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align="left"> Plantar Cannabis , 20,1508 Marijuana Seed (1977)

Perfclone Buzz- The first time I smoked some Shiskaberry yesterday it really didn’t stone me. Today it has whipped me :) A few hits on the way to school were a few too many, it hit and I became unmotivated. This evening a friend and I finished off two bowls and Perfclone Cannabis Seeds Shop it was quite the experience. Fair amount of visual distortion, lots of laughs which lead to tears and falling on floor. Totally a fun indica. I place it a little below the NL x shiva in power level, but still above average. I'd put the Shisk in the social indica category, with the nlxshiva toward the unsociable side. I did have to pull myself from the couch Cannabis Marijuana also. Ended up with 1 Sage, 2 GWS, 2 Cinder, 1 blueberry, and 2 Roms. Actually, I thought I had 3 Roms, but one had "sexual problems". No big deal. Watch your Roms--and look for females with prolific pre-flowering. Also, keep in mind that I like to veg for a long time--2 months min. This time I let them go 72 days. Actually, I wouldn't have done it if I didn't have those pH/slow growing problems--but everything worked out in the end. Each plant yielded 1-2 oz. each. Not bad for a tiny closet. Hell, that's enough to set me up for MONTHS! 1) is likely to involve a common allylic cation, since both cis-and trans-verbenols give the same products e to say that the user who possesses only an ounce is almost certainly not a large-scale dealer. There is the argument that the penalties for marijuana possession (and use) should be reduced, but not for selling. This distinction violates empirical reality; it implies the existence of two relatively separated social and moral spheres that articulate on a superficial basis—profit. If the seller is guilty, the user is, too, because the user is the seller, and the seller the user. The technical exchange of contraband goods for money takes place at every conceivable level and by nearly everyone above the minimally involved. Labeling all selling heinous and use only moderately reprehensible, is to display ignorance of how the market works. The present law, as well as the moderate reforms currently being proposed, puts use in one legal, logical category, and all levels of selling in another. We find use and most selling transactions to be logically and socially indistinguishable while high level, high volume, and high profit selling transactions exist in a disjunctive social and moral universe. If we believed in "natural" social categories, the present confusion would represent as great an intellectual blunder as classifying whales as fish and bats as a species of bird. * These prices were current before the Mexican border blockade and increased vigilance of 1969 and 1970. At the present time (February 1970), prices are about one and a third to one and a half more than what they were a year earlier, even assuming the availability of marijuana, which is often problematic. (back) N O T E S 1. It is interesting that the most vigorous of the antimarijuana propagandists of the 1930s, Harry Anslinger, denied that marijuana was sold by professional gangsters in 1937: "... the control and sale of marijuana has not yet passed into the hands of the big gangster syndicates. The supply is so vast, and grows in so many places, that gangsters perhaps have found it difficult to dominate the source.... gangdom has been hampered in its efforts to corner the profits of what has now become an enormous business." See Harry J. Anslinger, with Courtney Ryley Cooper, "Marijuana—Assassin of Youth," American Magazine 124 (July 18, 1937): 152-153. (back) 2. The clearest recent statement of this position may be found in Will Oursler, Marijuana: The Facts, the Truth (New York: Paul S. Eriksson, 1968), pp. 113-120. Oursler seems to think these college student distributors are gangland fronts, and are called "beavers" in the underworld. (back) 3. The New York Times, September 27, 1968. (back) 4. Ibid., October 6, 1968. (back) 5. The most informative of recent accounts must include: James T. Carey, The College Drug Scene (Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice-Hall, 1968), esp. chs. 2, 4, 5; Jerry Mandel, "Myths and Realities of Marijuana Pushing," in J. L. Simmons, ed., Marijuana: Myths and (16 of 18)4/15/2004 1:08:20 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Ch An old Island strain that comes out of Afghani and Blueberry seedlines. Long and fluffy to start but thick and sweet with a pinkishhue after 8 weeks. Odiferous flowers with intense resin production, this plant has a deep green colour on upper leaf surfaces, but the underside of the leaves are light green at first,becoming almost white with crystal at maturity. Recommended by my carny friend "Resin Rene". Plotnikoff, and P On Shishkeberry: I just finished up the Shiskaberry and I have a few notes on it, if anyone is interested. A friend made my seeds; parents were Breeder Steve’s seeds. The notes below are only from one of the Shiskaberrys that I have tested. With further testing I will find the definitive Shiska mum. Aroma - The smell put a smile on a friends face tonight when I pulled out da' sample. But kaka has yet to smell a thing. Allergies are a killin' and ka ain't a smellin'. A bunch of Shisks are drying and I can’t smell them. Culture Cannabis
Culture Cannabis , 96, 7807 (1974)
Kali Mist vah vah Plotnikoff, P oward various drugs vary tremendously from culture to culture, and this prevailing cultural climate may have a strong effect on the user. Classical Islamic culture, for instance, prohibits the use of alcohol but sanctions marijuana use. Our American culture as a whole believes marijuana produces undesirable and dangerous effects, and this knowledge may very well influence an individual user at times, in spite of subcultural support of marijuana smoking. In our culture, feelings of paranoia (e.g., fear that there may be a policeman watching) are frequent and normal, although experienced users generally treat them rather objectively rather than getting concerned about them in a maladaptive fashion. Personality affects marijuana reactions. Users commonly believe, for example, that authoritarian people, who are not open to new ways of perceiving and thinking, either get no effects at all from smoking marijuana or have very unpleasant effects. They try to maintain their ordinary way of perceiving and thinking against the drug effects. There is a large psychological literature on the way in which personality factors affect reactions to a wide variety of psychoactive drugs other than marijuana. Overall physiological functioning shows very similar patterns in healthy individuals; i.e., their bodily reactions to a given drug are similar enough to not be important. For some drugs and/or for some individuals, however, unique physiological factors might cause special reactions. I know of no solid (4 of 16)4/15/2004 7:02:54 AM On Being Stoned - Chapter 2 information on this for marijuana, but it should be kept in mind as a potential source of variability. Learned drug skills are particularly important in marijuana intoxication. A neophyte commonly must use marijuana several times before becoming aware of its effects; he must learn to recognize certain subtle effects that indicate he is intoxicated (see, e.g., Becker, 1953). With increasing experience and contact with other marijuana users, the neophyte learns of other effects that he may try to experience himself and of techniques for controlling his intoxication experience (see Chapter 17). He may learn to reproduce many of the usual effects of intoxication without actually using marijuana, as in "contact highs" (feeling intoxicated just by being with intoxicated companions) or "conditioned highs" (feeling intoxicated to some extent by the action of preparing to use marijuana). Immediate user factors include several factors that assume particular values for hours to days before using a drug, such as mood, expectations as to what will happen, and desires for particular happenings. Mood is particularly important with a drug like marijuana, as many users report the intoxicated state amplifies whatever mood they were in before taking the drug (see Chapter 16). If they were happy, they may become very happy; if they were sad, they may become particularly gloomy. An experimental stu

All were grown in tommy chong bongs 5 gal. black plastic, nursery buckets filled with "Whitney farms premium potting soil" cut by a third with "Whitney farms cactus mix". Vegged under 1 1000W Sunmaster MH conversion and 2 1000W HPS...after sexing, reduced to 1 HPS and the Sunmaster in a 4 x 8 x 7 space. Tried Mylar this year for the 1st time.
I Herer Jack don't notice much difference between it and

vah

plain flat white walls. Mylar is a real pain to keep clean and it will be gone as soon as the room is cleared.” - del

Using a whole room at this point you turn off the fan blowing air in but you leave the door open a little. You never cut off ventilation completely because mold is a threat right up until the end. The leaves should start to get a little crisp after a week or two. If it happens sooner you may be using too much ventilation and should cut back. Along about this time you should notice a very nice smell.

among professional criminals for profit. How we characterize marijuana selling depends on what level the transaction takes place. This might lend sustenance to the ideologically involved contestants, since they may, without distortion, portray dealing in a fashion which pleases their biases. Just how involved the large-scale dealer is in marijuana selling is obliquely determined by the size of the seizures of imports from Mexico. In terms of the number of these smuggling attempts, clearly the overwhelming majority are of relatively insignificant quantities—under a pound. The largest recent PerfClone border seizure was about a ton of marijuana. An operation of this size obviously requires organization: a micro-bus, middlemen in Mexico, drivers and high-level dealers for distribution.
This is not Cosa Nostra organization, but it is organization. If we mean by "organized crime," a syndicate involving thousands of tightly knit, lifelong committed gangsters whose entire livelihood derives from illegal activities, then marijuana probably is not sold, never has been sold, and never will be sold by professional criminals.
If, however, we mean an independent operation involving a score of individuals whose activities are coordinated, and who will earn their living for a few years from marijuana sales, then it is true that marijuana is often sold by professional criminals. Just how much of the total of marijuana consumed derives from this kind of source is impossible to determine. This is why a consideration of the level at which a deal takes place is important. The importer PerfClone is often a criminal: his livelihood is importing grass; he is a capitalist who sells an illegal product with no particular commitment to marijuana as an agent of mindtransformation, an element in a subculture, or a catalyst in social change. He probably does not smoke marijuana. The unsystematic business practices of "head" dealers created a vacuum into which he stepped. The multi-kilogram top-level dealers to whom he sells are also primarily profit seekers. The crucial difference between the importer and his dealcustomers is that Culture Cannabis the dealer sells to consumers as well as to other dealers and is very likely (14 of 18)4/15/2004 1:08:20 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 10 to be a consumer himself. Next to the consumer, friendship transactions are common. Thus, to say that marijuana is a business is both true and false. At some levels it is; at some, it is not. To say that it is big business is misleading. A monthly take of a quarter of a million dollars, split twenty ways, might represent the very top of the profession. Lower down, even dedicated hustling brings in what an unskilled factory worker might make. Below that, the profit motive breaks down entirely. A commonly encountered argument against the use of marijuana employs the differential association theory: by using the drug, one is thrown into association with the criminal underworld and, therefore, at

I've grown 4 crops of Flo. It is very difficult to clone and not very hardy. I lose 40% of the clones, and just lost 2 plants when my hydro system was shut off accidentally. All the other strains survived without any Marijuana Seed harm, but the Flo dried out beyond recovery. This is not an easy strain to work with. The only reason I keep growing it is because of its fragrance and cannabis not frosty taste. I cannabis not frosty love the hashy fragrance and taste.
It is truly an exceptional strain in this regard. The seedlings I grew were not very uniform in this regard, which might explain why yours does not have much odor. Revegging this strain takes a very long time.- potattic

, 11,377 (1968) as well as to an entire tradition in marijuana commentary. Yet such a conclusion is difficult to avoid. The marijuana user appears to be more active socially than the nonuser. He has more friends and socializes more. He is engaged in a larger number and a greater variety of activities than the nonuser—aesthetic appreciation and creation, political activism, and social welfare, for instance. (Of course, some other human endeavors, such as traditional and formal religious participation, are less often the object of marijuana users' interests.) The zero-sum notion assumes that the two realms, the straight and the stoned, are antagonistic and incompatible, enjoyed by a wholly different and distinct personnel. In reality, most potsmokers do not rob their straight life to pay their stoned existence. More commonly, the two enrich each other. Thus, any model based on the assumption that by using marijuana those activities which society values will typically or necessarily deteriorate in the lives of users has to be faulty. In the average user, no such process takes place. (It will, of course, be a relatively simple matter to uncover exceptions.) The average marijuana smoker utilizes his drug of choice as an adjunct and an enhancer of many of the activities that the ordinary law-abiding citizen participates in. The dire predictions of what happens when someone takes to the weed do not seem to happen. It is said that although marijuana is not technically addicting, it does generate a kind of psychological addiction (thus, the stoned model), and that once legal restrictions are relaxed, huge numbers of persons will be stupefied most of their waking hours. When we look at the facts, this argument evaporates. Most marijuana users smoke the weed occasionally. The truly committed "head," the smoker who is high the whole day, day in and day out, is a relative rarity, perhaps comprising 1 or 2 percent of everyone who has ever smoked marijuana. And yet it is from this rarefied upper reaches of the world of potsmoking that society's model of marijuana use is borrowed. We will, of course, be able to locate specific individuals who are, in fact, high a great proportion of their waking hours. But the difference between marijuana and any of the physiologically addicting drugs—including alcohol—in this respect is so great as to be a (6 of 9)4/15/2004 1:08:52 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 12 difference of kind, and not simply a matter of degree. It is only because the medical profession views marijuana use by definition pathological and abnormal ("abuse" is defined as taking a drug outside a medical context) that any use of marijuana has to be viewed, medically, as a kind of habituation, or psychological addiction. Something anomalous, puzzling, and disturbing must be labeled pathological. But in less moralistic terms—and it is only on moral grounds that the medical label makes any sense at all—it is necessary to face the fact th Cannabis Not Frosty Overgrow Perez-Reyes, Cannabis Not Frosty Cheap Glass Bongs

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Tommy Chong Bongs Int e laws is exceptionally complex, and some will be changed shortly. By far the best review of existing laws and their social consequences has been made by Kaplan in his recent book, Marijuana, the New Prohibition (1970). Smith's (1970) book also contains excellent discussions of the social issues revolving around marijuana use. EXTENT OF USE (5 of 7)4/15/2004 7:02:27 AM On Being Stoned - Chapter 1 In spite of the severe penalties attached to possession and sale of marijuana, use today is very widespread. Given the sorts of pleasurable effects reported later in this book, it seems likely that use will continue to increase. No definite survey of incidence of use can be made because there is always a (realistic) tendency of wary users to deny their use. Nevertheless, a large number of surveys of drug use on college campuses have been made (Kaplan, 1970; Pearlman, 1968). It is now a rare college campus that does not have a significant number of marijuana users and on many campuses users themselves estimate over 50 percent of the students use marijuana occasionally, primarily at social events. An unpublished study that I carried out in collaboration with one of my graduate students, Carl Klein, found that from 1967 to 1968 the percentage of students who used marijuana at a conservative West Coast university doubled, and various formal and informal estimates of that population since have confirmed that a majority of the students have tried marijuana. (Further details of this study are presented in Chapter 28.) This seems typical. Drug-education programs sponsored by schools and government agencies are viewed with scorn and amusement by users since their own and friends' experiences with marijuana convince them that the instructors are ignorant or lying. This is an unfortunate effect, as the attitude may be generalized to warnings about drugs that really are dangerous, such as hard narcotics and amphetamines. Marijuana use is by no means confined to college campuses. In a survey of young adults (eighteen and over) in San Francisco, Manheimer, Mellinger, and Balter (1969) reported that 13 percent had used marijuana at least once. Conservative estimates in the press usually figure that several million Americans have tried marijuana, although it is not clear how many use it with any regularity. Difficult political, moral, and religious problems arise when an act generally condemned and illegal spreads at such a rapid rate. This book is not the place to go into them, but the interested reader will find some good discussions in Aaronson and Osmond (1970), Krippner (1968), and Kaplan (1970). Leaving aside considerations of social and political problems, what sort of reliable, scientific knowledge do we have about the effects of marijuana? What do users experience that makes the risk of prison worthwhile? The following chapter discusses the nature of marijuana intoxication and explains why previous scientific work has gained v Princess is a female which resulted from a seed found in a Jack Herer bud I bought in Amsterdam near the Sensi Seed Bank at "Coffeeshop Sensi Smile". The bud came in a 2 gr. cello-pack with the Sensi logo; I expected sinsemilla, but it had about 10 seeds so I assume she's an F2 JH. Her characteristics were so fine I wanted to create seeds that would "replicate" this plant. She has the KILLER Haze-influenced high with the most DELICIOUS pineapple/evil scent, 50 day maturation in 12/12, and incredible resin production, doesn’t stretch - yet clearly Sativa-dominant! Last but not least: Never a hint of hermaphrodism after 2 years of cloning & many different styles of grow. e trees for the mere sake of it, nor should one use them as lumber. These trees are generating substances that other beings use as their nourishment. If one urinates and defecates on the tree, the tree will then emit something harmful to these beings. That is the reason they are very defensive. In the background we see cities, towers, monuments, and parks associated with the kapukiri. To the left we see huts where the great shamans of various tribes arrive in spirit, to be trained regarding the kapukiri. There one learns that a young man should not sleep in the bed of an old man. Native people, particularly the elderly, don't like anyone to touch what belongs to them. All that belongs to the shamans must be respected-the bed, the plates, etc. This is because a young man is full of filth. When one becomes old, one learns to be cleaner. The city in the centre symbolises the purity of a shaman when, already old, he goes to another stage. It is the purity that the person acquires through his death, when he leaves this life and is transported to another place. This is when a person has been ordained, when he has been requested. Not everyone goes there. I don't reject the Christian belief according to which Christ said to his disciples: "Whither I go, thou canst not follow me now; but thou shalt follow me afterwards" John 13:36]. But this does not hold true for everyone. Christ said: "In my Father's house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you" John 14:2]. But this doesn't mean that this is for all humanity, but for certain chosen persons. Christians were mistaken when they thought that everyone shall go to heaven. VISION 31 CUNCATUYA This vision shows us how a woman, suspecting nothing, contracts the cungatuya disease from the water she drinks. There are two ways of getting the disease. One gets it after a sorcerer sends his mashu or bat to drop its yachay or phlegm in order to bring the disease. The victim then becomes very weak and dies, as he cannot ingest any nutrition. Secondly, one can get it when the same bat or rnashu drops its saliva into the water one is about to drink. This happens if one leaves one's jar without a cap. Here we see how a woman is drinking contaminated water, causing this awful cungatuya disease sent by a sorcerer through his mashu, which dropped the phlegm into the jar on the grill. To the left, however; we see how a vegetalista is curing the disease by sucking it with the mann of his throat. To prevent any intrusion upon the circle where the healing is being performed, the doctors have raised strong tingunas of surprising colours and posted animals of prey, such as the yachaygavilanes wise sparrow hawk], the tahuicuros Monasa nigrifons] and the supay-unchalas unchala = Aramides cajanea], as well as the push co-yuyo plant and the thorns of casha-huasca thorny vine]. The master is also seen raising his magnetic powers in the f
Piece of crap Cannabis where can i buy cannabis seeds Cannabis - hard to clone. I grew a few seeds from a seedbank selling Sensi BB, and I’m glad I didn’t waste time and space with any more than 2 females. Maybe I was unlucky and didn’t score that hard to find large producer.
Dunno. the plants were grown indoors under plenty of light. They were big in circumference, with spread out bud yield. I was expecting fatty kolas, but nope. It looked more like Holland/Canada Big Treat than BB is supposed to be. Anyway, that’s my two cents.- dak
An vah old Island strain that comes out of Afghani and Blueberry seedlines.
Long and fluffy to start but thick and sweet with a pinkishhue after 8 weeks. Odiferous flowers with intense resin production, this plant has a deep green colour on upper leaf surfaces, but the underside Culture Cannabis of the leaves are light green at first,becoming almost white with crystal at maturity. Recommended by my carny How To Make Bongs friend "Resin Rene".
owing awareness that many seemingly respectable individuals also smoke marijuana: "After being turned on, I realized that many straight types smoke, too. It's sort of like when a virgin has just been deflowered; she realizes that others must also be nonvirgins, too, after having experienced it herself," said a twenty-two-year-old law school student, a weekly smoker. In fact, there is often a certain degree of disappointment in the experience. The experience has been billed as bizarre, beautiful, frightening, orgiastic, but either pro or con, the descriptions are invariably unusual. "At first I thought it would be the passageway into heaven," a young man of Catholic parentage told me, somewhat disenchanted that it wasn't. "I expected a fantastic change," said a twenty-three-year-old woman writer about her experience of being turned on in a cafe in Tangiers; "I was (11 of 15)4/15/2004 1:05:28 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 6 disappointed," she added. "I was scared shit," a student in pharmacy told me about an experience six years earlier. Aside from the expectation that the high would be much more spectacular, some of the disappointment stems from the fact that many initiates do not become high the first time that they smoke, or at least do not recognize it. Marijuana's effect is subtle, and is, as I have stated, quite dependent on the learning process. In Becker's words, ... the new user may not get high and thus not form a conception of the drug as something which can be used for pleasure.... ... being high consists of... the presence of symptoms caused by marijuana use and the recognition of these symptoms and their connection by the user with his use of the drug. It is not enough, that is, that the effects alone be present; alone, they do not automatically provide the experience of being high. The user must be able to point them out to himself and consciously connect them with having smoked marihuana before he can have this experience. Otherwise, no matter what actual effects are produced, he considers that the drug has had no effect on him.8] It is possible that the drug sometimes does not take effect on an individual who has smoked once or even a dozen times. A small proportion of individuals seem almost incapable of attaining a high, at least using conventional smoking techniques. Whether this is physiological or psychological, it is impossible at this point to determine. Many of these individuals have been socialized into the subculture, know the proper techniques and what to expect from them, have seen others enjoying pot, and yet never seem to cross the threshold of becoming high. More commonly, however, the reason for the lack of attainment of the high is inexperience. Among our respondents, 41 percent said that they did not become high the first time and 13 percent said that they weren't sure whether or not they were high. The attainment of the high, however, usually comes with experience. Twe owing awareness that many seemingly respectable individuals also smoke marijuana: "After being turned on, I realized that many straight types smoke, too. It's sort of like when a virgin has just been deflowered; she realizes that others must also be nonvirgins, too, after having experienced it herself," said a twenty-two-year-old law school student, a weekly smoker. In fact, there is often a certain degree of disappointment in the experience. The experience has been billed as bizarre, beautiful, frightening, orgiastic, but either pro or con, the descriptions are invariably unusual. "At first I thought it would be the passageway into heaven," a young man of Catholic parentage told me, somewhat disenchanted that it wasn't. "I expected a fantastic change," said a twenty-three-year-old woman writer about her experience of being turned on in a cafe in Tangiers; "I was (11 of 15)4/15/2004 1:05:28 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 6 disappointed," she added. "I was scared shit," a student in pharmacy told me about an experience six years earlier. Aside from the expectation that the high would be much more spectacular, some of the disappointment stems from the fact that many initiates do not become high the first time that they smoke, or at least do not recognize it. Marijuana's effect is subtle, and is, as I have stated, quite dependent on the learning process. In Becker's words, ... the new user may not get high and thus not form a conception of the drug as something which can be used for pleasure.... ... being high consists of... the presence of symptoms caused by marijuana use and the recognition of these symptoms and their connection by the user with his use of the drug. It is not enough, that is, that the effects alone be present; alone, they do not automatically provide the experience of being high. The user must be able to point them out to himself and consciously connect them with having smoked marihuana before he can have this experience. Otherwise, no matter what actual effects are produced, he considers that the drug has had no effect on him.8] It is possible that the drug sometimes does not take effect on an individual who has smoked once or even a dozen times. A small proportion of individuals seem almost incapable of attaining a high, at least using conventional smoking techniques. Whether this is physiological or psychological, it is impossible at this point to determine. Many of these individuals have been socialized into the subculture, know the proper techniques and what to expect from them, have seen others enjoying pot, and yet never seem to cross the threshold of becoming high. More commonly, however, the reason for the lack of attainment of the high is inexperience. Among our respondents, 41 percent said that they did not become high the first time and 13 percent said that they weren't sure whether or not they were high. The attainment of the high, however, usually comes with experience. Twe

Winner of several harvest festivals, and "High Times" Cannabis Cup. Skunk #1 (75% Sativa, 25% Indica) was originally a cross between 25% Afghani, 25% Mexican Acapulco Gold and 50% Colombian Gold. Inbred since 1978, now a stabilized homogeneous strain.
Blooms with long, thick buds, varying in color from light green to golden. Very high flower to leaf ratio. Soft and sweet aroma and Graines a very strong "up" high. Excellent variety for indoor growing or greenhouse with darkening system. Very high yields.
Easy to manicure.
This variety serves as a standard against which others can be measured.Winner of several harvest festivals, and "High Times" Cannabis Cup. Skunk 1 (75% Sativa, 25% Indica) was originally a cross between 25% Afghani, 25% Mexican Acapulco Gold and 50% Colombian Gold. Inbred since 1978, now a stabilized homogeneous strain. Blooms with long, thick buds, varying in color from light green to golden.
Very high flower to leaf ratio. Soft and sweet aroma and a very strong "up" high. Excellent variety for indoor growing or greenhouse with darkening system. Very high yields.
Easy to manicure. This variety serves as a standard against which others can be Cannabis Floraison measured.

“Original Flo is a Sativa/Indica cross (60% Sativa, 40% Indica) with very Sativa phenotypic characteristics that also matures very early. The large, tight, spear shaped buds are made up of small, densely packed purple calyxes. The plants are taller and like to branch out. Indoors the buds are fully mature by the end of their sixth week. Outdoors the plant is a super producer when multi-harvested over a period of time. The first buds are ripe around the third week of September. About every ten days after that, new buds form and can be harvested through the end of November, if the plant can be kept alive that long. Therefore, “Flo” is ideal for greenhouse production. The motivational “high” produced by the “Flo” is quite unique, the flavor is like Nepalese Temple Hash. A most pleasant and enjoyable experience.

Anker and A Salemink, Recl

I grew it, or at least something called Early Girl, that I got from Holland in the late '80s. It Plantar Cannabis was pretty average all the way around in my opinion.
About average yield, high, and everything else. I got some California Orange at the same time and liked it a little better. That was a while back, though. They might PerfClone have improved it in recent years.” – Been There

"1988 Catalog the Seed Bank introduced a Haze X NL #1 hybrid. In 1989 they introduced Haze X NL #5. Today the Sensi Seed Bank offers NL#5 X Haze. I do not know Orange Bud if the listing of Haze first in the "Name" as opposed to the listing today of NL#5 first in the "Name" has any real bearing on the formulation of this cross. I do know that the 88 version and the 89 version were indeed different."1988 Catalog the Seed Bank introduced a Haze X NL 1 hybrid. In 1989 they introduced Haze X NL 5. Today the Sensi Seed Bank offers NL5 X Haze. I do not know if the listing of Haze first in the "Name" as opposed to the listing today of NL5 first in the "Name" has any real bearing on the formulation of this cross. I do know that the Cheap Glass Bongs 88 version and the 89 version were indeed different.

Dewey, Committee on Problems of Drug Dependence, National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council Annual Report, p Kraatz, and F SALE FOR FOR SALE that; this is Cannabis Seeds Shop not for production, just personal smoke. The moral may be that Durban can work in some inside environments, or maybe just the right Durban. Like I say, so far, so good. It's 1 foot to the scrog screen and that gives me another foot until the tops are too close to the light. I may raise the screen a bit next time, as the longest Durban bud is 8 inches.
I let the Durban grow until it nearly filled up the scrog screen (not exactly a scientific process), and that took about 3-4 weeks from the rooted clones.
Sorry, I don't keep a log book or anything like that, so I'm guessing to some extent. From the time the lights went to 12 hours, the Durban looks to finish about 8 weeks.
That's sooner than I thought, and I'm basing it on the proportion of white to brown hairs, never actually having Durban go all the way. Outside I had to harvest it early due to mold. I think I'll let it go two more weeks, while I'm away on vacation, to see if it puts on some weight, which will be about 9 weeks from lights out. The sweet indica being grown in the same air chamber is already dead ripe. One thing about Durban; it's very prone to mold. I recommend denuding all the stalks beneath the screen and using a fan to provide air flow to that area. I lost several stalks to mold before I opened up the dead space. Oh, and one last thing. Remember, I tried Beaverbong Photos Durban sog last year, and it sucked. I had to pull them all out and start over. It was just this one Durban that seemed to have the potential to stay small that I saved, and it turns out to be ideally suited to scrog. I can't promise other Durbans will work out." -cha cal "I grew Dutch Passion's version. It's not worth paying for. From what I hear, the Sensi isn't much better. That is if you’re looking for a pure sativa with an anise flavour. My plants looked like tall indicas.
I'm not saying that the plants were absolute crap, just that they were not worth the $11 a seed I paid. Paying $28.50 per blueberry seeds had more value. They were good enough and uniform enough that I've selected the non hermie plants to create backup seed before I dump the lot. I think the wild bank in Africa would be the best source. With any luck, I'll have some coming in the mail any day.
I saw some pics of traditional durban leaves at lyceum. Dutch Passion's were not close." -Vic High “Today I tasted some Durban Poison for the first time. The plant was not mature yet, all pistils still white on day 60 of 12/12. Durban has a very clear energetic high for me with almost no body. About 90% head, 10% or less body. The aroma is sweet, like tai. It looks a bit like tai also, but much fluffier and less size to the calyxes. It is fun to talk on, go out in public, and energetic. I can see now why many old-timers like it.
Personally it is a nightmare in ScrOG/indoors and I would not recommend the physical characteristics. It stretches like crazy, and the buds are very fluffy and airy. the colas also fall over bef

vah @ 9/9/2010 11:17:23 PM