempts and addresses are rejected at all times.

Furthermore, data is anonymised as much as possible, so it cannot be directly linked to a specific consumer. With this data, however, we may be able to carry out market research and analysis. In addition, the third parties concerned (e.g. mailing service) are examined prior to our collaboration, comply with the GDPR from the EU and receive a processing agreement. Within Royal Queen Seeds, employees are assigned different access permissions. Specific permission provides access only to information that is strictly required to perform a task. Digital security measures are subject to change and must meet high requirements to ensure the safety of online customers. That is why, at Royal Queen Seeds, we appoint a security officer. Regular verification and improvement of security measures (where necessary) are part of the role.

SECTION 7 – CHANGES TO THIS PRIVACY POLICY

We reserve the right to modify this Privacy Policy at any time, so please check back regularly. Changes and clarifications will be effective immediately upon being published on the Website. If we make substantial changes to this policy, we will notify you here that it has been updated so you will know what information we collect, how we use it and under what circumstances, if any, we use and/or disclose it.

SECTION 8 – YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO:

  • Revoke the consent you have granted;
  • Access personal data;
  • Rectify personal data;
  • Delete personal data;
  • File a complaint or a writ for the protection of your rights before the Spanish Data Protection Agency;
  • Be notified of any security incident that may affect your rights;
  • Limitation of processing;
  • Portability.
By Max Sargent


We have been farming hemp for thousands of years, and not just to get high. In fact, getting stoned from cannabis has been a more recent development, at least in the West. But what’s the difference between hemp and cannabis?

Well, on a taxonomic level, there isn’t one—they both belong to the species, Cannabis sativa. However, in practice, there are significant differences between them. So for the purposes of this article, hemp refers to plants grown for purposes other than getting high, and cannabis refers to plants grown predominantly for their THC content.

There are also legal distinctions between hemp and cannabis, regarding THC content.

So, what is hemp used for? And how is it farmed? These are some of the questions we’ll be answering below. We’ll also be looking at hemp's new, and potentially most popular, application—the production of non-psychotropic cannabinoids such as CBD.

The History of Hemp Farming

Hemp has been farmed for thousands of years—around 10,000, in fact. The earliest discoveries place the beginning of hemp agriculture at around 8,000 BCE, making it one of the earliest farmed plants. This was in Asia, but it seems to have taken a little longer to reach Europe and the US (in terms of farming).

Europe

In Europe, hemp has been used for both its fibres and as a food source. De Honesta Voluptate et Valetudine, a cookbook from 1475 AD, references health drinks made using hemp. However, it is known that hemp has been used for much longer than that for its tough and malleable fibres. Great for making textiles, rope, building materials, paper, and more, these fibres, alongside flax, constitute one of humanity’s oldest and most reliable materials.

In the 1950s, synthetic materials made an appearance. This dealt a swift and fatal blow to the hemp trade, causing most producers to go out of business. It only really remained a practice in France, and some Eastern European states that were aligned with the Soviet bloc. This was greatly compounded by the UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs (1961), which defined cannabis so poorly that many countries simply outlawed hemp to solve the problem.

It is only in recent years, wherein legal THC limits were set to distinguish hemp from marijuana, that large-scale, legal hemp production has surged again in Europe. On an EU level, the THC cutoff is 0.2% THC, but countries are free to set their own limits, and many have. Alongside textiles, building materials, and foodstuffs, much of this boom comes from a growing market for high-CBD hemp seeds and other CBD-rich hemp products. Furthermore, other non-psychotropic cannabinoids, such as CBG, are being extracted from hemp to create an even greater range of products.

The History of Hemp Farming

United States

Hemp in the US has had an equally varied and turbulent past. It is known that Native Americans used hemp to make clothes and other materials, although how long they practised this is unknown.

The first English town in what is now the United States was Jamestown, and in 1616, hemp was cultivated there to make clothes, building materials, and sails. From then on, for 300 years, hemp was a very common and popular crop in the US.

However, in 1937, the US government introduced the Marihuana Tax Act, which made hemp cultivation significantly less profitable. From this point on, hemp production in the US began to drop. It picked up again a little during the Second World War, after Japanese imports ceased, but synthetic fibres meant this resurgence was short-lived.

In 1970, as part of the Controlled Substances Act, cannabis was placed under severe restrictions and deemed a dangerous drug, ultimately putting hemp in a very tenuous position as well.

Only in 2018 was hemp fully legalized under the new Farm Bill. This means that any plant containing less than 0.3% THC is legal.

How Is Hemp Used?

Hemp provides a huge amount of useful and sustainable products. As legalization has swept through Europe, Canada, and parts of the US, a resurgence in hemp-based products has occurred. From hemp clothes, to milk, to legal hashish, you can now buy hemp products in almost any kind of shop.

Cannabinoids

We at RQS think hemp is amazing all around, but we love it most for its cannabinoid content. With well over 100 cannabinoids, hemp is packed full of them, and most are hardly understood.

Of course, we don’t use hemp for its THC content, but instead for its CBD content. While this is not the only cannabinoid it’s farmed for, it is the most popular. Hemp grown for CBD shares far more characteristics with cannabis grown for THC than it does with its industrial-fibre-producing namesake. CBD plants grow quickly and produce large yields of cannabinoid-rich flowers. Hemp plants grown for fibres, on the other hand, are tall, slow growing, and produce few flowers.

Cannabinoids

Building Materials

Hemp produces versatile and tough building materials. Industrial hemp plants are grown mostly for their stalks, which produce two products: hemp bast and hemp hurd. Hemp bast are the long fibres taken from the outside of the stem. Hemp hurd are the small, tough fibres found within. Although hurd accounts for around 75% of the mass, it was traditionally considered a useless byproduct of bast. Bast was used to make paper, textiles, rope, and so on.

Recent technological advances have found ways to use hurd, and use it well. One of the most interesting uses of hemp hurd is as the major constituent of “hempcrete”. Hempcrete is made in a similar way to normal concrete, by mixing it with lime and sand and then setting it. It can then be used to make any product that could be made from concrete.

It has some interesting qualities, though. Over time, as it weathers, it actually petrifies and becomes more robust. Concrete, on the other hand, degrades. Moreover, hemp absorbs CO₂, making it a carbon-neutral product, meaning it offsets the carbon used to make it. In time, hempcrete is also recyclable and biodegradable.

Building Materials

Biofuel

Hemp extract can be used to create hemp ethanol and hemp biodiesel, two biofuels. Although the environmental credentials of biofuels are not completely known, hemp could provide a viable alternative to fossil fuels in the fight to halt climate change.

Biofuel

Plastic Composites

Hemp plants are 60–70% cellulose, and cellulose is not unlike a natural plastic. Due to the properties of cellulose, it is possible to manipulate hemp into plastic, and then manipulate that into anything we might like.

You might think that the only use for hemp plastic would be cutlery at a vegan food stand, but it is being embraced by all sorts of industries. It is even used by car manufacturers to make things such as dashboards. So hemp products aren’t for hippies only. You can cruise along while taking in the fine finish of your hemp dashboard.

While well-made hemp plastics can provide environmentally friendly alternatives to normal plastic, they only go some way to solving the issues surrounding plastics in general. Though they are biodegradable, this is a loose term, and they can still take many, many years to break down—that’s long enough to suffocate a few turtles first!

Likewise, being made from carbon-consuming plants, they will expel carbon dioxide as they degrade. But normal plastics would too, if they could biodegrade. So while hemp plastics may be a helpful step, don’t go chucking them out the window thinking they’ll be gone with the next rain!

Plastic Composites

Carbon Farming

In a serious blow to those who think all the hype around hemp is nonsense, it actually absorbs more CO₂ from the atmosphere than any other plant or organism (as far as we know). This makes hemp farms the single best, gram for gram, organic carbon sink we have.

Moreover, once carbon dioxide is absorbed into the hemp plant, it is sequestered very efficiently, meaning only combustion or complete degradation will release that CO₂ back into the atmosphere. This means that hemp products such as textiles, hempcrete, and paper are actually fantastic carbon shops too! 

Carbon Farming

Bioremediation

Hemp is renowned for being a tough plant that can grow in testing conditions. As such, it can be used to replenish poor-quality soil. By planting it in low-nutrient, high-toxin soil, the soil health can be rejuvenated. We are beginning to realise just how important the Earth’s supply of soil is, and just how much damage we have done to it. Using hemp, we may be able to undo a little of that damage.

Bioremediation

Seeds

Hemp seeds aren’t just used to grow more hemp. They are an important source of nutrients as well. Ever had hemp milk? It’s made from blending the seeds with water, essentially. Many hemp oils and food products are made from the seeds, rather than the body of the plant.

Of course, we can also use them to grow high-CBD hemp strains too.

Seeds

The Evolution of Hemp Farming

Hemp farming is now a huge industry worth billions of dollars. From large-scale farms producing hemp for construction to us at RQS producing the very finest CBD products, you can sense hemp’s influence almost everywhere.

Hemp Cultivation Quality Standards

The end product determines how hemp is cultivated. Hemp used for hurd and bast tends to be grown outdoors in large fields, beneath the sun. Tough and reliable, it’s cultivated much like any other agricultural crop, and harvested with large machinery once mature.

Hemp grown for cannabinoids, on the other hand, is grown much like cannabis. Often in greenhouses or indoors, using either artificial lighting or the sun, this hemp is grown under strictly controlled conditions. So long as industrial hemp grows and survives, its fibres can be used. Hemp grown for cannabinoids, however, needs to be grown to the best possible standard. Some sort of flower is not enough. It needs to be rich in the desired compounds.

In either field, hemp production is a highly professional and specialised practice.

Hemp Cultivation Quality Standards

What the Future Holds for Hemp

Due to the tight restrictions on legal levels of THC, many CBD and CBG-rich hemp plants lack the resin and terpenes we associate with cannabis plants. This means that products can be significantly more dull and less delicious than many smokers might be used to. Whereas cannabis plants can be terpene-rich, full of flavour, and coated in resin, CBD buds can often be dry, flavourless, and boring.

But this is changing. As the market grows, strains with the qualities of cannabis, but the cannabinoids of hemp, are becoming more and more common.

However, flowers are not the only answer. In fact, CBD and CBG are most commonly consumed as extracts, often oils. These oils can come in a simple tincture, or imbued into something else. CBD gummies are available, as are creams and lotions. In fact, walk into many health shops these days and they’ll have whole sections dedicated to CBD products.

As time progresses, we can expect these products to get better, grow in variety, and have more defined uses.

How To Source CBD-Rich Hemp Seeds

High-CBD industrial hemp seeds can be sourced from specialised seed banks and breeders, though many CBD plants in the industry are grown from clones, as this makes the cannabinoid content more reliable. Within each generation, especially from poorly stabilised plants, small changes can occur. And as THC levels need to be so exact in commercial hemp products, it’s often simpler to grow from clones.

That being said, if you want to have a go at home, you can source yourself some CBD or CBG cannabis seeds from seed banks like RQS. Although not the same as hemp seeds, you can grow plants that display even higher levels of these cannabinoids in many cases.

How To Grow CBD Hemp Seeds

Much like cannabis plants, high-CBD industrial hemp strains come in photoperiod and autoflowering varieties. This means there are options available for all types of growers.

Hemp grows much like cannabis, but if anything it's a little easier. Though if you want it to be packed full of cannabinoids, you are going to have to take some care of it. Much like weed, it loves sun and water. Being tough, it can take minimal nutrients, especially if autoflowering, as these have robust ruderalis genetics in them too.

RQS Pro: Taking Professional Breeding To The Next Level

RQS Pro is a newcomer to the professional hemp seed market, and intends to make a big splash. A branch of Royal Queen Seeds, RQS Pro is all about innovation and development, focusing on the development of reliable hemp and cannabis seeds. By researching cannabinoids and other compounds, we will identify and isolate the most relevant characteristics of cannabis. From there, we will breed and stabilise these seeds for the professional market.

Alongside researching genetics and plants, we will also be developing the latest in cutting-edge technology and growing techniques, allowing us to push the boundaries of the industry.

The future of hemp farming looks bright.

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