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After tasting "Milk of Mazar" or in Pashto "Shirak-i-Mazar" in Afghanistan, Hippies on their trail moved to land of care and taste, where hash was treated very differently and culturally. INDIA and NEPAL. Parvati valley and in the Middle Hills of mid-western Nepal inhabiting highlands extending through eastern Rukum and northern Salyan, Rolpa and Pyuthan Districts in Rapti Zone as well as Dhaulagiri and Bheri Zones exclusively did and still do only HANDRUB. When hippies came to these areas they saw something unique and special that they haven’t seen before. Landrace strain from these areas was/is famous for there Spicy to very spicy taste, Distinctive aroma and consistency. There is a relegious angle to it as well, Muslims believed in killing the plant, drying it dead till its powder dry and than sift it. After sifting it through fine silk-cloth they used to get powder that’s called KEIF in Lebanon and Morocco and called Garda in Hindukush (Afghan/Pak/kashmir). After that Garda was stuffed in dead goats skins, sealed and buried 3 to 4 feet deep in soil for curing and whenever they had to process hashish they would take out goats skins from soil and heat press whatever the amount they wanted. This charas is very soft but never called creame. This method is still used in India in Pangi and Teesa Valley of Chamba district of Himachal because majority population in that area is Muslim migrated from Afghan/Pak. ppl talk abut parvati a lot but i am amazed how nobody, even old hippies seldon talk about PANGI VALLEY N TEESA IN HIMACHAL - Every Ent should visit that area once in lifetime and experience that shit, its best source of MUSLIM CHARAS in INDIA But for IndoNepal Hindus, it was a religious plant, it was to be worshipped and offered to Shiv. These Hindus couldn’t be more fucked killing the plant and than putting it goat skins and than offering it to there Sadhus so as a matter of devotion they made love to live buds by very gently m softly caressing live buds in three hands and extracting the nectar. a different method of hash production was evolved as world famous HANDRUB/CREME
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Hi am shady.I am from kathmandu,nepal.A wanna be grower. A year ago i started collecting seed here in kathmandu. And by that i mean, kept the seeds of all the plants that i have come across and loved. Some of which i bought and some i found growing in the suburbs.So i cant say anything about the quality of these plants and the seeds, their strain. Now i am about to go hunting around and just outside kathmandu.So i was wondering if u guys could help me with that. I want to know the names of great strains that i can find here and maybe the places. Just the names of stains i can find here will be great for me as a starter to looking for. Thank you. its a pleseure to be people who love this plants.
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I found this video interesting. Hunting hallucinogenic honey in Nepal. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_b2i_FvYPw
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nirakar here from nepal. we got some real big marijuana trees in nepal. this 20 footer was my very first plant way back in 2009.
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Hello everyone. I am arranging a unique experience for anyone that would like to join. I will be headded to Nepal in August to go camping, smoke, and enjoy nature. Anyone who would like to come along is more then welcome. Currently it is myself and one other person. We will have plenty of gear, so if you would like to join, you would probably just need a sleeping bag and a mat. The more the marrier!
About us
Strain Hunters is a series of documentaries aimed at informing the general public about the quest for the preservation of the cannabis plant in the form of particularly vulnerable landraces originating in the poorest areas of the planet.
Cannabis, one of the most ancient plants known to man, used in every civilisation all over the world for medicinal and recreational purposes, is facing a very real threat of extinction. One day these plants could be helpful in developing better medications for the sick and the suffering. We feel it is our duty to preserve as many cannabis landraces in our genetic database, and by breeding them into other well-studied medicinal strains for the sole purpose of scientific research.
