Most financially valuable strains - most in demand and highest value

kaka420

Well-Known Member
Strain is irrelevant.
Your clientel may be okay with whatever you decided to grow but get into a situation were you have some competition and strain choice is not irrelevant.

If I am in a dispensary, I won't even look at it if it isn't a kush, cookie, or maybe a chem and I am not alone. Why bring something less desirable to market when you could bring something highly desirable? Be competitive.. play with fire genes.
 

Freddie Millergogo

Well-Known Member
Your clientel may be okay with whatever you decided to grow but get into a situation were you have some competition and strain choice is not irrelevant.

If I am in a dispensary, I won't even look at it if it isn't a kush, cookie, or maybe a chem and I am not alone. Why bring something less desirable to market when you could bring something highly desirable? Be competitive.. play with fire genes.
So what are your Top 3 "homie"? If price is no object. Thanks.
 

Rasta Roy

Well-Known Member
Your clientel may be okay with whatever you decided to grow but get into a situation were you have some competition and strain choice is not irrelevant.

If I am in a dispensary, I won't even look at it if it isn't a kush, cookie, or maybe a chem and I am not alone. Why bring something less desirable to market when you could bring something highly desirable? Be competitive.. play with fire genes.
I can't argue you with you there. I was referring more to the quality of the grow and cure having more effect on the quality than the strain type. And once you grow a wide variety of strains you start to notice there's not that much variety... certainly lots of varieties for sure...but grow enough and you'll start to notice a lot of strains are just rebrands of others.
 

elephantSea

Well-Known Member
Your clientel may be okay with whatever you decided to grow but get into a situation were you have some competition and strain choice is not irrelevant.

If I am in a dispensary, I won't even look at it if it isn't a kush, cookie, or maybe a chem and I am not alone. Why bring something less desirable to market when you could bring something highly desirable? Be competitive.. play with fire genes.
I blame pop culture.
 

elephantSea

Well-Known Member
I know what you're saying though. I've seen people buy strains without even looking at the product just because the name. I tend to scope the jars that peak my nostalgia first, then the stuff i've read or heard about but yet to smoke. then the stuff that sounds interesting or I know is most likely fire, like what you're saying. I like when places label the mom and pop of the strain. I have certain strains that I just avoid all together. But put a bomb ass nug in my face that lights my nose on fire and I dont care what its called, or if its indica or sativa, I wanna smoke it.

maybe you need better sales people? :P
 

kaka420

Well-Known Member
maybe you need better sales people? :P
I don't make the market and I aint selling chit. These are just my observations from what I see and discussions with dispensary owners. The thread is about highest value highest demand varieties. Other farmers may have a model that pumps out 55 day flowers and thats cool too. Not all markets are the same. Here in Michigan there is a good sized market of cheaper flowers, because it is a poor state in general, but real dank is flying out of dispensaries also.
 

Rasta Roy

Well-Known Member
I don't make the market and I aint selling chit. These are just my observations from what I see and discussions with dispensary owners. The thread is about highest value highest demand varieties. Other farmers may have a model that pumps out 55 day flowers and thats cool too. Not all markets are the same. Here in Michigan there is a good sized market of cheaper flowers, because it is a poor state in general, but real dank is flying out of dispensaries also.
I can't speak for the whole state but I'm in Lansing, here the dispensaries all have garbage cash cropper weed because they only pay $125-$150 an ounce, regardless of quality. Anyone with good quality bud or that isn't running 10,000 watts in their pole barn can usually sell their wares to their patients for 200 an ounce or better. And Michiganders smoke a lot of pot it seems because a harvest of quality organic, well cured cannabis never seems to sit for long. And I know the dispensaries are still making a killing just pushing their shitty cash crop weed. I will grant that there are a few exceptions...a handful of Lansing dispensaries have specific hired growers vs just accepting overages from caregivers. These guys usually have fire bud. However under current laws this is definitely not legal lol.

However the new Michigan Marijuana laws that have yet to go into effect make it so caregivers can no longer unload overages at dispensaries, they can only sell to their patients. And dispensaries will have to procure their bud from licensed commercial growers. So itll be interesting to see how the quality of bud in dispensaries changes now that testing and regulations are going to be implemented in Michigan. Most of us have been trying to operate ahead of the curve in anticipation of all this but there's a lot of clueless fucks that are gonna be in for a cold shower when they find out they have to present a professional business plan to get a license, and can't cover their clones in avid to get rid of spider mites.
 

greenghost420

Well-Known Member
This won't work everywhere. If you are gonna step on toes like that, you better be able to defend yourself. I know its just weed, but it's some folks livelihood and they don't take too kindly to some new jack undercutting and stealing all their regulars.
good way to get ur ass robbed!
 
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