Cannagenetics

e deviant from his own perspective as biased. But if we look at the agents of
social control as one out of a multiplicity of definers of social reality, no more or less
valid than any other, then the possibility is open for us to see the deviant through his own
eyes. If, on the other hand, we adopt a condescending social worker point of view toward
him, that is, the view that we must help him to adjust to society, we will be wholly
incapable of understanding him.
We wish, therefore, to adopt a perspective which decentralizes sources of realitydefinitions.
We wish to throw open a dialogue with all participants in the activity that we
are studying. No one definition of the situation will be allowed to impose itself on any and
all participants. Each version of reality will glint a particle of the total (even though each
version will almost invariably claim to tell the whole story). Each will be incomplete,
although valid on its own level.
Another way of saying something similar is that we assume intentionality on the actor's
part. Marijuana users are fully aware of what they are doing; they enter into the activity,
from start to finish, with open eyes. They are not unwitting dupes, they have not been
conned by a clever "slick," eager to make a profit from their naiveté. They have chosen to
smoke marijuana. There is an active element in their choosing. They imagine themselves,
prior to the act of becoming "turned on," actually smoking. They carry the actions
through, in their minds, conceiving of what they would do "if." They have weighed
alternatives. They have considered social costs. They operate on the basis of a value
system; marijuana use is in part an outgrowth of that value system; using it is a realistic
and a rational choice in that marijuana use will often be and obtain for them what they
anticipate. The basic values may themselves be thought of as irrational by someone with a
more positivistic and scientific-technological-economistic point of view, but this is largely
a matter of definition. Let me illustrate: if I want to become high, smoking marijuana is a
rational choice, but drinking a cup of coffee to attain that state is irrational. The value of
becoming high might be viewed as irrational within the framework of certain values
prevalent in America today, but many marijuana users question those very values.
This point of view holds that marijuana use grows out of many of the processes in
society which we all take to be normal. It is convenient to label as pathological any
phenomenon that we do not like. We attempt to legitimate our biases by claiming for an
activity traits that we reject. Thus, marijuana use becomes a product of boredom—because
boredom is a bad thing, and if marijuana use is produced by it, marijuana use must also be
a bad thing. Or it is rebellion against the older generation or a result of a broken home or
the wish to escape reality or to avoid meaningful attachments to other peoplDwc Jack Herer Bubbler Dwc
Submission to health select committee on cannabis inquiry health thus, harm reduction strategies were seen as concerned with smoking a cannabis only joint enables
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Cannabiogen
the confusion) but rather related to an NCGA experiment (probably
involving a NL with some alleged G-13 in it) dating back to the time they (Sag and NCGA) teamed up briefly.
They just appropriated the Matanuska name, as it had a mystique, and applied to the ""new"" breed. I wouldn’t
be surprised if they registered it as a trademark, which they can in Holland."
"Sag are very liberal with seed names --their ""NL#9"" has no Northern Lights at all, but rather is a combination
of Jack Herer, White Widow and Durban (yeah, nice mix). As you see, its all very seedy (hehehe) and the
only way to ascertain quality is to grow the stuff. I even suspect that Sag permanently lost some of their own
strains, as several of them where out of stock for more than a year (rip-offs and boycotts at their seed grow
operation) and suddenly (suspiciously) resurfaced... perhaps today’s Stonehedge is not the original, but a
female clone crossed with a male Special K to get a seed line going (that would explain the new reference to
Special K in the description).
More ramble than you bargained for, eh? Sorry... got carried away, the story of strains reads like a novel.
Hope this helps though."" -Adam Tripper"
"“I grew out ten seeds earlier this year. The plants were quite robust and large. Although you could see some
indica influence in the leaves, Stonehedge grows like a sativa with internode spacing on the long end of the
spectrum. It needs a lot of light and even then the yield is somewhat exiguous. The buds grow in dense
clusters and begin to put on some weight after fifty days of flowering. The aroma of the plant is subtle, an
earthy grapefruit bouquet if I were pressed for a description. There is excellent resin production which picks
up markedly after fifty days of flowering. The high is intense and long-lasting. I like the way the smoke
tastes and makes me feel but I am not happy about the yield. Ten seeds were not sufficient in this case to
get a mother of truly outstanding character. Perhaps another female would produce a heavier yield. I do not
know.” -Moose"
"“Don't know too much about Stonehedge's parents. It was indica dominant, dense nugs and a hashy flavour.
A ""stony"" party killer-type herb. Pretty average when compared to some of the other strains available.”
–Geronimo
Type high/strength: lightweight smoke Height: 2m Yield: med Harvest date (Netherlands natural
photoperiod): end Sept 12hr day exposure harvest (# of weeks): 8-10 indoor / greenhouse / outdoor Early
flowering (good breeding stock for earliness), good for the Dutch Alps"
"“The top44 is a cannabis strain developed in Holland some years ago, it's mostly indica crossed with a skunk
and something else, there are a lot off speculations what this 'else' might be, but for now it's still unknown.
The top44 is an impressive fast flowering plant, I never heard off a strain that was faster, it has an flowering
time from only 6 weeks (44 days), but gives big resinous buds in