The Real Seed Company Mazar-i-Sharif

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Cannabiscotti

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 2, 2008
Messages
276
Reaction score
132
as described from attitude seed bank....

Sex : Regular
Type : Indica Flowering : Photoperiod Genetics : Traditional North Afghan charas cultivar Flowering Time : Long Outdoor Harvest : December to early January Height : Tall THC Level : Medium Characteristics : Unusually large indica strain with classic wide leaved characteristics
Grown around the desert towns of Balkh, Mazar-i-Sharif and Sheberghan in the far north of Afghanistan, close to the modern borders of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. This Mazar-i-Sharif strain produces the legendary hashish known as ""Shirak-i-Mazar"" and ""Milk of Mazar"". The people of these regions are a patchwork of Turkic, Tajik, Afghan and Pashtun tribes, and the history of Mazar-i-Sharif strains is likely to be equally complex. In fertile and well-irrigated soils these vigorous giants are capable of reaching 4 metres in height or more, and will produce a similarly immense yield of intensely resinous flowers. Traditionally harvested in the first half of December with the onset of the brutal Central Asian winter, Mazar-i-Sharif plants will enjoy cold conditions, including snow, and will turn a deep blood red in low temperatures. Growers favour leaving harvest as late as possible, sometimes into early January. Sieved ""Milk of Mazar"" garda is very resinous and so can be hand-pressed to make charas; it has a distinctively pungent, sweet aroma and a dreamily mellow high. Over-indulgence produces a mind-warping, immobilising and narcotic effect.

Type: Traditional landrace/pure-bred
Yield:
1.5 to 2 kg of dried flowers in natural outdoor environment
Aroma:
pungent, intense terpene aroma, classic Afghan, with some sweetness
12 and 15 regular cannabis seeds





Does anyone have any experience with growing these monsters outdoors? can they really survive frost and snow? it must look like a Christmas tree covered in snow!
 
I dont know but that would be cool! put it out with the lettuce in winter.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top