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Landrace indicas

zamalito

Guest
Veteran
If any of you guys are interested in the mixing of sativa and indica or the history of these gene pools I cannot recommend hashish! By rc clark enough. Its a great book with tons of info on landrace hashplants and their history.

I have doubts about the leb producing hash that's real similar in anything other than the high especially if you grow them indoors. Resin from indoor plants is extremely different from that of outdoor. Indoor plants tend to be more sticky with larger gland heads although the cannabinoid levels in the smaller heads tend to be the same despite having a smaller mass meaning they're more potent gram for gram. However outdoor plants have more dust contamination. So it probably won't be the same color (I've heard highland lebanon has red soil along with more mature plants makes the hash red as opposed to the less mature plants and lighter soild of the lowland blonde) and probably has lower cbd levels overall making the high slightly different but its hard to say
 

zamalito

Guest
Veteran
I'm glad to see tashkenti written correctly. It was always a pet peeve when I see taskenti written (maybe spanish spelling). Tashkenti isn't a pure landrace because of hybridization with northern lights (big dissapointment) but it is an excellent ibl.
 

Raco

secretion engineer
Moderator
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Hi folks,
Thought you might want to check this out:
Nube Roja (Red Cloud) bred in my region...Lebanese/Paki
There are more strains....:D
 
G

Guest

With the Tashkenti being a hybrid of Uzbekistani and NL perhps the Uzbekistani is a better bet. It's less than a third of the price and maybe the same Uzbeki used to breed Tashkenti.

That Red Cloud looks awesome, is it available commercially?
 
hey are all ndicas I think, although the Nepali and Pakistani have very thin leaves, so may be classed as sativas. In my mind, it is fairly pointless debating whether strains from the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent and Central Asia are indica or sativa as there are so many different strains in this area, hey will all be pretty fast flowering but I don't think you'll see any ruderalis traits in any of them, ruderalis is just indicas that have adapted to a northely climate and a very short growing season.

I have a ruderalis type landrace from Moravia (Czech Republic), I'm not sure if it really classes as a ruderalis as it is more potent than Russian ruderalis and I haven't seen any signs of autoflowering, they finish in late August outdoors, going to test a few indoors shortly.


Greetings, this is an older post, but I wanted to ask a question about your Czech Ruderalis; does it have wide leaves? Is there more than one variety of Ruderalis there? I'm asking because I have a photo of a plant which the owner says is a Czech Rudy from Moravia, can you please enlighten me more?
 

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Storm Shadow

Well-known member
Veteran
I love seed is one of Med mans multiple accounts...

Dude is desperate to score something exotic of the Landrace variety
 
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