Jogro
Well-Known Member
Well, I don't think anyone is claiming that today's stuff is *LESS* potent than the stuff from the 70s! Some people do claim that the quality of the "high" of the stuff from the 70s was better.Didn't know all these things...thanks for the lesson ! But in the last 30 days [years] i think that there was always somone selecting for the potency then the power of today's weed must be comparable to those years if not better...
I wasn't smoking weed in the 70s, but this seems plausible to me. Again, in the 70s you had pure landrace sativa strains, grown outdoors in their native environments. Some people think that high quality is largely related to just length of flowering time, and maybe there is something to that.
Very few people are growing out 16+ week flowering plants indoors. These plants typically aren't suitable for indoor grows, being stretchy, hermie-prone and low yielding. Unless you have a greenhouse, you can't really grow them outdoors in most of the USA either (due to winter coming and killing your plants). True tropical/long season outdoor grown sativas like this just don't get smuggled into the USA much anymore either. Much of the Mexican "brick" stuff that gets smuggled in nowadays has been genetically bastardized specifically to increase yield and provide earlier harvests. The genetics aren't the same as in the 70s.
In terms of breeding for potency, some people think that cannabis is literally THE oldest plant ever cultivated by man. If it isn't, its certainly ONE of them, with documented cultivation going back roughly 10,000 years.
So its not like cannabis has "only" been cultivated for potency in the last 30 years. Humans have been selectively breeding it for max potency literally since pre-historical times.
Some individual lines, like the Afghani Mazari Shariff can probably trace back 1000 years or more. Simon Bolivar supposedly traded cannabis in his trips around Latin America in the early 19th century. The line he used was believed to be the founder of the modern Santa Marta/Columbian Gold, meaning that line traces back at least 200 years. Drug use of cannabis is mentioned in the Judaic talmud, dating back roughly 1500 years.
Anyway, with 10,000 years of selective human breeding all over the planet for max potency, I think its reasonable to think that the plants genetic maximum potential, or pretty close to it, has probably been reached some time ago.