Germany legalized weed, then made sharing it basically illegal.
That’s the absurd center of this new @HIGH_TIMES_Mag piece by Tim Lamoth: you can grow together, trim together and build a club together. But when it’s time to smoke, you’re supposed to do it alone.
https://t.co/IeSRRtuzdS
1977. Sinsemilla: Marijuana Flowers by Jim Richardson with photos by Arik Woods.
This wasn’t some underground pamphlet — it was a full-color, coffee-table transmission that dropped the sacred knowledge of seedless, high-potency cultivation right when the modern movement needed it most. Lavish shots of living landrace-inspired flowers, maturity stages, and the pure art of the plant in her prime.
Before the internet. Before seed banks flooded the game. Before everything got hybridized into oblivion. This book helped shift the culture from seeded brick weed to the sinsemilla revolution that birthed today’s elite genetics.
Study every layer — from the deep indigenous handoffs in the highlands to these early Western codifications of the craft. Respect to the keepers who documented it when it was still risky.
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What is your favorite vintage cannabis magazine or artifact?
#LandraceBureau #Sinsemilla #CannabisHistory #VintageWeedBooks #PreservingTheLegacy #MarijuanaFlowers #AncestralKnowledge #LandraceCannabis