Jogro
Well-Known Member
In the context of cannabis, "land-race" refers to a strain grown in a particular isolated geographic location, that, after many generations has become acclimated to that area and offers its own unique characteristics. By definition, all pharmaceutically relevant landrace strains have been selectively bred by people at one point.No such thing as a true jamacan landrace, cannabis was brought to the island
The Jamaican strains were probably introduced by Indian laborers in the mid 19th century, though there may be other Asian or even African cannabis influences there. Regardless, after growing and being selectively bred on the island for 150 years, they'd represent about as true of a "landrace" as you're going to find anywhere. In particular, the Jamaican landraces were known for a particularly "speedy" high. Also, like most sativas, these strains don't do as well if grown outside their natural climate.
The issue isn't that there isn't such a thing as a true Jamaican "land-race" (there is, or at least used to be); the issue is that everyone in Jamaica is growing outside, and the pollen from one grow corrupts another. After two decades of importing indica-based and other strains to increase harvest rate, most if not all of the current Jamaican stuff is "mongrel" stuff of various and uncertain genetic backgrounds.
I don't know if any of the "pure" older stains still exist. Jamaica is big enough that its at least *possible* that some true older genetics are still around, but its pretty unlikely that you're going to find something like that sold on a beach. As pure sativas, the true Jamaican landrace plants would only offer one harvest per year, and of lower quantity. This is not the stuff that commercial growers will want to grow for sale.