What they are asking is WHY do you want CW over any other CBD strain.
What can I say, the Brothers are good at marketing.
Why is CBD more prevalent in Indica versus Sativa, I don't know. Some evolutionary divergence? Just saying, when the hunting/breeding goes down, CW will be a mediocre medicinal strain at best. There are entire countries filled with CBD plants that have yet to be chromatographed. Where the CBD strains come from.
An oriental man would have connection to those areas (or people in/traveled to those areas), much more than a white boy Greenrusher.
I'd be more interested in a CBD plant that doesn't look like a genetic reject, personally.
Just wondering, what would be the effect of crossing an r-4 or similar CBD high strain with some hemp? Not worried about ruining the THC content at that point. Or a low content Ruderrallis?
Of course in the ag scale production of things, many chemistry routes may be employed to isolate the various compounds.
One guy suggests basically cooking off the THC till you are left with CBD and other more stable cannabinoids.
"Cannabinoid Flashpoints:
tetrahydrocannabivarin (THCV)
Flash Point: 137.6 °C (279.68 °F)
delta-8-tetrahydrocannabinol (delta-8-THC)
Flash Point: 144.5 °C (292.10 °F)
delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)
Flash Point: 149.3 °C (300.74 °F)
cannabichromene (CBC)
Flash Point: 174.2 °C (345.56 °F)
cannabidiol (CBD)
Flash Point: 206.3 °C (403.34 °F)
cannabigerol (CBG)
Flash Point: 207.2 °C (404.96 °F)
cannabinol (CBN)
Flash Point: 212.7 °C (414.86 °F)"
But fractional distillation, chromatography, ect are all possible.
And there is the fact that the longer she runs the more the THC will degrade. Changing your ratios.
Might have better luck with these guys than the SB, too.
https://www.thcfarmer.com/community/threads/high-cbd-medicinal-farming.55954/
"the strain ac/dc is 22%cbd/1%thc, the male was found in a french hemp field and still had thc present"
Well, looks like I'll be getting some hemp here. Finally, a reason to go out to Kansorado.