http://www.uk420.com/boards/index.php?app=gallery&module=images&img=14625
http://forum.sensiseeds.com/uploads/29077/t2.jpg
Pictures of cystolithic hairs on cannabis ...they are noted in all members of the Cannabaceae family
Wish I was cool enough to put pics on here but I thought they were nice and help show what I was referring too...
They break off easily, and are very irritating...it makes sense to me that a sift would contain a rather large portion that could easily get airborne
"My point is that your argument against introducing better genetics to this country is baffling to me. Explain to me why it is a crime against nature. What gives other countries the right to decent genetics but not the farmers in india?"
No just no..other countries don't do it as well ...what you call "decent" genetics, I do not...hybridization destroys the wonderful qualities that make a landrace, and they don't realize till much later the devastation it causes..plants that adapted in a totally different environment with different pests different everything....its ruined....
Your showing your ignorance in mj breeding...breeding of anything really lol..heirloom fruits and veggies are highly desirable and collected often..heirloom tomatoes have came to prominence recently (well not that recent I guess) and for good reason, they have a much sweeter taste even though they aren't desirable from a commercial standpoint (like a 26 week sativa)
Words of the late jack harlan talking about veggie/fruit hybridization
we are loosing the genetic diversity at an accelerating and alarming rate.
"These resources stand between us and catastrophic starvation on a scale we cannot imagine. In a very real sense, the future of the human race rides on these materials. The line between abundance and disaster is becoming thinner and thinner, and the public is unaware and unconcerned. Must we wait for disaster to be real before we are heard? Will people listen only after it is too late." Every heirloom variety is genetically unique and inherent in this uniqueness is an evolved resistance to pests and diseases and an adaptation to specific growing conditions and climates. With the reduction in genetic diversity, food production is drastically at risk from plant epidemics and infestation by pests. Call this genetic erosion."
http://www.bountifulbrookline.org/2011/12/importance-of-heirloom-seeds-in-local.html?m=1
This is a serious topic around the world and not just cannabis
Hybridization IS a crime against nature..and those new hybrids will also eventuality adapt.
I don't know anything about indica..anything....or sativas from that region for that matter......but I do know a lot about central American sativas, been growing landrace sativas just over a decade, and have friends/contacts in that region that have grown their strains passed down through generations, families take great pride in their genetics and are not impoverished idiots.. it is indeed a crime against nature to hybridize any landrace and allow pollination to destroy the rest..sure if you like qualities of one to breed it with another and keep running clones..especially if trying to sell seed stock and improve flowering times and yields to increase profit and appeal to indoor growers(that's all modern breeders are doing, creating the next flavor of the month and "blank name" kush)...but nature knows what its doing..the hybrids will eventually reduce disease and pest resistance, potency will lower and cannabinoid ratios muddle until its all stoney junk with the same boring smell and quick tolerance.
You have to preserve the unique genetics that evolved..even taking an heirloom and growing it indoors won't be the same as its natural soil/environment and it will eventually adapt (quite quickly actually) landraces are beautiful unique works of art.. like any other heirloom they need to be preserved
The reason we have such a variety of genetics and terpene combinations is because of heirloom strains....we all know this
Perhaps thinking about the concept but in reference to pure bred dogs...this should be common sense and is actually discussed often on riu.. "strain hunters" for example
You can see the impact, looking at Mexican cartels ruining local weed...most of the weed is sold to cartels however, by the producing family
I can't even put in words how wrong you are...seriously dude
"The cannabis that grows in charas producing regions tend to be more sativa dominant but very low in potency if smoked as buds. Not to mention the seeds..sooo many. There people dont pull all the males cuz they need their seeds for the next season" "look like mids cuz they dont practice proper curing and usually press bricks to make for easier transport"
In mexico they leave a few males, they deem to be the best(this is very difficult requiring trained eyes to not alter and ruin the herb through selective human breeding over proper environmental adaptations ) this leaves some heavily seeded herb that stays with the grower. The resulting herb is less seeded the further away and is what's sold. The higher quality seedless bud doesn't get far from the border however(where I am
) most is bought/claimed by buyers before harvest .. it is extremely potent and results in old tales of hippies in the 70's.."most potent herb they ever smoked"
Now hash making is a traditional process to ease smoking and improve upon what they had to work with...very much like bricking in south America..it does improve potency by removing plant matter obviously and concentrating cannabinoids...bricking has been practiced for just as long..bricking is very much an art as well, transforming unsmokable "bud" with 8inch fox tails..buds looking like some Jamaican dreads.. I've seen a half inch between calyxes on long spindly stems (think grinspoon)..they dry the bud as you normally would for a cure but instead of jars they would press it after about 2 weeks of hanging..a very difficult process to time just right.. the weed cures to perfection in the brick with even moisture. A remarkable invention very useful in their harsh environment.. some of the most flavorful smoothest and potent weed I've ever smoked was properly bricked (not machine pressed and cared for improperly by cartels)...it just so happened that bricking and turning to hash also improved transportation by slowing oxidation etc but don't think that because it aids transportation it automatically has a detrimental effect..there are roughly 6 landrace sativas in central America, each very different and a trained grower can tell what the plant should taste like and the high associated just by the structure
Well damn..I think I rambled a bit....my point is
We have to preserve the unique highs and flavors before they become lost.. they are all so beautiful in their own way..if you want to use those land races to create a strain that better suits your needs, that's fine..just remember those landraces that made it possible and remember that to retain vigor and unique properties associated with each most companies have to do back crossing...land races will forever remain a staple in all breeding trials
Do some reading on the importance of heirlooms or land races not pertaining to mj