The ugliest of the ugly smells, to me, is one that I've encountered on 2 plants so far in my 20 year career... I refer to it as the burnt rubber smell. YUCK!!! It always makes me want to vomit in my mouth. I trashed both plants that exhibited this smell without any mercy. One was Cheese by Dinafem. The other one I don't even remember what strain it was. But strangely enough, the smell always confused my olfactory sense, because it seemed to morph into a "fried chicken" smell every once in a while, and then my brain would make it go back to smelling like burnt rubber again. Anyway, it made me stop eating fried chicken for like 10 years!!! lol
Cannabis also contains other classes of compounds that contribute to taste and smell (maybe the high too?) besides terps.
Simple esters are found in pot (these are not the same as the esterified cannabinoids you may have read about) Here is a table I lifted from Wikipedia about simple esters in general:
Above the table it says:
'Many esters have distinctive fruit-like odors, and many occur naturally in the essential oils of plants. This has also led to their commonplace use in artificial flavorings and fragrances when those odors aim to be mimicked.'
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I'm pretty sure that I have read that methyl salicylate (oil of wintergreen) has been identified in weed (maybe that's where the minty flavor and smell of that old Oaxacan you smoked back in the day came from).
Notice also that besides fruity smells simple esters can smell like pine, or like solvents or glue. Chem? Diesel? Maybe I guess, I don't know.
There are other types of compounds in pot that smell and taste too, but I have to go now. Maybe you can look into it for now, and later I will check in to add more.
Would'nt it be good if someone made like some sort of scratch and sniff type booklet for all the different terpene's that are known and what they're associated with, for example you could have a little square of limonene that when you scratch it smells like lemons and have written underneath a list of things that contain that terpene.
Everybody interprets smells differently and that type of thing could help connoisseurs hone their noses.
How many times have you had bud that smells wonderful but cant quite put your finger on what it smells like?
The other day i had a bud that to me smelt exactly like ripe mango but my girlfriend said carrots lol wtf!?
That would be great! Although rather impossible... but the major ones should be feasible. Just wonder who will spend the money for the development.Would'nt it be good if someone made like some sort of scratch and sniff type booklet for all the different terpene's...
I don't get it... do you mean it's something also found in hops like humulene and its epoxides?typical skunk smell(fresh/sweet body odor) it's from the hops family.
I was wondering what might cause the fuel, diesel, rotten meat & dead skunk smells and maybe also other nasty odours... couldn't find anything and I know of no terpene with such kind of ugly smell.
I'd be grateful if anyone could shed some light on that.
Right now, my Ciskeis smell like the Cali-O from last year did: like overripe, rotten orange peel with hints of rancid motor oil and maybe something like turpentine. I suppose the orange and turpentine comes from racemic limonene. I don't like it that much though... Unfortunately, I never paid any attention on whether cannabis synthesises (D)-(+), (S)-(-), or racemic limonene. Anyone any idea?
Never had a chem, diesel, trainwreck, OG kush, GSC, GG#4, or whatever hyped 'modern' US strain. On one hand I'd like to try them (just to be en vogue LoL) but on the other... smoking fuel? Bork!actually its quite nice guess you haven't had the pleasure of skunk va chem 91 !
@Hydrosun: Do you propose that I simply get reincarnated as a carrion fly? You're a funny guy . But me being a dung-fly wouldn't stop my wondering 'bout the responsible chemicals causing the siren-like attraction to the sticky deathtrap .
But you're at least in part right with your reasoning about the sense behind the different scent profiles. But that's true for almost all plants producing essential oils .
Never had a chem, diesel, trainwreck or whatever hyped US strain. Just European Skunk and SuperSkunk; the ones prior 2000 were too stinky for me (and a dead giveaway), the one I grew last year was very fruity (really nice but not Skunk-like at all).
I think we could learn quite a bit from aroma therapy . Sure, many terpenes also have 'conventional medicine effects' but these are seldom understood....
I am very interested in the subject especially in correlation to how those flavors / smells relate to the canabinoid make up of the essential oil. Which profiles work best for which people? And do the profiles they prefer correlate to aliments they are treating with the essential oil?
On a personal note I have had the pleasure to enjoy hundreds of different amazing strains of cannabis flowers (the west coast of the USA is an amazing place). The best of the best can have any type of smell you could imagine.