If you could only Grow/Smoke 1 strain for the rest of your life....

Bird Gymnastics

New Member
Yea man no problem. Let me go get some.

Oh wait


Yea yea


Go fuck yourself. Two faced clown.

Gotta love the harshness :) can I see some pictures LV? I am running a few of those and really want to see what she looks like in flower. Im hoping for a good SOG strain rather then multi branching but I can adjust :weed:
 

Chronicseeker

New Member
That Iruk is some serious fire, one should be proud to showcase her as she is probably one of the danker strains in the valley.
 

irieie

Well-Known Member
As soon as I have it flowering I will take some pics.;) probably about another week now.
I thunk we have different phenotypes.
 

Tempe420

Active Member
We grew the Irukanji out as well once before. It was really nice. Good yielder. We swapped out growing it for Pestilence OG which we are now working with but will probably give the Irukanji another run soon.

Does anyone know what the cross is on Irukanji? The guy we got the cut from said it was Pestilence Og x Black Mamba. I don't know much about the Mamba.

Although i'm not 1000% sure this pic is of it as there was also a Jilly Bean and a Qush being grown in that grow but i'm pretty sure this was it as we were trimming. It was by far the stickiest.

View attachment 2423726
 

jjlongo

Active Member
CU BW.jpg

Blue Widow - Mmmmmm

That was pretty easy.

1. Grow a plant(s)

2. Have pride in said plant(s)

3. Take photo(s)

4. Post photo(s)

5. Discuss in a Civil Manner with Respected Colleagues
 

Neat

Member
European retirees smoke pot :D :D :D

[video=youtube;WzTPrlmJKk4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WzTPrlmJKk4&feature=youtu.be&hd=1[/video]
 

Chronicseeker

New Member
Iruk is supposed to yield more than the pestilence, please correct me if I am wrong.
Pestilence is a great strain, super high THC levels, but Im pretty sure the yield is more reminiscent of a head stash strain.
Is Iruk Pestilence OG or Pestilence x mamba?
Im pretty sure there is a difference, but not 100%.
Check out legion OG as well, some serious fire...

I have been hearing more and more about Pestilence BX, hoping to get a hold of that in the future.
 

Chronicseeker

New Member
Thank you for the clarification.
I need another confirmation after all the pestilence research recently...
Is pestilence kush the same as pestilence OG? Obviously OG is a kush, lol. I have seen both advertised, maybe pestilence kush is just a nickname that some give the strain?
From what I gathered Ink breeds the real pestilence...

This is why I ask..
http://www.naturalalternativesforhealth.com/menu.html

https://www.stickyguide.com/dispensaries/auburn-health-organics/products/pestilence-kush

The clear lineage would be appreciated.
 

Tempe420

Active Member
Thank you for the clarification.
I need another confirmation after all the pestilence research recently...
Is pestilence kush the same as pestilence OG? Obviously OG is a kush, lol. I have seen both advertised, maybe pestilence kush is just a nickname that some give the strain?
From what I gathered Ink breeds the real pestilence...

This is why I ask..
http://www.naturalalternativesforhealth.com/menu.html

https://www.stickyguide.com/dispensaries/auburn-health-organics/products/pestilence-kush

The clear lineage would be appreciated.
Pestilence and Pestilence OG are different from what I heard from the guy I got it from.
 

irieie

Well-Known Member
Good lord, they don't like to make things easy with some of these strain names.
Irukandji jellyfish*(*/ˌɪrəˈkændʒi/*irr-ə-kan-jee) are tiny and extremelyvenomous*jellyfish*that inhabit marine waters of*Australia[1]*and which are able to fire their stingers into their victim, causing symptoms collectively known as*Irukandji syndrome. Its size is roughly no larger than a cubic centimetre (1 cm3). There are two known species of Irukandji:*Carukia barnesiand the recently discovered*Malo kingi.[2]The symptoms of*Irukandji syndrome*were first documented by*Hugo Flecker[3]*in 1952 and named after the*Irukandji people*whose country stretches along the coastal strip north of*Cairns, Queensland.[4]*The first of these jellyfish,*Carukia barnesi, was identified in 1964 by Jack Barnes; in order to prove it was the cause of Irukandji syndrome, he captured the tiny jelly and allowed it to sting himself; his son and a life guard observed the effects.[5]
 
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