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|status = Vulnerable
|status = Vulnerable
|coordinates = 32.000000, 77.500000
|coordinates = 32.000000, 77.500000
|description = Major Himalayan charas-producing cultivation region across northern India’s temperate valleys and highland basins
|description = Major Himalayan charas-producing cultivation region across northern India's temperate valleys and highland basins
}}
}}


The '''Western Himalayas''' is a major [[landrace cannabis]] cultivation region spanning the mountain valleys of northern [[India]], encompassing traditional ''[[charas]]'' (hand-rubbed hashish) producing areas in [[Himachal Pradesh]], [[Uttarakhand]] and parts of [[Jammu and Kashmir]].<ref>https://www.pmfias.com/himalayas-regional-divisions-punjab-himalayas-assam-himalayas-western-himalayas-central-himalayas-eastern-himalayas/</ref><ref>https://archive.org/details/b32222920_0001</ref><ref>https://www.unodc.org/pdf/india/publications/south_Asia_Regional_Profile_Sept_2005/10_india.pdf</ref><ref>https://narcoticsindia.nic.in/Publication/2002.pdf</ref>
The '''Western Himalayas''' is a major [[landrace cannabis]] cultivation region spanning the mountain valleys of northern [[India]], encompassing traditional ''[[charas]]'' (hand-rubbed hashish) producing areas in [[Himachal Pradesh]], [[Uttarakhand]] and parts of [[Jammu and Kashmir]].<ref name="pmfias">https://www.pmfias.com/himalayas-regional-divisions-punjab-himalayas-assam-himalayas-western-himalayas-central-himalayas-eastern-himalayas/</ref><ref name="archive_gazette">https://archive.org/details/b32222920_0001</ref><ref name="unodc2005">https://www.unodc.org/pdf/india/publications/south_Asia_Regional_Profile_Sept_2005/10_india.pdf</ref><ref name="narcotics2002">https://narcoticsindia.nic.in/Publication/2002.pdf</ref>


In the Western Himalayas, landrace cannabis is cultivated by local communities and also occurs naturalized across steep valley systems from the Himalayan foothills (~300–600 m) through mid-elevation temperate valleys (e.g., Malana, Kullu, 1500 m through 3200m) to cold-desert basins above 3,000 m; published records extend to ~3,500 m in Lahaul–Spiti.<ref>https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/bitstream/handle/fub188/14541/ThexHolocene-2016-Demske-1661-75.pdf?sequence=1</ref><ref>https://www.researchgate.net/publication/291116090_Retrospect_and_Prospects_of_Natural_Resource_and_Disaster_Management_in_Uttarakhand_Himalaya_Geo-environmental_Characteristics_Natural_Resources_and_Disasters_in_Uttarakhand_State</ref><ref>https://www.eresearchco.com/articles/abnormal-meiosis-in-tetraploid-4x-cannabis-sativa-l-from-lahaulspiti-cold-desert-higher-altitude-himalayasa-neglected-bu.pdf</ref>
In the Western Himalayas, landrace cannabis is cultivated by local communities and also occurs naturalized across steep valley systems from the Himalayan foothills (~300–600 m) through mid-elevation temperate valleys (e.g., Malana, Kullu, 1500 m through 3200 m) to cold-desert basins above 3,000 m; published records extend to ~3,500 m in Lahaul–Spiti.<ref name="demske2016">https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/bitstream/handle/fub188/14541/ThexHolocene-2016-Demske-1661-75.pdf?sequence=1</ref><ref name="uttarakhand_geo">https://www.researchgate.net/publication/291116090_Retrospect_and_Prospects_of_Natural_Resource_and_Disaster_Management_in_Uttarakhand_Himalaya_Geo-environmental_Characteristics_Natural_Resources_and_Disasters_in_Uttarakhand_State</ref><ref name="lahaul_tetraploid">https://www.eresearchco.com/articles/abnormal-meiosis-in-tetraploid-4x-cannabis-sativa-l-from-lahaulspiti-cold-desert-higher-altitude-himalayasa-neglected-bu.pdf</ref>


The region's cannabis populations are cultivated primarily for [[charas]] production, with hand-rubbing techniques passed through generations of farming communities.
The region's cannabis populations are cultivated primarily for [[charas]] production, with hand-rubbing techniques passed through generations of farming communities. Cannabis also occupies a central place in the region's religious life, folk medicine, material culture and food traditions, with documented uses spanning Shaivite ritual offerings, fibre processing for textiles and footwear, seed-based cuisine, and a range of traditional medical preparations.<ref name="rathore2018">{{cite journal |last1=Rathore |first1=Sumati |last2=Shashni |first2=Sarla |last3=Samant |first3=Sher Singh |last4=Sundriyal |first4=Rakesh Chand |title=Indigenous uses of wild hemp (Cannabis sativa) by the local inhabitants in Manikaran Valley of Himachal Pradesh, North Western Himalaya |journal=Journal of Non-Timber Forest Products |volume=25 |issue=3 |pages=127–130 |year=2018}}</ref><ref name="rani2013">{{cite journal |last1=Rani |first1=Savita |last2=Rana |first2=J.C. |last3=Rana |first3=P.K. |title=Ethnomedicinal plants of Chamba district, Himachal Pradesh, India |journal=Journal of Medicinal Plants Research |volume=7 |issue=42 |pages=3147–3157 |year=2013 |doi=10.5897/JMPR2013.5249}}</ref> The economic impact of cannabis cultivation in the region is substantial, particularly in Kullu, Shimla, Kinnaur and Mandi districts, where the plant thrives due to favourable climatic conditions.<ref name="sharma_manjul2024">{{cite journal |last1=Sharma Manjul |first1=Anshul |last2=Sharma |first2=Parveen Prabha |last3=Lata |first3=Charu |title=Cannabis Chronicles: Unveiling Himachal Pradesh's Green Secret |journal=Just Agriculture |volume=5 |issue=2 |year=2024 |issn=2582-8223}}</ref>


== Geography ==
== Geography ==
Line 31: Line 31:


== Culture ==
== Culture ==
Cannabis in the Western Himalayas serves overlapping religious, medicinal, material and culinary functions that are documented across multiple districts and ethnic communities. The plant is not merely cultivated for resin production; it is integrated into daily life, seasonal festivals, healing practices and household craft in ways that vary by valley and community but share a common foundation in Shaivite religious tradition and mountain subsistence agriculture.
=== Religious practice ===
Cannabis holds a revered place in Shaivite Hindu tradition throughout the Western Himalayas. The plant is considered sacred to Lord Shiva and features in both daily worship and festival observance.<ref name="rathore2018" /><ref name="rani2013" /> In the [[Manikaran Valley]] of Kullu District, communities prepare ''Ghota'', an offering made from hemp, for Lord Shiva during the annual Shivaratri festival; hemp leaves are also used as offerings in daily Shiva worship.<ref name="rathore2018" /> In [[Chamba District]], cannabis is among the plants most commonly offered to Shiva and can be found for sale in shops near temples.<ref name="rani2013" />
These local devotional practices connect to a much older textual tradition. The ''Atharva Veda'' (second millennium BC) names ''bhang'' alongside ''Soma'' as one of five sacred plants used "for freedom from distress" (11.6.15) and prescribes the burning of hemp boughs in magical rites (8.8.3).<ref name="aldrich1977">{{cite journal |last=Aldrich |first=Michael R. |title=Tantric Cannabis Use in India |journal=Journal of Psychedelic Drugs |volume=9 |issue=3 |pages=227–233 |year=1977 |doi=10.1080/02791072.1977.10472053}}</ref> In the Shaivite ritual context, ''bhang'' is poured over Shiva's stone phallus (the ''lingam'') and consecrated to Kali.<ref name="campbell1894">{{cite book |last=Campbell |first=J.M. |title=Note on the Religion of Hemp |work=Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report |year=1894}}</ref> The Tantric tradition holds that ''[[Tantric cannabis use in India|vijaya]]'' (the cannabis beverage used in ceremonies) represents the ''amrita'' produced by the Churning of the Milk Ocean and was named "victory" because it gave the gods their triumph over the demons.<ref name="aldrich1977" /> Tantric cannabis practice reached its historical peak in medieval Bengal and the Himalayan kingdoms, where cannabis itself came to be called ''siddhi'' (a pun on "occult powers").<ref name="aldrich1977" />
For further detail on the Vedic and Tantric dimensions of cannabis in Indian religious practice, see [[Tantric cannabis use in India]].
=== Folk medicine ===
Ethnobotanical surveys across the Western Himalayas document a consistent set of traditional medical uses for cannabis, with some district-level variation in preparation methods. The most commonly reported applications involve treatment of joint and musculoskeletal pain, wound care and menstrual disorders.
In the [[Manikaran Valley]] (Kullu District), fieldwork conducted between 2015 and 2017 recorded five medicinal applications: seed oil (cold-pressed or infused in mustard oil) massaged on arthritic joints at bedtime; dry leaf powder mixed with egg, taken once daily for excessive or prolonged menstrual bleeding; leaf paste applied directly to wounds and sores; leaf paste mixed with cow urine applied to painful joints; and leaves rubbed on stings from wasps, bees and scorpions.<ref name="rathore2018" /> Cancer patients in the valley also reportedly use the seed oil for emergency pain relief by applying it to the affected area.<ref name="rathore2018" />
In [[Chamba District]], surveys of Gaddi and Gujjar tribal communities (2010–2012) found cannabis leaves and bark used for joint pain, with the same leaf-paste-and-cow-urine preparation method documented independently in the [[Parvati Valley]].<ref name="rani2013" /> The Chamba study also reported that new medicinal uses of ''Cannabis sativa'' documented in the district could not be found in literature from other parts of India or the world, suggesting locally distinctive ethnopharmacological knowledge.<ref name="rani2013" />
=== Material culture ===
The hemp fibre tradition in the Western Himalayas involves a multi-stage processing method and yields a range of utilitarian and ceremonial objects. In the Manikaran Valley, full-grown hemp plants are cut and left in the open for approximately one month for dew retting, then placed under running water in a ''kulh'' (traditional irrigation channel) for water retting. Fibres (locally called ''Shel'') are extracted from the bark by hand, either by crushing or beating, then sun-dried.<ref name="rathore2018" />
The processed fibre is used to make:
* '''''Pullan''''': Traditional lightweight footwear worn during religious ceremonies, within sacred precincts, and for walking on snow. For snow use, the sole is covered with leather. ''Pullan'' are among the most recognised handicrafts of the Kullu valley.<ref name="rathore2018" />
* '''''Chikda''''': Bull mouth masks made from hemp fibre, used in local cultural performances.<ref name="rathore2018" />
* '''Ropes and mats''': General-purpose cordage and matting.<ref name="rathore2018" /><ref name="rani2013" />
* '''''Cheuli''''': A form of processed hemp fibre used by women as a non-stick agent for the ''tawa'' (cooking hotplate), applied by scrubbing the fibre against the surface with a small amount of oil.<ref name="rathore2018" />
The fibre tradition in Chamba District is documented separately, where cannabis bark is used for rope-making alongside the plant's religious and medicinal roles.<ref name="rani2013" />
=== Food and drink ===
Hemp seeds (locally ''Mangolu'' in the Kullu valley) are a traditional food ingredient in Western Himalayan cuisine, consumed particularly during winter months.<ref name="rathore2018" />
Seeds are roasted until they crackle and pop (necessary to release flavour and soften the coarse hull), then ground in a pestle with garlic, salt and green chilies to produce a condiment used for seasoning vegetables such as ''kachalu'', potato and cauliflower. A chutney is also prepared using hemp seeds with ''dadhu'' (a local variety of pomegranate), green or red chilies, mint leaves, coriander leaves, lemon and salt. Roasted seeds are eaten raw with jaggery or sugar as a snack.<ref name="rathore2018" />
Two traditional dishes feature hemp seeds as a primary ingredient. ''Siddu'' is a steamed bread filled with the hemp seed condiment. ''Aaksalu'' is prepared by women during the winter season using hemp seeds with wheat and rice flour, cooked in ''patel'' (special stone pots); the dish is made in either sweet (with sugar) or savoury (with salt) versions.<ref name="rathore2018" />
Hemp leaves are used in the preparation of ''Dhehli'', an inoculum for ''Sur'' (a traditional alcoholic beverage of Himachal Pradesh). Various herbs are mixed with flour, shaped into a brick and dried between cannabis leaves for one to two months.<ref name="rathore2018" />


== Cultivation History ==
== Cultivation History ==
Cannabis cultivation in the Western Himalayas has deep historical roots, though precise dating of when deliberate cultivation (as opposed to use of wild or feral populations) began in the region remains uncertain. The ''Atharva Veda'' references to ''bhang'' (second millennium BC) confirm the plant's presence in the broader Indo-Aryan cultural sphere from an early period.<ref name="aldrich1977" /> During the late Vedic period, as Aryan populations moved deeper into the Indo-Gangetic plains and lost access to mountain-grown ''Soma'', cannabis emerged as one of several substitute sacred plants, a transition reflected in later mythological narratives.<ref name="aldrich1977" />
By the time of Sushruta (approximately 500–600 AD), cannabis was established in the Indian medical pharmacopoeia, described as an antiphlegmatic agent and prescribed for conditions such as catarrh and biliary fever.<ref name="grierson1894">{{cite book |last=Grierson |first=G.A. |title=Note on References to the Hemp Plant Occurring in Sanskrit and Hindi Literature |work=Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report |volume=3 |year=1894 |publisher=Appendices}}</ref> Buddhist monks in the region used it to treat rheumatism.<ref name="davids1882">{{cite book |last1=Davids |first1=T.W.R. |last2=Oldenberg |first2=H. |title=Vinaya Texts (Mahavagga 6.14.3) |edition=Part 2 |location=Delhi |publisher=Motilal Banarsidass |year=1882}}</ref>
For many farming communities in the region, cannabis cultivation has served as a means of sustenance and livelihood across generations. The plant's versatility, encompassing resin production, textile fibre, rope, medicinal preparations and food, has sustained its economic importance even as legal frameworks have shifted.<ref name="sharma_manjul2024" /> The income derived from the illicit charas market supports essential needs including education, healthcare and daily subsistence in remote mountain communities where alternative cash crops face logistical and climatic constraints.<ref name="tribhuvan2018">{{cite journal |last=Tribhuvan |first=P. |title=Cannabis and Social Change in the Indian Himalayas |journal=Journal of Ethnobiology |volume=38 |issue=4 |pages=504–516 |year=2018}}</ref>
The Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act of 1985 prohibited the possession, cultivation and consumption of cannabis across India, including Himachal Pradesh.<ref name="jothieswari2023">{{cite journal |last1=Jothieswari |first1=D. |last2=Bindu |first2=D.H. |last3=Nelavala |first3=A. |title=Deciphering the narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances act of 1985 and its enforcement guidelines in India |journal=Future Journal of Pharmaceuticals and Health Sciences |year=2023}}</ref> Despite this legislation, cultivation persists in certain areas of the region, driven by economic necessity and the absence of comparably profitable alternatives.<ref name="sharma_manjul2024" />


== Genetics ==
== Genetics ==
Line 64: Line 113:


==== [[Lahaul and Spiti District]] ====
==== [[Lahaul and Spiti District]] ====
Due to the harsh climate and short growing season, as of 2015 is sparse evidence of current, intentional cannabis cultivation in Lahaul and Spiti districts. There are, however, feral, self seeding cannabis populations found near roadsides, rivers and temples throughout the district.<ref>https://www.eresearchco.com/articles/abnormal-meiosis-in-tetraploid-4x-cannabis-sativa-l-from-lahaulspiti-cold-desert-higher-altitude-himalayasa-neglected-bu.pdf</ref>
Due to the harsh climate and short growing season, as of 2015 there is sparse evidence of current, intentional cannabis cultivation in Lahaul and Spiti districts. There are, however, feral, self-seeding cannabis populations found near roadsides, rivers and temples throughout the district.<ref name="lahaul_tetraploid" />


* [[Trilokinath]]
* [[Trilokinath]]
Line 73: Line 122:
* [[Kaza]]
* [[Kaza]]
* [[Losar]]
* [[Losar]]
==== [[Chamba District]] ====
Ethnobotanical surveys of Gaddi and Gujjar tribal communities in Chamba document cannabis use across multiple localities including Banikhat, Bhalai, Brangal, Brahmaur, Chamba, Chaurah, Chuari Khas, Dalhousie, Harsear, Holi, Saluni, Sinhunta and Tissa.<ref name="rani2013" />


==== [[Sirmaur District]] ====
==== [[Sirmaur District]] ====
Line 102: Line 154:


==== Ladakh ====
==== Ladakh ====
High-altitude cold desert region with limited cultivation
High-altitude cold desert region with limited cultivation.


=== All documented Growing Areas ===
=== All documented Growing Areas ===
Line 163: Line 215:
* [[Charas]]
* [[Charas]]
* [[India]]
* [[India]]
* [[Tantric cannabis use in India]]


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 19:23, 17 March 2026

Western Himalayas
View of the Parvati Valley in Kullu District
View of the Parvati Valley in Kullu District
Location

India

Coordinates 32.000000, 77.500000
Gene Pool South Asian Gene Pool
Regional Complex Hindu Kush-Himalayan
Country India
Provinces/States Himachal Pradesh,Uttarakhand,Jammu and Kashmir
Elevation Range 500–3,500 m
Area ~50,000 km²
Climate Temperate montane
Primary Rivers Beas River,Tons River,Alaknanda River
Primary Mountains Pir Panjal Range,Dhauladhar Range,Great Himalayan Range,Mussourie Range,Nag Tibba Range,Shivalik Hills,Zanskar Range,Ladakh Range
Conservation Status Vulnerable






The Western Himalayas is a major landrace cannabis cultivation region spanning the mountain valleys of northern India, encompassing traditional charas (hand-rubbed hashish) producing areas in Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and parts of Jammu and Kashmir.[1][2][3][4]

In the Western Himalayas, landrace cannabis is cultivated by local communities and also occurs naturalized across steep valley systems from the Himalayan foothills (~300–600 m) through mid-elevation temperate valleys (e.g., Malana, Kullu, 1500 m through 3200 m) to cold-desert basins above 3,000 m; published records extend to ~3,500 m in Lahaul–Spiti.[5][6][7]

The region's cannabis populations are cultivated primarily for charas production, with hand-rubbing techniques passed through generations of farming communities. Cannabis also occupies a central place in the region's religious life, folk medicine, material culture and food traditions, with documented uses spanning Shaivite ritual offerings, fibre processing for textiles and footwear, seed-based cuisine, and a range of traditional medical preparations.[8][9] The economic impact of cannabis cultivation in the region is substantial, particularly in Kullu, Shimla, Kinnaur and Mandi districts, where the plant thrives due to favourable climatic conditions.[10]

Geography

Climate

Demography

Culture

Cannabis in the Western Himalayas serves overlapping religious, medicinal, material and culinary functions that are documented across multiple districts and ethnic communities. The plant is not merely cultivated for resin production; it is integrated into daily life, seasonal festivals, healing practices and household craft in ways that vary by valley and community but share a common foundation in Shaivite religious tradition and mountain subsistence agriculture.

Religious practice

Cannabis holds a revered place in Shaivite Hindu tradition throughout the Western Himalayas. The plant is considered sacred to Lord Shiva and features in both daily worship and festival observance.[8][9] In the Manikaran Valley of Kullu District, communities prepare Ghota, an offering made from hemp, for Lord Shiva during the annual Shivaratri festival; hemp leaves are also used as offerings in daily Shiva worship.[8] In Chamba District, cannabis is among the plants most commonly offered to Shiva and can be found for sale in shops near temples.[9]

These local devotional practices connect to a much older textual tradition. The Atharva Veda (second millennium BC) names bhang alongside Soma as one of five sacred plants used "for freedom from distress" (11.6.15) and prescribes the burning of hemp boughs in magical rites (8.8.3).[11] In the Shaivite ritual context, bhang is poured over Shiva's stone phallus (the lingam) and consecrated to Kali.[12] The Tantric tradition holds that vijaya (the cannabis beverage used in ceremonies) represents the amrita produced by the Churning of the Milk Ocean and was named "victory" because it gave the gods their triumph over the demons.[11] Tantric cannabis practice reached its historical peak in medieval Bengal and the Himalayan kingdoms, where cannabis itself came to be called siddhi (a pun on "occult powers").[11]

For further detail on the Vedic and Tantric dimensions of cannabis in Indian religious practice, see Tantric cannabis use in India.

Folk medicine

Ethnobotanical surveys across the Western Himalayas document a consistent set of traditional medical uses for cannabis, with some district-level variation in preparation methods. The most commonly reported applications involve treatment of joint and musculoskeletal pain, wound care and menstrual disorders.

In the Manikaran Valley (Kullu District), fieldwork conducted between 2015 and 2017 recorded five medicinal applications: seed oil (cold-pressed or infused in mustard oil) massaged on arthritic joints at bedtime; dry leaf powder mixed with egg, taken once daily for excessive or prolonged menstrual bleeding; leaf paste applied directly to wounds and sores; leaf paste mixed with cow urine applied to painful joints; and leaves rubbed on stings from wasps, bees and scorpions.[8] Cancer patients in the valley also reportedly use the seed oil for emergency pain relief by applying it to the affected area.[8]

In Chamba District, surveys of Gaddi and Gujjar tribal communities (2010–2012) found cannabis leaves and bark used for joint pain, with the same leaf-paste-and-cow-urine preparation method documented independently in the Parvati Valley.[9] The Chamba study also reported that new medicinal uses of Cannabis sativa documented in the district could not be found in literature from other parts of India or the world, suggesting locally distinctive ethnopharmacological knowledge.[9]

Material culture

The hemp fibre tradition in the Western Himalayas involves a multi-stage processing method and yields a range of utilitarian and ceremonial objects. In the Manikaran Valley, full-grown hemp plants are cut and left in the open for approximately one month for dew retting, then placed under running water in a kulh (traditional irrigation channel) for water retting. Fibres (locally called Shel) are extracted from the bark by hand, either by crushing or beating, then sun-dried.[8]

The processed fibre is used to make:

  • Pullan: Traditional lightweight footwear worn during religious ceremonies, within sacred precincts, and for walking on snow. For snow use, the sole is covered with leather. Pullan are among the most recognised handicrafts of the Kullu valley.[8]
  • Chikda: Bull mouth masks made from hemp fibre, used in local cultural performances.[8]
  • Ropes and mats: General-purpose cordage and matting.[8][9]
  • Cheuli: A form of processed hemp fibre used by women as a non-stick agent for the tawa (cooking hotplate), applied by scrubbing the fibre against the surface with a small amount of oil.[8]

The fibre tradition in Chamba District is documented separately, where cannabis bark is used for rope-making alongside the plant's religious and medicinal roles.[9]

Food and drink

Hemp seeds (locally Mangolu in the Kullu valley) are a traditional food ingredient in Western Himalayan cuisine, consumed particularly during winter months.[8]

Seeds are roasted until they crackle and pop (necessary to release flavour and soften the coarse hull), then ground in a pestle with garlic, salt and green chilies to produce a condiment used for seasoning vegetables such as kachalu, potato and cauliflower. A chutney is also prepared using hemp seeds with dadhu (a local variety of pomegranate), green or red chilies, mint leaves, coriander leaves, lemon and salt. Roasted seeds are eaten raw with jaggery or sugar as a snack.[8]

Two traditional dishes feature hemp seeds as a primary ingredient. Siddu is a steamed bread filled with the hemp seed condiment. Aaksalu is prepared by women during the winter season using hemp seeds with wheat and rice flour, cooked in patel (special stone pots); the dish is made in either sweet (with sugar) or savoury (with salt) versions.[8]

Hemp leaves are used in the preparation of Dhehli, an inoculum for Sur (a traditional alcoholic beverage of Himachal Pradesh). Various herbs are mixed with flour, shaped into a brick and dried between cannabis leaves for one to two months.[8]

Cultivation History

Cannabis cultivation in the Western Himalayas has deep historical roots, though precise dating of when deliberate cultivation (as opposed to use of wild or feral populations) began in the region remains uncertain. The Atharva Veda references to bhang (second millennium BC) confirm the plant's presence in the broader Indo-Aryan cultural sphere from an early period.[11] During the late Vedic period, as Aryan populations moved deeper into the Indo-Gangetic plains and lost access to mountain-grown Soma, cannabis emerged as one of several substitute sacred plants, a transition reflected in later mythological narratives.[11]

By the time of Sushruta (approximately 500–600 AD), cannabis was established in the Indian medical pharmacopoeia, described as an antiphlegmatic agent and prescribed for conditions such as catarrh and biliary fever.[13] Buddhist monks in the region used it to treat rheumatism.[14]

For many farming communities in the region, cannabis cultivation has served as a means of sustenance and livelihood across generations. The plant's versatility, encompassing resin production, textile fibre, rope, medicinal preparations and food, has sustained its economic importance even as legal frameworks have shifted.[10] The income derived from the illicit charas market supports essential needs including education, healthcare and daily subsistence in remote mountain communities where alternative cash crops face logistical and climatic constraints.[15]

The Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act of 1985 prohibited the possession, cultivation and consumption of cannabis across India, including Himachal Pradesh.[16] Despite this legislation, cultivation persists in certain areas of the region, driven by economic necessity and the absence of comparably profitable alternatives.[10]

Genetics

No data at present, further research needed.

Growing Areas

The Western Himalayas growing region encompasses numerous documented cultivation areas. Browse by administrative division:

Himachal Pradesh

The Kullu District contains the highest concentration of documented growing areas in the Western Himalayas:

Due to the harsh climate and short growing season, as of 2015 there is sparse evidence of current, intentional cannabis cultivation in Lahaul and Spiti districts. There are, however, feral, self-seeding cannabis populations found near roadsides, rivers and temples throughout the district.[7]

Ethnobotanical surveys of Gaddi and Gujjar tribal communities in Chamba document cannabis use across multiple localities including Banikhat, Bhalai, Brangal, Brahmaur, Chamba, Chaurah, Chuari Khas, Dalhousie, Harsear, Holi, Saluni, Sinhunta and Tissa.[9]

Uttarakhand

Jammu and Kashmir

No data at present, further research needed.

Ladakh

High-altitude cold desert region with limited cultivation.

All documented Growing Areas

Growing Area
Kullu Valley

Accessions

Accession IDNamePriorityCollectedLocality
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250004Karmi General Population 2024Medium10 December 2025Karmi
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250013Jumma Village General PopulationMedium9 December 2025Jumma
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250014Kali Valley 'Pangla Village' Feral Seleciton 2025Medium9 December 2025Pangla
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250015Kali Valley 'Bung Bung Village' Feral Selection 2025Medium9 December 2025Bung Bung
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250009Saur Valley Bharkatia General Population 2024Medium9 November 2025Bharkatia
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250010Saur Valley Jajardewal General Population 2024Medium9 November 2025Jajardewal
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250011Saur Valley Jajardewal Selection 2025Medium9 November 2025Jajardewal
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250012Saur Valley Chatkeshwar Temple General Population 2024Medium9 November 2025Chatkeshwar
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250009Thunja Deepack General Population #1 2025Medium29 October 2025Thunja
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250014Grahan Kutla Forest Selection 2025Medium29 October 2025Grahan
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250019Tosh Village General Population #2 2025Medium29 October 2025Tosh
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250010Thunja Deepack General Population #2 2025Medium29 October 2025Thunja
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250015Grahan Kutla 'Tangy' Selection 2025Medium29 October 2025Grahan
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250020Lapas Village General Population 2025Medium29 October 2025Lapas
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250011Thunja Deepack General Population #3 2025Medium29 October 2025Thunja
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250016Grahan Village General Population #2 2025Medium29 October 2025Grahan
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250007Thunja Village General Population #1 2025Medium29 October 2025Thunja
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250012Grahan Kutla Lower Terrace Selection 2025Medium29 October 2025Grahan
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250017Grahan Village General Population #3 2025Medium29 October 2025Grahan
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250008Thunja Village General Population #2 2025Medium29 October 2025Thunja
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250013Grahan Kutla Middle Terrace Selection 2025Medium29 October 2025Grahan
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250018Tosh Village General Population #1 2025Medium29 October 2025Tosh
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250018Lambagad General Population #218 October 2025Lambagad
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250017Lambagad General Population #118 October 2025Lambagad
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250006Atolang Black Selection #2 2025Medium16 October 2025Atolang
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250004Atolang Green Mango Selection 2025Medium16 October 2025Atolang
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250005Atolang Black Selection #1 2025Medium16 October 2025Atolang
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250016Niti Valley General Population 202516 October 2025
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250001Rasol 'Vairam' General Population #1 2025Medium14 October 2025Rasol
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250002Rasol Pawan Selection 2025Medium14 October 2025Rasol
ZOM-IND-HIM-1020250003Rasol Maya Selection 2025Medium14 October 2025Rasol
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250010AKhati General Population2024 #3 Grade ALow13 October 2025Khati
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250005Khati General Population #1 2024Low13 October 2025Khati
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250011ATeekh General Population 2024 Grade AMedium13 October 2025Teekh
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250015Niti Village General Population 202413 October 2025Niti
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250006Khati Feral Selection #1 2025Low13 October 2025Khati
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250011BTeekh General Population 2024 Grade BMedium13 October 2025Teekh
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250007Khati Feral Selection #2 2025Low13 October 2025Khati
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250012Dhoor General Population 202413 October 2025Dhoor
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250008Khati Feral Selection #3 2025Low13 October 2025Khati
ZOM-IND-UTT-1020250003Jhopra Goan General Population 2024Medium10 October 2025Jhopra Gaon
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250008Champawat General Population 2024Medium9 October 2025Champawat
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250004Khauna Malak General Population 2024Medium9 October 2025Kauna Malak
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250005Lohaghat General Population 2024 #1Low9 October 2025Lohaghat
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250006Lohaghat General Population 2024 #2Low9 October 2025Lohaghat
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250007Lohaghat General Population 2024 #3Low9 October 2025Lohaghat
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250036Martoli Village Glacier Selection 2025Medium29 September 2025Martoli
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250033Burphu Village Feral Glacier Selection 2025Medium28 September 2025Burphu
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250034Burphu Village Glacier Selection 2024Medium28 September 2025Burphu
ZOM-IND-UTT-0920250035Bilju Village Feral Glacier Selection 2025Medium28 September 2025Bilju
... further results

Botanical Characteristics

Regional Traits

Geographic Variation

Cultivation Practices

Traditional Methods

Modern Methods

Conservation Status

Threats to Landrace Populations

Conservation Efforts

Chemical Profile

Cannabinoid Content

Western Himalayas populations are traditionally drug-type cannabis, selected for resin production. Research is needed to characterize chemical profiles.

See Also

References