Weed classification is a way of categorizing plants that are considered to be weeds. Generally weeds can be categorized into four distinct categories:
Annuals are weeds that complete their life cycle in one year. They germinate in the spring flower during the summer and die in the fall. Biennial weeds live for two years with the first year being spent as a vegetative stage and the second year being spent flowering and producing seeds. Perennials are weeds that live for more than two years and are often more difficult to control due to their deep root systems. Lastly vines are climbing plants that can spread quickly and choke out other plants.
Skunk
funk
Purple wreck
White widow
Norther Lights
Durga Mata
NY deseal
Sour deseal
sweet deseal
deseal
kush
blueberry
green crack
super skunk
Bc God Bud
White Rino
bubble gum
ak 47
Amsterdam Gold B-52 Bubblegum Big Bud Black Jack Blue Velvet Buddha California Orange Bud Chemotherapy Weed (UBC) Chitral Chronic (BC) Durban Poison
http://www.marijuanapassion.com/forum/showthread.php?t=2206 this is a source for the last clump of names. Look at weed seed banks for more options.
- Juan Guei Wo
There are only a small few different strains of marijuana, such as Sativa and Indica. The differences exist because of the geographic locations they originally came from. Within the sativa/indica family you can come across dozens of plants all named differently - but that is where the similarity's end. Marijuana is grown in wildly different varieties because of the various growing methods (indoors, outdoors, hydroponically, outdoor. The only difference you will come across is the amount of and ratio of THC to cannibanoid (or how much it will mess you up, in laymans terms)
they are not usually called varieties but strains... there are probably thousands of different strains, maybe hundreds of thousands, popular one are : white widow, jack Herer, big bud, lemon skunk, sour diesel.
a new variety is made by cross pollinating two strains, then stabilizing your strain by making two of your strain pollinate over and over until the genes (high/stone, THC content) are satisfying....
Chronic is a type of marijuana. Chronic has many times of varieties. Its just the kinda buzz it gives you that gives it the name Chronic.
Various hemp varieties can probably cross-polinate each other.
Marijuana is used by many for its medicinal properties. It is used for such things as reducing pain, relieving stress or anxiety, combating nausea, and improving appetite. If considering to use marijuana as medicine, it may be worth noting that different varieties of the plant produce different effects. A doctor in a place where medicinal marijuana is legal could best help a patient identify which strain (type of marijuana) is best for them.
Yes, there are some plants that can resemble marijuana, such as hemp and certain varieties of wild plants like dogbane or horseweed. However, it is important to note that these plants do not contain the psychoactive compound found in marijuana.
ok you first need to know weed branches into 2 groups with strains inside on of two. indica and sativa. indica is the pulsating body tingle relax feel with enhanced taste and pleasure sativa is seeing stuff color chnage and hearing music. most strains out there are indica dominant but here are some good strains white rhino, blue budha, sour diesiel, trainwreck, purple banana OG strawberry and blueberry kush, super silver haze, northern lights, white widow, black mamba, afghan, durban poison, ak, fire, ice, cheese, g-13, grape ape, grandaddy purp, strawberry cough, maui maui, super skunk, black purple and thousands more at least
what are varieties of sesame.
The primary chemical in marijuana that gets you high is delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). It interacts with the brain's cannabinoid receptors to produce psychoactive effects, such as feeling euphoric, relaxed, and altered perception.
oregano is something offtenly sold as marijuana
The word "varieties" is a plural noun.
There are allot of varieties in California.
Varieties in spanish is "variedades"
Some varieties are, and some varieties are not.