This looks much like what I encountered in the 70s only what I saw were skinnier and tied (like these) onto the "sticks," which may have been weed stems. A friend in the Pacific northwest showed me a trash bag in a closet filled with them and it was fabulous.
I can't imagine how you hung onto these so many years and, hopefully, you'll find a seed or two. I recall seeds were rare but there were the occasional finds. Thanks for sharing!
I remember that as well, but thoes 70's hazes were fairly well seeded. Being an Equatorial strain, they never truly finished, and would eventually herm.
However, the farmers who understood this would harvest them before they became too seeded. That was the best! It had such an intensity, as it's terp profile is like nothing I've had since the 80's. It's still gotta be around, just extremely rare, and hard to find.
The Europeans, Americans......pretty much destroyed all the landraces by breeding, and farming.
Pollin flys a very very long way. In the fall in S Spain, the pollen from Africa can travel to S Europe. That's amazing.
Even true Jamaican weed is gone. Hopefully there have been some of a few of these strains preserved.People got greedy, and wanted larger harvests
Interesting read