What's new

🇵🇦 Panama Red 🔴 High Times 1978

Lugo

Well-known member
Veteran
Ran across these beautiful images. I'm so going to make that chicken foot bowl!

Now what I remember personally was that the flowers had the longest red hairs I had and have ever seen. Like little red guitar strings probably owing to a somewhat rocky terroir. I was too young to even contemplate flavor/scent but I do remember it was spicy/salty and would make you drool and the high was (as cliché as it sounds) groovy 😆

This is Panama Red 🔴
spark 💥 one up for carépiña 🍍!!!
 

Attachments

  • FB_IMG_1678316039399.jpg
    FB_IMG_1678316039399.jpg
    68.7 KB · Views: 163
  • FB_IMG_1678316035841.jpg
    FB_IMG_1678316035841.jpg
    84.1 KB · Views: 164
  • FB_IMG_1678316032562.jpg
    FB_IMG_1678316032562.jpg
    79.6 KB · Views: 166
  • FB_IMG_1678316029266.jpg
    FB_IMG_1678316029266.jpg
    79 KB · Views: 164
  • Screenshot_20230308-175425_Facebook.jpg
    Screenshot_20230308-175425_Facebook.jpg
    173 KB · Views: 154

Creeperpark

Well-known member
Mentor
Veteran
I remember seeing that chicken foot in high times. I can't remember my grandkid's birthdays but I remember seeing that chicken foot pipe. When that mag came out you could get 10 years in prison for an oz of weed. Being a smuggler back then was very dangerous. Just getting caught with a High Times magazine could cause a lot of problems. Seeing Panama photos made everybody months water. Thanks for the thread.
 

Lugo

Well-known member
Veteran
I remember seeing that chicken foot in high times. I can't remember my grandkid's birthdays but I remember seeing that chicken foot pipe. When that mag came out you could get 10 years in prison for an oz of weed. Being a smuggler back then was very dangerous. Just getting caught with a High Times magazine could cause a lot of problems. Seeing Panama photos made everybody months water. Thanks for the thread.
It gets better, recently found a so/so documentary that has somewhat recent color photos of the original plant itself which was found in a very degenerated, scraggly state.
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_20230308-175119_YouTube.jpg
    Screenshot_20230308-175119_YouTube.jpg
    100.5 KB · Views: 89

Lugo

Well-known member
Veteran
Im not sure if most people are aware that Panama was once part of Colombia.

I am of the opinion that Panama Red is really Punto Rojo in a different, rockier, saltier coastal terróir. This can be confirmed by historical and contemporary descriptions of Panama Red describing it as musky, peppery, spicy. It is not a far-fetched concept but i'm sure some folks (especially breeders and seed makers of said line) would disagree.
 

Attachments

  • FB_IMG_1678313140145.jpg
    FB_IMG_1678313140145.jpg
    112 KB · Views: 95
  • FB_IMG_1678313136816.jpg
    FB_IMG_1678313136816.jpg
    52.5 KB · Views: 99
  • FB_IMG_1678313133497.jpg
    FB_IMG_1678313133497.jpg
    23.2 KB · Views: 97
Ran across these beautiful images. I'm so going to make that chicken foot bowl!

Now what I remember personally was that the flowers had the longest red hairs I had and have ever seen. Like little red guitar strings probably owing to a somewhat rocky terroir. I was too young to even contemplate flavor/scent but I do remember it was spicy/salty and would make you drool and the high was (as cliché as it sounds) groovy 😆

This is Panama Red 🔴
spark 💥 one up for carépiña 🍍!!!
I have real 70s panama red seeds collected by me while stationed in panama. One of our co-op members will be doing a preservation open pollination of her this summer - we are not breeders - we simply do open pollinations as preservation of some old lines that we would like to pass on to the community. Will post when they are ready as to share - veterans take top priority followed by legit preservationist - that’s neither here nor there as the beans won’t be ready for a bit.
 
Im not sure if most people are aware that Panama was once part of Colombia.

I am of the opinion that Panama Red is really Punto Rojo in a different, rockier, saltier coastal terróir. This can be confirmed by historical and contemporary descriptions of Panama Red describing it as musky, peppery, spicy. It is not a far-fetched concept but i'm sure some folks (especially breeders and seed makers of said line) would disagree.
I’m not a breeder however I happen to hold really old lines of both - there are differences - could the differences be Pheno related I do not know - I’m not a breeder - due to proximity of the two countries it is highly feasible that the same strain evolved differently due to some environmental influences such as soil differences etc
 
Top