Holeshot51
Well-known member
I prefer the Pakistani Citral kushes . Amazing terps
If you’re talking about Dutch Passion’s Mazar then it’s actually an Afghan-Skunk, not a pure Affie.The Mazar is also good. Nice kief hash
Don't forget the Derg Corra Helmand Afghani offering.
I mean the dude that made these collection trips in Afghanistan is on Instagram and is growing and breeding also looking for new strains but I'm not sure how he's selling them I do know someone tried to make a fake scam account mimicking this guy and they robbed some people ...... that made indian landrace exchange to stop dealing with him on top of the main drama about a deal that went sour between irrazin ig (indian-landrace-exchange)and afghan landrace seeds on Instagram . According to afghan landrace seeds the guys from indian landrace exchange stole his genetics they sold they only bought the seeds for the book and promised to come back for more to sell retail packs but they just made a seed increase on their own its just a bunch of drama
Ngakpa, if I re-phrase it, instead of highland vs lowland, in Afghanistan, is there any distinction between southern vs northern afghani plants or is it all pretty scattered?
Deep Chunk is a classic affie from the 80s... love it or hate it but in my opinion is still one of the best representations of the old hashplant cultivars.
Mazari from Real Seed is legit too, more modern though. They used to have Shebergan too. GN Collection used to have another Mazari cultivar but I've seen mixed reviews.
Unfortunately the availability of hashplant landraces is very limited nowadays so there isn't much to choose from.
What’s the smells likeLandrace Afghani
Landrace Afghani
I was gifted 38 seeds sourced direct from Afghanistan, of those seeds 37 were very similar but 1 grew with single blade leaf and was almost runt like for the first month of growing. She ended up being possibly the greatest find I've had in any seeds let alone landrace. Im currently testing this cut crossed with my ChemValley Cooks (Forum GSC x SFV OG/ChemD BX).
There's a big difference between the north of the country where there wasn't as much of a disruption in cultivation in the south. Many southern growers lost their strains during the wars and had to import new stock from the north. The southern strains are often a hybrid between the southern local feral narrow leaf landrace types and the more cultivated selected heirloom types from the north. The feral types acclimatize the select strains from the north to the local conditions and shorten flowering time in the highland. Kandahar and Balkh are more closely connected I'd thought, I've found out that many farmers have fields in both southern and northern Afghanistan. There's a trade in both seeds and hashish between the two regions.Granted, the lowest elevation in Afghanistan is about 2,000 ft (is SW Afghanistan) which is pretty much like California, then it can go all the way up to near-himalayan elevation. So, there is a distinction in-country between highland and lowland, though their lowland is nowhere near sea level elevations.
“Kandahar and Balkh are more closely connected I'd thought, I've found out that many farmers have fields in both southern and northern Afghanistan.”
Seems there are (or were, anyway) cross-border connections between Mazar-i-Sharif and Tirah Valley, Pakistan as well; I’m told that Mazar seeds made their way to Tirah around 1970 and were widely introduced at that time. Interestingly most of the Tirah plants I grew last year seemed to have more in common structurally with Himalayan types than Northern Afghan types, i.e. super tall with long internodes - although I understand Mazar plants can be monsters too.