What's new

Tom Hill Haze

Farmer John

Still alive.
Veteran
20240924_214250.jpg
This pic is magic and I have always wondered what the hell that plant is.
 

Old Uncle Ben

Well-known member

Yep, that's the classic.

Saw a video interview with him. He seems to be a smart, well grounded person steeped in botany and no bullshit. Have you seen Jorge's online book! Fuckin' WOW! I often wondered how they measure THC and such. That's just one fine chapter where he explains it so well and so thoroughly.

Nice to help too. BTW, I just made a batch of Griffin's Spin-Out paint this weekend. Used 7 oz Kocide 3000 FP (copper hydroxide) to a qt. of latex paint. Should be fun!

1727203312957.png


 

Sub24ox7

Well-known member
View attachment 19072516 One leaf from my very first plant that I grew and flowered from start to finish, a Shiva Shanti bagseed. Almost 25 years ago. It's a miracle the book is still in (almost) one piece. But that's how I started before diving into internet. Reading a shitload of books and sending cash to seedbanks in Netherlands to buy my first "real" seeds and so on.

This is from my first grow in 1995 from Mexican bagseed. Was good smoke too.

IMG_5934.jpeg


Been sitting in this dictionary for a long time lol.
 

CharlesU Farley

Well-known member
The problem with Mex from the old days and how it got its bad reputation as "schwag" from snooty elitist yankees who got old cut brickweed is that it was, yes, shit weed....... not properly cured and handled by the mexicans from the growers and everyone in between (very seedy, dried in the sun and pressed into bricks with manually operated hydraulic presses) and by the time it reached NY
1000012325.jpg


This is probably the only Mexican most people have ever seen/smoked. :ROFLMAO:
 

Wolverine97

Well-known member
Veteran
View attachment 19072524

This is probably the only Mexican most people have ever seen/smoked. :ROFLMAO:
The bricks we used to get were usually pretty good quality. Compressed, and usually fairly seeded, but ugly bricks like this one, full of loose seeds and sticks were rare in my circle. Maybe once or twice a year we'd get some Jamaican tossed our way, the plug said he reserved that for his best customers. It was a rare treat, and usually hoarded by me!

The Jamaican was always in smaller bricks, super light green with thick vibrant orange hairs.
 

CharlesU Farley

Well-known member
The Jamaican was always in smaller bricks, super light green with thick vibrant orange hairs.
In Miami in the late '60s - early '70s, the Jamaican I used to get was sinse, developed by the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church and was never bricked... although I knew people who bricked it up before it went up to Bensonhurst and Bayside. ;)

Now the Columbian that came in through Haulover Cut wasn't bricked, it was fucking bailed. :ROFLMAO:
 

Wolverine97

Well-known member
Veteran
In Miami in the late '60s - early '70s, the Jamaican I used to get was sinse, developed by the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church and was never bricked... although I knew people who bricked it up before it went up to Bensonhurst and Bayside. ;)

Now the Columbian that came in through Haulover Cut wasn't bricked, it was fucking bailed. :ROFLMAO:
Yeah I don't know about Colombian, before my time... I'm in Michigan, so I'm sure it was bricked for transport. It was never nearly as compressed as the usual Mexi stuff. Not loose, but not pressed completely flat either. I'm trying to remember if there were seeds... and I just can't recall.
 

GrandpaMillenial

Well-known member
These millennial fucks, with their easy, legal seed drops where they get a fucking FedEx tracking number and bitch and complain because they're not there in 48 hours, would just _never_ understand the process we went through. :ROFLMAO:

Nah, we ordered from marc emery and got the cardboard with the qtips in there and each strain written on the corrugation.

I actually was first taught to grow by a vietnam vet, he talked about 2 things. Growing pot and jumpin outta planes in the army.

Both of which, I ended up doing a lot of. Plenty of us, including yours truly, have been arrested for… as the state of Michigan calls is… Marihuana
 

GrandpaMillenial

Well-known member
aaa
Yeah I don't know about Colombian, before my time... I'm in Michigan, so I'm sure it was bricked for transport. It was never nearly as compressed as the usual Mexi stuff. Not loose, but not pressed completely flat either. I'm trying to remember if there were seeds... and I just can't recall.

I seen both in from Detroit. mainly what you describe sorta decently manicured then pressed. that was our bread and butter, occasionally “ghans” would come through.

I only seen that snarfy brick once, i paid like $1200 for a lbs and it was difficult to recoup my investment.

our supply supposedly came through some of the automotive company’s supply lines. lotsa parts made in mexico. apparently the nasty brick came through some water beds being shipped from mexico to Detroit.

some of the nicer stuff like christmas buds may have been kentucky grown, again shipped via automotive company supply lines
 

led05

Chasing The Present
These millennial fucks, with their easy, legal seed drops where they get a fucking FedEx tracking number and bitch and complain because they're not there in 48 hours, would just _never_ understand the process we went through. :ROFLMAO:
I’m not too old like some you dinosaurs :p but did first order seeds in the 90’s and the process definitely took months; I got an international bank money order iirc (trying to figure out exact amount needed was a trip), but eventually @ 7 weeks later some seeds showed up to our address; addressed for someone whom used to live there…

Oddly I kinda miss all that hoopla & illegality back in the day, made you appreciate shit a hell of a lot more I recon
 

@hempy

The Haze Whisperer
Oddly I kinda miss all that hoopla & illegality back in the day, made you appreciate shit a hell of a lot more I recon
A lot of us still live in that reality, sadly, and worse they have made it almost impossible to safely receive seed through the post from overseas by introducing new Teach that seeks seed out.

I still remember the days pre Holland seed banks and in all honesty I wish I could go back to those days.
 
Top