News Release  
Berthoud, Colorado USA 
 
By Meredith Hutmacher 
The Surveyor - reprinted 2009  
 
 
 
In the future, it is possible that residents  
of Berthoud might receive a prescription for  
a medication that contains disease-fighting  
ingredients that were made possible because of  
technological advances made by AgriHouse of  
Berthoud.  
 
AgriHouse, a biotechnology company whose  
products President and founder Richard Stoner believes  
are poised to revolutionize the way pharmaceutical  
companies create drugs, is housed in a small  
non-descript building on the corner of Welch   
and Third Street.  
 
   
Maturing plants grown in a pesticide free environment
 
 
Large agricultural companies are currently  
researching the potential to use current  
crops as biological factories that, in the future,  
will provide natural, phytochemicals and  
phytopharmaceuticals that could potentially be  
used to prevent cancer and other diseases. 
 
This type of plant development is referred to as  
biofarming. 
 
   
Richard Stoner, AgriHouse founder & President, shown  
with NASA space shuttle test fixture and BEYOND product 
 
Today, Stoner quotes business is on the  
cutting-edge  of providing the technology  
required for biofarming.  
 
"In a recent speech, to the United States  
Department  of Agriculture, the President of  
Kraft foods said  that growers need a controlled  
environment for the  biofarming of phytopharmaceuticals",  
Stoner said.  
 
Stoner explained that it is important to isolate  
crops that are being genetically modified for  
biofarming, Pollen from corn can travel 100 miles  
in the wind. He also said that if biofarming is  
to become economically feasible, it is necessary to  
be able to produce multiple crop rotations. He said  
this is easier to accomplish in a controlled  
environment.  
 
"This is why we are a shining star", said Stoner  
emphatically. The current line of products created  
by AgriHouse has begun to attract attention from  
biofarming industry leaders. AgriHouse licensed  
its technology to two large companies this year.  
 
"We have the technology to provide containment,   
and control of pollen and effluence out of building",  
said Stoner. 
 
"This has been a long-time coming", stated Stoner.  
 
The this that Stoner refers to is the culmination  
of more than 18 years of work during which he has  
dedicated his energy toward finding better ways to  
grow vegetables and plants.  
 
Stoner's odyssey began in the late 80's  
when he began using a method known as aeroponics  
to grow herbs in a greenhouse. Stoner said he was  
one of the only people in the country growing plants  
using the aeroponic technique at the time.  
 
In aeroponics, plant matter is literally grown while  
suspended in air. In Stoner's method a seed or  
a seedling is placed in a piece of micro-fiber, he devoloped.  
It is placed in small, round hole in a rigid plastic incubator  
that has numerous holes. As the plant grows, its roots  
are kept moist by a light and regular misting. Full-spectrum  
light array suspended above the plants provides the right  
photosynthetic energy. A light special filter prevents insects  
from eating the plants. Stoner developed the light array under 
a NASA R&D grant. 
 
Stoner used this method to provide fresh herbs to  
area grocery stores.  
 
   
Stoner shows plants incubated in less than 10 days 
 
In 1992 Stoner received consulting contracts from  
the timber industry and a Boulder-based pharmaceutical  
company. The consulting contracts launched Stoner,  
literally as it turns out, on an odyssey to discover  
a natural way to enhance and trigger the defense  
mechanism of plants.   
 
Along the way Stoner worked with researchers at  
Colorado State University to develop an all natural,  
organically derived, disease control method  
known as ODC - 'organic disease control'.  
The product is known as a biocontrol because it  
works with the plant immune system to enhance growth.  
The product also has been effective  in preventing  
problems with fungus and insects, according to product  
information available on the company website.  
 
Information about this research piqued the interest  
of NASA scientists, and Stoner's company, Aeroponics  
International, was asked to assist NASA with an experiment  
that was  carried onboard the Russian space station MIR  
in 1997.  
 
NASA was interested in using Aeroponics International 
expertise with aeroponic growing because of the  
low-water requirements of the growing method.  
Using aeroponics to create plant experiments helped  
NASA eliminating the need to carry water, which helped  
to reduce payload weight. NASA also has strict regulations  
about the use of pesticides on board the space  
station, so they were equally interested in trying  
Aeroponics International ODC product, 
known as Beyond All Natural Plant Amendment.  
 
Adzuki beans coated with Beyond, were taken  
aboard the MIR. At the same time, a similar  
experiment using Beyond was conducted at a NASA laboratory  
in Cape Canaveral, Florida.  According to a NASA   
press release (available on the AgriHouse website),  
the beans on MIR sprouted successfully, as did  
those tested on Earth.~ Experiment literature states  
that the seedlings on the space station grew faster  
than the ones grown in the  laboratory in Florida.  
 
After the success and notoriety of the MIR space station  
experiments,  the company applied for a NASA Small  
Business Initiative  Research grant designated for developing  
High Performance Foods for Space and Terrestrials.   
 
In 1992 Aeroponics changed its name to  
AgriHouse to incorporate its new Beyond All Natural Plant  
Amendment product, and shift focus from its aeroponic  
growing systems.  
 
Beyond underwent numerous years of testing at  
major universities according to Stoner. It was  
sold on the home shopping network after the MIR  
space station success, and over 1,000 shoppers  
purchased the product at 6 a.m. Although that wasn't  
enough to ensure success at the Home Shopping  
Network, it did gain the product popular support 
from gardeners in various states.  
 
Company executives realized that their expertise  
with aeroponic growing using their patented Beyond  
product, opened the door for them as a provider  
of future technology in biofarming.  
 
Biofarming has the potential to increase food  
production for the entire planet, as well as  
provide advancements in medicine according  
to AgriHouse board member, Dr. Larry Forest of Longmont.  
 
In May of 2005, Stoner accomplished a major goal in  
the life of his company when he was  able to move his  
research and development as well  as manufacturing  
from a building on his property  south of Berthoud, to a  
the corner of Welch and Third Street.  
 
Another major milestone was achieved recently,  
when on August 4, 2005, Beyond was granted a Colorado  
Department of Agriculture certification as an all-natural  
plant amendment for food crops. 
 
According to Stoner, the entire venture has been a  
team effort. "From Dr. Larry Forest, who was my first investor,  
to CSU researchers, and the cooperatives with NASA   
it has been a group effort", said Stoner. 
 
Stoner continued, "It is one thing to come up with a  
science and technology discovery, but it is another  
coming up with product marketing. There are 30,000  
new products created every year, and most target  
buyers will never see the products." He explained that  
most small businesses fail their first year.  
 
"It is hard to gain national prominence. It  
requires a big time commitment and capital to  
have the staying power. The ability to endure while  
waiting to gain a foothold has allowed AgriHouse  
the opportunity to participate in to the future  
of biofarming", Stoner concluded.  
 
Stoner said that it was fortunate to be  
able to work with NASA, "NASA pumped a lot  
of money into the company they have  
been our principal investigator. It took an  
incredible amount of work and effort  
to gain respect for AgriHouse." 
 
"We have a tiger by the tail, he said in  
describing the potential for his company.  
Stoner, who said that he has enjoyed the  
entire venture stated, The whole thing is a  
heck of a lot of fun  (in part) because of the  
people we have met  in agricultural, in space  
science it is the  people who have made this  
business enjoyable."  
 
"I believe we have the best kept secret in  
agriculture", Stoner said. 
 
How often can a weekend gardener say he or  
she is using a product that was tested in space? 
 
Aeroponics growing supplies and the patented  
Beyond product are available on the company  
website at www.agrihouse.com 
 
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