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The Landrace Indica thread

rainha Ginga

Ginga don't sell seeds
Veteran
New pakistan pics
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and male
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Peace RG
 

supahdupah

Member
thx 4 sharing nice pics everyone!

Here´s some new chinese yunnan pics!
6 weeks in bloom under 400w hps. grown in soil, coco and bloodmeal fed with some biobizz bloom.



 

pebble

Well-known member
Veteran
what a beautifull pics and lines, rainha Ginga and supahdupah!!
big muaaaa! (kiss) fi the queens ;) and a big hug di the kings
 

supahdupah

Member
have anyone grown some bhutan lines?, i was told by a old stoner that they got their own charas production there and it supose to be of top quality...it´s not very easy to go there and find out. im very curious of this
 
INDICA GURUS
Any feed back on SEEDSMAN Narkush?

Mriko no way for you to walk into on of them Afghani seeds shops and buy a monster bag of there highest grade and send um in as freebies........Im sure bunch of us are willing to chip in for one of them zips full


This thread will never thrive against the sativa thread ,WHEN ONLY A FEW HAVE LANDRACE INDICA BEANS IN PURE FORM
 
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Geronimo

Member
In looking at all of the Landrace Indicas, there doesn't seem to be that many of them. Correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like all or most of the worlds indicas come from one area.
 

mriko

Green Mujaheed
Veteran
This thread will never thrive against the sativa thread ,WHEN ONLY A FEW HAVE LANDRACE INDICA BEANS IN PURE FORM

I've shared heaps of beans, from Mazar and Pak's hindu Kush, but as a matter of fact only a handful of people have posted grow reports and, unless I'm wrong, I don't think there's a single one on ICmag, maybe something about the Mazar, but for the Yarkhun, nada !


have anyone grown some bhutan lines?, i was told by a old stoner that they got their own charas production there and it supose to be of top quality...it´s not very easy to go there and find out. im very curious of this

Bhutanese Charas strains would rather be Sativa I think. Maybe in drier places near Tibetan border could yield some indica influenced strains, but not sure. THe country is heavilyhit by moonsoon which make it hard for indica strains.
Not that difficult to go anymore. Now you can go for a single day without having to pay for the huge expenses usually asked. ANd you can do it several days in a range, you just have to go back to India before border closes.


In looking at all of the Landrace Indicas, there doesn't seem to be that many of them. Correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like all or most of the worlds indicas come from one area.

You can find indica landraces from Iran to Siberia so that's more than an area, or a pretty big one eheh...
What we have here in the thread, Afghan, Pakistan, Uzbek, Tajik, Yunnan, western Mongolia and maybe some Iranian? Not that bad !
But there's quite a lack considering the expansion of the Indica variation. Probably due to the fact that it mostly grows in countries which, historically, werenot part of the hippie scene, and are also places which are not always as accessible, or easy to travel, as other tropical ones. More, Indica strains are rather used for hash, so of course no seeded buds to be exported !

Irie !
 

Pops

Resident pissy old man
Veteran
mriko, If I had a camera, I would post more about the land race strains I am growing.I just harvested 3 Yunnan Indicas, who suffered greatly from my desert heat. All 3 hermied and the buds were very fluffy. They are drying now. I have both Mazar-i-sherif and Shebergan in veg now. Here are thew Sheberghan.


Now the Mazar:


Clones of my Yunnan(I will try again in cooler weather)"

and lastly a pic of a Mazar, a Sheberghan and a LUI.


These are courtesy of Dubi and ngakpa. I will have some Deep Chunk, PTK, Hindu Kush#1 and others coming later in the year. I will try to borrow my daughters camera, if I can delete all the nude pics of her boyfriends.
 
C

charlie garcia

Beautiful pìcs everyone

Mriko I always wondered about Nepal and North Indian indica lines as well, not much known or maybe hard to document them well but havent heard much for years about indicas there but mostly about sativas

Being most irregular lines with irregular individuals often would take a while to find the good ones to work with but I am sure some lines still can have nice breeding potential... with little luck.

In the first pics Pakistan Chitral and last 2 shots are Uzbekistan grown od by a good argentinian friend and last one being grown indoors

best

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uzbi-1.jpg
 
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mriko

Green Mujaheed
Veteran
Shebarghan seeds going around ? nice thing ! I'm curious to see how they compare with the Mazar, look pretty similar for now.

Mriko I always wondered about Nepal and North Indian indica lines as well, not much known or maybe hard to document them well but havent heard much for years about indicas there but mostly about sativas

I have seen some plants with undoubtfull indica influence on roadsides in Kashmir valley, and I also know about indica to be found in some areas of Nepal (have to find back the message to give a more precise location). I also wouldn't be surprised that some indica strains are grown in some remote areas of Ladakh or Lahaul, but that's only a supposition here eheh...

Superb plants Charlie! thumbs up to your friend !

Irie !
 

ngakpa

Active member
Veteran
These are courtesy of Dubi and ngakpa. I will have some Deep Chunk, PTK, Hindu Kush#1 and others coming later in the year. I will try to borrow my daughters camera, if I can delete all the nude pics of her boyfriends.

hahaha

I'm afraid the HK#1 (Chitrali Laspur) if it is from our stuff is definitely heat-damaged, real pity

...itching to see more pics of the Sheberghan and Mazar though

what's the consensus on the indica phenotype being an adaptation to desert conditions?

if it is, then presumably anywhere in a rain-shadow there is a chance you may find indicas - yes, no?
 

mriko

Green Mujaheed
Veteran
what's the consensus on the indica phenotype being an adaptation to desert conditions?

kinda yes. It's just obvious from the typical plant structure which is especially designed to channel the little water it receives right to the base of the trunk. Plus the thick canopy of a well developped plant provides some thermal isolation to the core, making it able to keep a relative coolness and humidity level below the green shield. Those plants pictured here (not by me) show greatly how it is designed to keep water I think.




if it is, then presumably anywhere in a rain-shadow there is a chance you may find indicas - yes, no?

That's a probability indeed.

I'm afraid the HK#1 (Chitrali Laspur) if it is from our stuff is definitely heat-damaged, real pity

Ooooooh, what happened ? Sad news it is... I've myself very few seeds left of the pure Laspur, I just hope they're stil good as they start being old (from 2002).

Nice plants BB !

Irie !
 

Raco

secretion engineer
Moderator
ICMag Donor
Veteran
mriko said:
kinda yes. It's just obvious from the typical plant structure which is especially designed to channel the little water it receives right to the base of the trunk. Plus the thick canopy of a well developped plant provides some thermal isolation to the core, making it able to keep a relative coolness and humidity level below the green shield. Those plants pictured here (not by me) show greatly how it is designed to keep water I think.






That's a probability indeed.


Very interesting!! :yes:

A couple of DC cuts ...biomass :D

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A

Afghanicus

hindu kush

hindu kush

Here is Hindu kush, seeds originally from sensi seeds. Second generation selection. Most strongly indica phenotype. Hopefully good medicine :)

img1364hc9.jpg
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