• A friendly and supportive community, register today. Our forums use a separate account system.

Flower The Building Blocks of your Medicine. Landraces, Terpenes and Compounds

I thought Id try hindu kush after seeing this video. Id love for some growers to use the moroccan landrace. They export tonnes legally so im not sure what market they are going to. I normally hate Sativas but the true moroccan thats not mixed with the paki/afghan plants is incredible.
 
Got a low THC master kush coming soon on my script but have wanted to sample the Hindu Kush for some time now myself.
 
Got a low THC master kush coming soon on my script but have wanted to sample the Hindu Kush for some time now myself.

Do you find the levels make much of a difference in strength? I think the highest Ive had was chemango kush amd I didnt really notice any difference to be honest. I have 2 lower THC strains coming toookoshe sherbert at 19% and hindu kush.
 
Do you find the levels make much of a difference in strength? I think the highest Ive had was chemango kush amd I didnt really notice any difference to be honest. I have 2 lower THC strains coming toookoshe sherbert at 19% and hindu kush.
More the quality of how it's grown but the one I've got on order is sometimes available at T25 I think where as mine will be T18 even though the same strain and Hindu Kush I imagine was never high THC in the first place on todays scale .
I prefer probably 19-26% THC or more importantly what the strain is meant to be.
As you say about Chemango Kush ,I've had this and didn't rate it as good as lower THC strains .
 
Patient/Youtuber UK Medical Cannabis Reviews FOR THE BUCK has a look through Cannabis literature and pays tribute to the legends of the history of our plant and their contributions to driving cannabis knowledge on!👏

Like and Subscribe.
 
Patient/Youtuber A Guy Called Sam takes a look at terpenes and cannabinoids and temperatures.

Please like and subscribe, help support patient videos on YouTube.
 
I have read a few books but would like the strain encyclopedias

There's more than seeed catalogues on there, strains by geography a-z of strains at a point in time with some pictures. The great book of hashish, ed rosenthals book of buds (if you've got higher then think of this as higher 30 years earlier....).

If you haven't got or seen higher then I ca recommend it, some great photgraphy and little anecdotes.

Screenshot 2025-04-12 at 09.43.29.png

I like books, physical copies too, if anyone (I'm lookig at you @GrownHealth) likes what I can best describe as post modern psychedelic fiction set in Manchester then I heartedly recommend you read some Jeff Noon, Vurt is a great place to start.

Big fan of Terry Pratchett (RIP :( ) too, got pretty much all the discworld novels (I think all, but some are the hardback versions some paperback) and half the kids books and co-authored stuff he did.
 
Last edited:
Landrace Bureau

In the Shen Nung's era: 2800 BCE. In Neolithic China, amid the Yellow River's fertile cradle, cannabis wasn't just a medicine but regarded as one of the "Five Sacred Grains" (alongside rice, barley, wheat, millet), its seeds fueled diets, while fibers wove ropes, nets, and early paper, powering agriculture and trade. Shamanically, its "ghost-seeing" effects aided rituals, connecting mortals to ancestors to spirits in a time of tribal mysticism.

Let us time travel to ancient China where the legendary Emperor Shen Nung wore simple robes, was regarded as a divine farmer-wanders misty fields, tasting hundreds of herbs to unlock nature's secrets. As the "Father of Agriculture," he's said to have sampled everything from ginseng to poison, compiling knowledge that would echo through millennia.

The Shen Nong Ben Cao Jing (Divine Farmer's Classic of Materia Medica), is the cornerstone of Chinese herbalism. Though compiled in the 1st-2nd century AD from oral traditions attributed to Shen Nung, this text categorizes 365 medicaments into three classes - superior (immortality elixirs), medium (tonics), and inferior (symptom-treaters). Cannabis earns a spot in the superior class as one of the “Supreme Elixirs of Immortality," promising longevity, vitality, and harmony with the Tao.

The female flowers (mafen or mabo) are "acrid and balanced," used for “female disorders, gout, rheumatism, malaria, beri-beri, absent-mindedness," and even to "disperse pus, break accumulations, and relieve impediment." Seeds (huomaren) act as a laxative and tonic for the viscera, nourishing chi and easing constipation. But beware overuse— it could make one "see ghosts and run madly," a caution to its psychoactive resin and THC.

Did you know that research finds that Cannabis was first domesticated 12,000 years ago in China - but really how far does it go?Civilizations has been cultivating cannabis since before the last ice age but how far back in time does the earliest use or cultivation go ?

Tens of thousands of years or hundred thousand of years?

Have the medicinal properties of cannabis always been known about? If healers were brewing cannabis teas for pain and shamans were inhaling fumes for visions, bridging body, mind, and the cosmos over 3,000 years ago do you think they weren’t doing it 4 or 5 thousand years ago?

xinjiang indigenous cannabis
1756498681332.png
 
Back
Top