First time I've seen them in combination!this has been going on for like, 15 years!
First time I've seen them in combination!this has been going on for like, 15 years!
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Type | Physical Characteristics | Potency range (THC % of dry weight) | Market Share (%), Price per ounce (£) |
Morocco | Kif, Djibli, Ketama, Zero Zero. May originate from elsewhere in North Africa. By far the most commonly available cannabis in the UK. | 0.9%-26% | 42% of market |
Light | Also known as "Slate". Normally found in thin slabs around 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick. Light brown in colour, smell lightly to strongly aromatic or "biscuity" dependent on age and quality, which is normally poor to medium. Crumbles to powdery or fluffy texture on heating. Very common. Rating - 5.7/10 | typically 3-9% | 20% of market £70-£100 Avg £85 per ounce |
Dark | Also known as "Soap Bar" or "Black Moroccan". Extremely common. Arrives in 250g blocks approximately 3/4 inch thick, wrapped in clear cellophane, like a block of brown soap, often with makers imprint. Dark brown in colour, sometimes greenish, with shiny exterior. Smell mildly to strongly aromatic, depending on age and quality, which is extremely variable. On heating may crumble or soften, but may reform into small nodules on cooling. These pose a threat to clothing when they fall as hot coals from a badly-constructed spliff, leading to those "inevitable pinhole burns" (P.Floyd) Rating - 6.9/10 | Typically 4-7% | 22% of market, £70-£110 Avg £88 per ounce |
Lebanon | Now rare, but very common in early 1980s. Normally in blocks up to 1 inch thick, and up to a half kilo, wrapped in coarse white cloth bearing makers trademark. Appearance light brown (Lebanese gold/blond) to mid-brown (Red Leb), slightly malleable. Pungent aromatic aroma depending on age and quality. Crumbles on heating. Small lumps when lit will often remain smouldering until exhausted, and may be smoked on a pin. Excessive use, or by those unused to the variety, can lead to uncontrollable fits of coughing (Lebanese cough). Quality variable The eighties prices were only 60-70% of those of "black", this price differential has now been eroded, so users now pay a premium for novelty/nostalgia value. Rating 6.6/10 | 1.0%-18% | 5% of market, £70-£120 Avg £89 per ounce |
"Black" | Most "Black Hash" is either from Pakistan or Afghanistan, and is rarely identified by country of origin. It is distinguishable from "Black Moroccan" by the soft, oily texture, and its malleability - it may be squeezed and kneaded into different shapes, and may even be rolled into long "strings" which can be inserted into a spliff without being heated. Some "black"-type resins are now imported from Central Africa. Average rating 7.0/10 | 9% of market, £65-120 Avg £90 per ounce | |
Afghanistan | Very common. Soft, malleable dark brown resin, smell often putrid, internal consistency may be uneven with small lumps. normally crumbles on heating | 1.7%-6.5% | |
Pakistan | Very common, normally appears in blocks wrapped in red cellophane ("Red seal"), larger (250g-1kg) blocks bear imprint or trademark. Also appears as "Gold Seal" although appearance of gold colouring on exterior is no guarantee of quality, and may be mimicked by tranferring lettering from "Rizla" packet. | 2.4%-15% | |
India | Less common - appearance as per other "Black" types, often with a greenish tinge and more aromatic smell. May be mouldy, in sticks twisted into bundles, irregular shapes or wafers with shiny surface. Some may be of hard consistency. Also in kilogram blocks "Manali" - soft Indian-black hashish, appears in 3-4 inch cylinders or flattened pieces. "Goan" - From South-West India, fine consistency aromatic black hashish | 2.2%-26% 10-12% | |
Nepal | Rare in UK, no organised market, normally imported by independent travellers. Appearance dark black to greenish-black, pressed flat into cakes or rolled into "Temple Balls" about the size of a golf ball, texture soft to brittle, Exterior often mouldy, with streaks in interior. May be loose and crumbly like soil. | 11%-15% | |
Other Hashish | Other forms of hashish are occasionally seized by customs, or encountered by tourists in the Coffee-Shops. Average rating 6.4/10 | 5.8%-13% | Very. rare, £45-£160 (avg £88) per ounce |
Turkey: Greenish-brown powder or thin wafers | 3.5%-8.8% | ||
Iran | 11% | ||
Egypt Greece | 0.7%-11.5% | ||
"Nederhash". Green and powdery Dutch hashish made from high quality hybrids, using sieve to separate heads of glandular trichomes (THC glands) from vegetable material. Normally fresh hence very strong smell of flowering tops, and very high potency. Potency refers to UK-produced material. | Up to 59% | ||
"Formula" | Occasionally very poor quality cannabis resin is encountered, normally resembling bars of Moroccan "soap", but with a very hard, brittle "bakelite" texture with fragments not crumbling when heated, and forming thin slivers when broken. This appears to be resin mixed with henna or other bulking agent Impurities - Resin is often smuggled into the UK within fuel tanks, and contamination with diesel fuel is not uncommon, THC content is not usually affected. The most common impurity revealed by forensic analysis is "caryophyline" a constituent of oil of cloves, commonly found in Asian resin, but also occasionally in "soap bar". This appears to be a used as a perfume, but may also have a mild numbing effect on the nose and mouth. This substance would appear to be introduced during manufacture. |
Type | Physical Characteristics | Potency range (THC % of dry weight) | Market Share (%), Price per ounce (£) |
Thailand/ Far East | Compressed herbal cannabis, normally contains some seeds and smaller stems. Thai sticks now rare, individual buds wrapped around bamboo twigs. Colour normally greenish-brown, smell distinctive "herby" to musty, depending on age. Rating 7.9/10 | 0.4%-17% | 7% of market, £75-£120 Avg £96 per ounce |
Caribbean | Jamaica: Normally coarse compressed flowering heads, brown, normally containing seeds & stems. Better varieties are sinsemilla (sensi) i.e. buds without seeds. Rating 7.0/10 | 0.2%-13% | 2% of market, £75-£120 per ounce |
Trinidad | 8.5% | ||
St Lucia | 5.5% | ||
Grenada | 1.8% | ||
Antigua | 1.9% | ||
Africa | Wide range of African varieties. Normally dark green/brown compressed herbal material, High stem/flower ratio, seeds. Overall rating 7.1/10 | 0.7%-4.3% | 9% of market, £50-£120 Avg £91 per ounce |
Ghana: Brown, often leafy normally compressed | 0.7%-4.3% | ||
Zambia: Green or brown compressed and wrapped in coarse vegetable fibre | 1.3%-7.7% | ||
Nigeria: Brown, with small twisted stems; | 0.8%-8.4% | ||
S.Africa: Green small rolls in brown paper, or brown and mature with seeds "Durban Poison" of higher quality and price. | 0.6%-7.6% | ||
Kenya: Green/brown, often appears rolled in cigar-shaped paper packages known as "fingers". | 1.0%-5.8% | ||
Malawi | 3.8% | ||
Zimbabwe | 1.2%-9.6% | ||
Tanzania | 1.7%-6.2% | ||
Swaziland | 2.1%-3.6% | ||
America | Mexico: Often coarse, compressed into kilo bricks. Better varieties include Oaxacan, Acapulco Gold. | 0.4%-4.5% 1.3%-6.9% | Very rare in UK £100 - £160 per ounce |
Columbia: Commercial grade compressed green/brown. High grade buds brown to golden. | 2.5%-8.0% | ||
USA: Very high US prices keep most of the crop at home. Normally found in second generation indoor plants grown from seed.Hawaiian, e.g. "Maui Wowie" particularly prized - large buds with sweet aroma. | 0.9%-10.3% | ||
Canada: British Columbian buds are highly prized in the western USA, not seen in UK | 10%-27% | ||
Home-Grown | Normally grown outdoors. Common in season (September to November), rare and probably stale out of season. Green to brown, normally leaf, often a fresh "grassy" smell. Few flowering tops normally present, quality varies from very poor to medium. Normally consumed by the grower, often in food or drink, frequently in neat cigarettes, or used as a tobacco substitute. Where distributed, most commonly given away free - no organised market. | 0.3%-3.5% Rating 5.6/10 | 7% of consumption £0-£80 Avg £47 per ounce |
Hemp | Cultivated legally outdoors in the UK under license from the Home Office, on agricultural scale for fibre, hurds and seeds. Attracts EEC subsidy. There is a growing market for commercial products: clothing, footwear, paper, food (burgers, salad oils etc.), horse bedding, construction materials etc. Seeds bred for very low THC potency, average below 0.3%. Other approved seed strains may produce slightly higher potencies, although one would need to smoke very large amounts in order to achieve a high. Unlicensed cultivation remains an offence, and strict conditions must be met before a licence can be granted. Hemp plant are identical in appearance to other cannabis plants if allowed to branch, and produce flowering tops. Usually grown very close together to encourage single unbranched stems. Hemp seeds are a common ingredient in bird seed and fish bait, and the oil from seeds contains several essential fatty acids claimed to be beneficial for health. Very long internodal lengths & symmetrical nodes (>10-15cm) | 0.01% to 0.3% | Approx. £30 per tonne |
Type | Physical Characteristics | Potency range (THC % of dry weight) | Market Share (%), Price per ounce (£) |
"Skunk" | The trademark of "Sensi Seeds" in Amsterdam. Strictly refers to plants grown from their seeds or cuttings from those seeds. True skunk has a very strong pungent aroma, such that a few buds are enough to cause the distinctive smell to pervade a whole room. The pistils are normally white, and the bud is very resinous and greenish-white. Internodal length 2-7cm. The quality of true skunk is medium to very high, depending on the skill and system used by the grower. Rating 8.9/10 | 6%-15% (Typically 10%-12%) | 9% of market £70 - £180 Avg £129 per ounce |
Northern Lights | Short-stature indica/sativa hybrid (internodal length 1-6cm) with clear colourless resin, pistils (twin hair-like protrusions) white or brown with age, medium-dark green leaves. Prized for the light, fresh smell & taste. Among the varieties which can produce the most potent plants when grown in ideal conditions. Rating - 8.9/10 | 3.5%-22% (Typically 10%-12%) | 3% of market £70-£180 Avg £137 per ounce |
Haze | Purple resin coating on female flowers and upper stems. Late flowering sativa variety, tall, narrow leaflets, thin but abundant flowers. Internodal length 5-15cm, therefore lower yields per height than "Skunk/NL". Spicy sweet and sour aroma. Rating - 8.3/10 | 6% plus | £80-£180 Avg £138 per ounce |
Big Bud | True hybrid (indica/sativa) with variable daughter plants, only a small proportion of which will be short, high-yielding, early flowering and potent, producing dense medium to dark green floral clusters with high resin content. | 2.4%-12% | £70-£180 per ounce (Estimate) |
Super-skunk | Variant on Skunk#1, crossed with afghani parent. Broad medium-light green leaves, very strong pungent aroma. Internodal length 2-7cm. | 7%-20% | £70-£180 per ounce (Estimate) |
Shiva Shanti. | Afghani-type indica with broad dark green leaves originally used for hashish production. Early-flowering, coarse buds with high resin content. Aroma and taste thick, acrid, greasy, medicinal. | 6.8%-14.4% | £70-£180 (Estimate) |
Other Hybrids | Varieties listed in seed catalogues include the following varieties: Sensi-skunk, Silver haze, Shiva-skunk, Four Way, Early Girl, Jack Herer, White Widow, Durban Poison etc. | 2.4%-15% | £70-£180 (Estimate) |
ones i got the fondest memories of are jack herer, ak-47, shiva shanti, silver haze. jack herer most of all. had a good line on that for a while. did have a romance with cheese a lot later on too.
You can't argue with science.We are the 6th version of Humans on Earth. So we are a hybrid species crossed between Draco Reptilians and Lyran Humans. We contain a significant amount of reptilian genes which is why we are so aggressive and reactive. The reptilian genes and our reptile brain, allows us to be triggered and thus controlled very easily. But it also makes us extremely determined and fierce and unstoppable when we are angry. We are a terrifyingly powerful hybrid because we have the immense love of the Human heart mixed with the warrior Draco genetics. We have between 12 to 22 base species in our genome. And not all races are the same on Earth, and we've been lied to about that. The African race comes from a completely different genetic program and they have no Neanderthal genes at all. White Aryan Caucasians have Neanderthal genes. The African people have a completely different Earth ancestry. All of us contain the reptilian genes. But the elite bloodlines on Earth have the most reptilian genes which is why sometimes you see them shapeshift. None of us are mammalian, all of us are reptilian hybrids. We are an Obligate Carnivore species. One needs to understand what an Obligate Carnivore is because the media lies continuously about the proper Human diet. An Obligate Carnivore has no mechanism to digest plant fiber, and that is true for Humans.
where is the gm pot?would infer most of these genetics to be borderline extinct, at least before everything went mutant
cheese was birthed by Exodus sound system in Luton of all places
Get with the times, grandpa. A couple of weeks ago I ordered a half ounce of nice hash on a darkweb marketplace and it plopped through my letterbox a few days later.It is still too difficult to obtain good quality weed and hash.