Hey OG. Happy New Years. Hope I’m doing this right. I’ve been meaning to do this one for a while and I’ve finally gotten around to it. I was gifted these seeds close to a year ago now. I haven’t been able to find these for sale anywhere, or very much information on them for that matter.
What we know:
This is an unknown Chinese landrace cross, originating in the Namgerville jungle. Supposedly named after tigers due to the large population found in the gorge this strain originates from. This is a high THC strain (supposedly 19-25%), with terps ranging from sweet baking, vanilla oats, to fruity and piney profiles.
That’s literally all I’ve been able to find so far, I encourage everyone following this to try and dig up some more information on this strain for us. When I was gifted these seeds, I was told that it is a light feeder and it is relatively easy to grow. Let’s see if that holds true.
It appears that cult classics released a cross of this strain at some point:
I found a post from Instagram, supposedly a picture of this strain:
Enough background, on to the grow. We went 4/5 on our Tiger Berry germination. For extra fun, I’ve also germinated:
3x Chunky Mint Kush.
These were gifted to me by the same person, this is Uzbekistan landrace x thin Mint Kush. The landrace mother had a strong menthol stem rub as well.
3x Columbian Gum from @LegsMahoney.
We’re 1/3 for germination on these so far. We have no idea what these are but I guess we’re about to find out.
I’m planning on reproducing Tiger Berry, and crossing these strains to each other. I’ve also got some PPP pollen from @DougDawson that’s going to make an appearance.
The seeds were all soaked for 24 hours in dechlorinated tap water and placed into the medium. Medium is old reused organic soil with Gaia green amendments, worm castings, and microbes.
These are a few days old now. One of the Columbian Gum may pop still.
I’m not sure how frequently I’ll be updating this, but pull up a seat and let’s see what these strains have to offer!
Seeds will be made available at the end of this run.
I don’t like to “count my chickens before they hatch”, and have more of these seeds tucked away in case of failure.
Thanks for stopping by