I search the Strain: Vietnam Tourist - Green Hornet
In short: this is the most hallucinogenic Strain i ever came by. It was such an insane smoke. Even the Thais i smoked were hallucinogenic too they didnt come even close.
If you heard about someone having some Pack of this Breeder , old Stock, i want to inform you this Strain is an absolute Gemstone.
I hunt sice 6 years straight for something similar, that Strain was IT.
Nobody seemed to have reproduced it, only People raving about it. Green Hornet himselve lost it too. So, if you heard anything…
Long live the tripweed!!! There’s 2 or 3 different plants here i think. Definitely 2, maybe 3. Hoping for a male and female! Green Hornet viet tourist hemp.
Key word “hemp” HA! See I fkn knew it! We call it hemp but bro it’s just a broad spectrum evenly balanced muti-cannabiod THC, thcv, cbn, cbg, cbn, ect who knows what @lefthandseeds have you found any other cannabinoids in the syrian x leb x Ethiopians ? For a reference point? Of possible other cannabinoids that could influence said buzz or are we talking totally uncharted waters? Thanks
I always thought the tropical haze effects were more from the treatment than the terps. The cobbing or Thai stick processes themselves definitely seem to affect the experience
Yes it does but it doesn’t completely change it will only make effects “deeper” if that makes sense maybe @DragonflyCoyoteSmoke can help with this explanation for us @Upstate but see I feel and I could be wrong but I feel that the “wild hemp” is really where nld and nlh diverged from and maybe not all but most and I’m probably wrong but it seems logical ps also you are probably right about the trickery part ps i guess a better way to say it would be that or ask that at one point wasn’t everything called “hemp”
the word hemp in the name has nothing to do with the variety we had a special law in 2000 and that’s why you have to camouflage everything with the word hemp in Switzerland in 2000
it is pure
Of course, there can also be a bit of hemp in it from Vietnam, the flowering time is at least 17 weeks to 25, so it is very questionable whether the hemp is in it tho
@LandraceJunkie@Arnold Yes, these are those some very intentional projects have begun, enabled by John’s kindness and generosity. ECNY is doing stellar work here with these and others!
@drgreensleeves@sardinebags absolutely it is the concert of the notes - broad spectrum, THC/CBC rich and reinforced profiles, subjected to the peculiarities of the local variants of sweat curing. The cures found both in hash cultures as well as most every tropical ganja locale won’t make mids a private stash but will absolutely refine and magnify the effect and profile. Quite significant differences in the styles as well, ie the black cured Oaxaxan cob i have smokes very different but in the same spirit as the same plant cured to a green/gold in brick (the form being not so consequential as the depth of the cure here).
In regards to hemp and reading into what it means here - many SE Asian plants are multi-use in cultural context - often used for cooking as well as the psychoactive effect. Some famous flagships with ring dinger zinger profiles (this being one of them ) but many prized for the panarama of profile and purpose.
It’s true that Southeast Asia has always been selected for medicinal use.
I rarely hear other statements.
That’s why it sometimes irritates me when the world’s hallucinogenic weed is supposed to come from this region. That’s why I assume that selection isn’t the only decisive factor.
There are tropical zones where every cannabis variety goes in this direction, regardless of whether it’s South America or Africa.
I’m just trying to explain that this extreme hallucinogenic effect was probably more of a side effect and not the actual goal.
Of course, there were individuals who liked this effect, but it wasn’t the average thought.
I could imagine that the average person even tried to select away from this effect. And promptly, you can also find very mild varieties in Southeast Asia.
This is a hypothesis that this mildnessperhaps reflects the spirit of Southeast Asians.
Now the theory that it contains hemp.
I don’t really believe that because there are different ethnic groups in Southeast Asia.
And everyone does something different. Some and arguably the mostare specialized in hemp, others less so. Maybe I’m misinformed here, but I believe that there are some hemp-free zones in northern Laos.
I’m simply critical of generalizing and saying that everything contains hemp.
My reasons are that this variety is hallucinogenic and its shortest phenotype is 17 weeks flowering and it doesn’t grow very broad-leaved or very densely. The seeds aren’t very large either.
Then I know another Southeast Asian variety, a hallucinogenic variety. This one blooms for at least 18 months and is exactly as thin as bamboo. These are the only two strains where I have pictures of it that are hallucinogenic or stronger. This points away from hemp to me, but that’s just a hypothesis.
In my opinion, the extreme hallucinogenic effect comes from natural selection in this region and the simultaneous selection for THC from humans.
It could also be important that in Southeast Asia, cannabis has a few more genes in genetic tests than other tropical varieties, so there was less of a bottleneck.
The mindset of the people may also be important, for example, to select gentler puffs.
It should also be noted that one of the best aromatic woods, called Oud, comes from Vietnam. One of the best coffees in the world also comes from regions like Malaysia or Vietnam.
In comparison, Colombia and Kenya have some of the best coffee ever. For me, this is a clear sign that gold simply sprouts from certain regions.
In the end, I am also sympathizer of the assumption that there is a bit of hemp in it and that the spectrum of cannabinoids is thus expanded but I am simply unsure whether this is the case. There are various indications. Basically, hemp is already widespread in Vietnam, Cambodia, and so on. I have to leave it at , both are possible.
Or let’s put it this way: it’s simply not true that everything is hemp and is grown by the Hmong tribe. When you type Cannabis Vietnam into Google, you always see these Hmong hemppictures without interruption.
But this is only in the northern part of Southeast Asia.