Toggle menu
17
24
14
1.7K
Landrace.Wiki - The Landrace Cannabis Wiki
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

2025 Atolang General Population

From Landrace.Wiki - The Landrace Cannabis Wiki
Revision as of 22:54, 20 November 2025 by Eloise Zomia (talk | contribs) (Created page with "= 2025 Atolang General Population = ''Landrace cannabis population collected in Malana Valley, Parvati, Western Himalayas.'' <div class="acc-hierarchy"> South Asian Gene Pool › Hindu Kush–Himalayan › Western Himalayas › Parvati Valley › Malana Valley </div> <!-- Infobox would sit here, floated right. We design it later. --> == Overview == Short 2–3 sentence lead paragraph describing the population, where it is grown, and why it matters. <div class="acc-...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

2025 Atolang General Population

Landrace cannabis population collected in Malana Valley, Parvati, Western Himalayas.

South Asian Gene Pool › Hindu Kush–Himalayan › Western Himalayas › Parvati Valley › Malana Valley


Overview

Short 2–3 sentence lead paragraph describing the population, where it is grown, and why it matters.

1. Collection context

Who collected it, when, how many fields/households, key practical details of the collection.

2. Local cultivation and use

How farmers grow and use this population: planting, field layout, harvest practices, use (charas / ganja / seed / fiber / ritual), and any relevant local terminology.

3. Population profile

Narrative description of plant architecture, flowering time, resin and aroma range, and within-population variation (early vs late, tall vs short, etc.). Mention obvious hybrid influence if present.

4. Conservation assessment

Explain the conservation priority, main threats (enforcement, hybrid seeds, economic shift, climate), and whether cultivation is expanding, stable, shrinking, or nearly extinct.

5. Preservation & trials

Where seeds are stored, approximate quantities, any grow-outs or trials you have done (where, when, main observations), and where seed has been shared.

6. Notes & references

Any references, field report links, or internal notes that don’t fit elsewhere.