preparedfarmer
Active member
Passionfruit terps for days… 17 week flower huge yielding. Line is from Mt. Kirivong and is an ancestral line that is safely guarded by locals. Named for its radioactive “lime” green color.
She’ll be ready to smoke in 2 weeks!Beautiful! Would love to know how it smokes.
Pure passionfruitBeautiful flowers. How is the the smells?
cheers
Yes we have many Cambodian lines still to pop. Lyric, Honey, Hachs Gift, Cambodian Red, Puk Puk, Chimkuri Roi…. All from Cambodian based breeder monkeypuzzlegenetics. We are currently holding 2 Cambodian mothers from this Mt. Kirivong Lime line. I wish it were easier to share videos here. Anyway one of them is extremely LOUD pure passionfruit and the other one is more muted passionfruit with an added sawdust/pencil shaving/ raw wood type smell accompanying it. I can hardly wait to smoke them we have to let them cure perfectly first though we will be increasing all of these respective lines with permission from the breeder and will be sharing the surplus back with him as it is quite hard for him to do it himself currently and also lacks the stock that we hold. These lines are precious genetic treasures that have features modern varieties have lost completely. I will share more photos of the ongoing process.I keep saying. Despite all the talk of watered down strains, extinction of landraces, predominance of 'western' 'bad' genetics. This is a golden age of landrace availability. If you use the internet, have the right 'tools'. You can find people willing and able to spread wonderful landrace types from the places they're still grown. Especially Cambodian types, it's a 'golden age' of real Cambodian landrace strains. May not be able to find your favorite smoke from the '70s, Thai sticks and such. But Cambodian genetics...
There's people, not just ex-pats but Cambodians. With seeds available of the real deal stuff. @preparedfarmer looks great, the proof's in the pudding, kool-aid or whatever we're eating and drinking these days. Nice work. I love the SE Asian Passionfruit type stuff. It's fantastic. There's great work right now, this type of stuff makes great hybrids that make it possible to grow the stuff indoors and out at temperate latitudes. Also people preserving the lines 100%. It's wonderful to see and taste and enjoy.
All things considered I think where we stand currently this is one of the best times ever to be alive and collecting cannabis. Sure we’ve lost many wonderful things but the ingredients are still there waiting to be discovered for new gems. Cannabis is so wonderful in this way.I keep saying. Despite all the talk of watered down strains, extinction of landraces, predominance of 'western' 'bad' genetics. This is a golden age of landrace availability. If you use the internet, have the right 'tools'. You can find people willing and able to spread wonderful landrace types from the places they're still grown. Especially Cambodian types, it's a 'golden age' of real Cambodian landrace strains. May not be able to find your favorite smoke from the '70s, Thai sticks and such. But Cambodian genetics...
There's people, not just ex-pats but Cambodians. With seeds available of the real deal stuff. @preparedfarmer looks great, the proof's in the pudding, kool-aid or whatever we're eating and drinking these days. Nice work. I love the SE Asian Passionfruit type stuff. It's fantastic. There's great work right now, this type of stuff makes great hybrids that make it possible to grow the stuff indoors and out at temperate latitudes. Also people preserving the lines 100%. It's wonderful to see and taste and enjoy.
I keep saying. Despite all the talk of watered down strains, extinction of landraces, predominance of 'western' 'bad' genetics. This is a golden age of landrace availability. If you use the internet, have the right 'tools'. You can find people willing and able to spread wonderful landrace types from the places they're still grown. Especially Cambodian types, it's a 'golden age' of real Cambodian landrace strains. May not be able to find your favorite smoke from the '70s, Thai sticks and such. But Cambodian genetics...
There's people, not just ex-pats but Cambodians. With seeds available of the real deal stuff. @preparedfarmer looks great, the proof's in the pudding, kool-aid or whatever we're eating and drinking these days. Nice work. I love the SE Asian Passionfruit type stuff. It's fantastic. There's great work right now, this type of stuff makes great hybrids that make it possible to grow the stuff indoors and out at temperate latitudes. Also people preserving the lines 100%. It's wonderful to see and taste and enjoy.
Can you dm me locations in Cambodia where do you get landraceYes we have many Cambodian lines still to pop. Lyric, Honey, Hachs Gift, Cambodian Red, Puk Puk, Chimkuri Roi…. All from Cambodian based breeder monkeypuzzlegenetics. We are currently holding 2 Cambodian mothers from this Mt. Kirivong Lime line. I wish it were easier to share videos here. Anyway one of them is extremely LOUD pure passionfruit and the other one is more muted passionfruit with an added sawdust/pencil shaving/ raw wood type smell accompanying it. I can hardly wait to smoke them we have to let them cure perfectly first though we will be increasing all of these respective lines with permission from the breeder and will be sharing the surplus back with him as it is quite hard for him to do it himself currently and also lacks the stock that we hold. These lines are precious genetic treasures that have features modern varieties have lost completely. I will share more photos of the ongoing process.
Very nice, and it reminds me of Laotian Landrace, the buds have a similar structure but the Lao is supposed to finish in 13 weeks.Passionfruit terps for days… 17 week flower huge yielding. Line is from Mt. Kirivong and is an ancestral line that is safely guarded by locals. Named for its radioactive “lime” green color.
That's interesting! Laotian Landrace sounds like a unique strain, especially with that longer finish time. It must be exciting to see how different genetics compare—I'd love to hear more about your experience with it!Very nice, and it reminds me of Laotian Landrace, the buds have a similar structure but the Lao is supposed to finish in 13 weeks.
Most definitely, it's my first time running this one, she's approaching 21 days since first pistils, and seems to be doing well so far. Will post a pic or 2 in the next few days, meanwhile you can check out my journal (Laos Landrace / Mass Medical Seeds) if interested. I'm especially excited about this one, as have read some interesting smoke-reports on it, citing it as a unique Sativa effect with unusual clarity and anti-depressive qualities. Can't wait to finally try her after a good cure. She was around 15'' tall at the onset of flowering, and I've topped her and spread out the main 6- branches so she is wider than she is tall these days, while she counts her days in a greenhouse-type environment.That's interesting! Laotian Landrace sounds like a unique strain, especially with that longer finish time. It must be exciting to see how different genetics compare—I'd love to hear more about your experience with it!