I'm not disputing who bred what where. I'm just theorising that good cannabis originated from long lines of genetics that have been lovingly selected for centuries, maybe longer. The breeders in the US didn't wave a wand and these heirloom strains appeared from 2 swag parents. They simply benefited from other people's work as have others today from the US breeders work. And so it goes.
Mate I never mentioned Dutch strains at all. I give up.
It is like Game of Thrones. Is is a British show? An American show? Something else? As long as it is good, who cares.Why quibble between Netherlands and USA? Who cares. I wish I was in Holland right now (instead of Communist Republic of Massachusetts), what a beautiful country with cool people.
Holland’s attitude at the time allowed proper breeding to be done with USA sourced genetic material so let’s give them credit for selections made with 10-50,000 specimen count fields.
This allowed countless growers to find their own keepers and advance the lines even further via seed purchases
Imagine what we could accomplish together in a legal environment.
I’m excited about the possibilities
Most of the popular and famous strains in the 90s came from Amsterdam and just got called other names like Kush, Bubba Kush, Thunder F@ck, when they hit the illegal markets.
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Why quibble between Netherlands and USA?:
Europeans all have massive inferiority complexes with respect to America because of the course of history over the past 150 years and because their continent has become little more than a Europe themed amusement park for American tourists. Irrational hated from their quarter is par for the course as a result.
Part of it is the goal of the breeding over the last 30 years. Strains have been bred for commercial growers who want customers to buy their product. The emphasis has been on bag appeal, yield and ease of growing indoors. The focus has been on breeding for attractive nuggets that smell and taste good. The nature and quality of the high have taken a back seat. Anyone who grew old sativas knows that modern sativas have had most of the sativa bred out of them because the market doesn't want stringy buds with woody flavors, and growers don't want a three month flower time. Over time we have narrowed the phenotypic bandwidth of cannabis.
Younger smokers in legal states seem to judge cannabis solely by flavor and aroma because the product in the market all tends to have the same generic, indica leaning, hybrid high, even if we give it different labels.
The end result is that we are breeding strains to be more and more like the beefsteak tomato, which checks all the boxes in terms of marketing and grower profit but is a less desirable for the end user than the full palette of heirlooms.
G `day Folks
Take into account , this is the primo of the 1970s era ...
You had good contacts if you were smoking this stuff .
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Thanks for sharin
EB .
skunk
northern lights
haze
are dutch. most of the building blocks of cannabis today were also bred by the dutch. blueberry being the exception.