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Genetics: Kurgan Landrace 

Location: Kurgan Oblast (South of the Urals Mountains) 

Type: Super Autoflower XXL 

Regular Feral Seeds

Source: Hand Collected Straight from Kurgans feral fields not reproduced.

Exotic Seeds from đŸ‡·đŸ‡ș Russia

This pure Landrace Narrow Leaf Dominant variety was collected directly from feral fields along the Russian-Kazakhstan Forrest border. These were gathered at 54.4 degrees North Latitude. These are cold tolerant, frost resistant and have a dominant early flowing characteristic. So, it is excellent strain for hybridization in the hands of a skilled breeder. This variety is a fundamental building block allowing for original strains to be created from the ground up. This is a revolutionary assets for all outdoor growers. “What other seed growers fail to realize is that this dominant early flowering characteristics allow Ruderalis to be outcrossed indefinitely with almost any other strain, and a percentage of the resulting hybrids will still flower early. Far from “polluting the gene pool” with Ruderalis, with good breeding practices we can open the more areas for cannabis cultivation then was ever thought possible.” - - Seed Bank 1987 Revised Catalogue ‘Roadside Ruderalis’ 

 

An exceptionally sweet true breeding Ruderalis. Highly heterogeneous, each plant tends to be a different individual both in growth pattern, structure and high. Their heterogeneous background makes it possible to discover some true keepers. Careful breeding through many generations will allow you to select the earliest, most resinous, most vigorous plants available anywhere in the world. This is definitely the strain to work with for difficulty, cold climates, or for those growers that desire extreme earliness. 

 

-Noteworthy - will ripen around Sept. 1st crossing this variety with a later flowing variety will predictably cause the resulting hybrid to flower earlier.   

*As is often the case with all wild Landraces, the occasional hermaphrodite will be occur when going indoors first generation. 

 

Height: 7 to 12 ft

Harvest: Mid-Late August. 

Aroma: Selected for a very strong pleasant Sweet and sour taste, with few Lavender hint Terpene profiles. 

Color: Magenta, pink and purple hues were discovered. 

Grow Type: This Cultivar is suitable for outdoor and greenhouse growing, but it is possible to grow this variety in a growthroom. 

 

Climate (High/Low)

May 67°/ 43°

June 76°/ 53°

July 78°/ 57°

August 73°/ 52°

September 62°/ 43°

On average it rains about 7 days in a month. May has 1.4in, June 2.1in 

Daylight 

May 16 hours

June 17.5 hours

July 17 hours

August 15 hours 

September 13 hours

 

This is a vigorous, disease/Pest resistant, cold resistant, early super Autoflower. Perfect for early planting in uncertain climates. A moderately resinous with both Narrow leaf and broad leaf appearance and structure. 

The effects after smoking was Stoney, but not highly psychoactive. Ideal for hybridization. 

 

History 

Kurgan hypothesis - “Five thousand years ago nomadic horseback riders from the Ukrainian steppe charged through Europe and parts of Asia. They brought with them a language that is the root of many of those spoken today—including English, Spanish, Hindi, Russian and Persian. That is the most widely accepted explanation for the origin of this ancient tongue, termed Proto-Indo-European. Recent genetic findings confirm this hypothesis but also raise questions about how the prehistoric language evolved and spread. No written record of PIE exists, but linguists believe they have largely reconstructed it. “ - Wikipedia 

Some words, including “water” “father” and “mother” are still used today. Archaeologist Marija Gimbutas first proposed the Ukrainian origin, known as the kurgan hypothesis, in the 1950s. Gimbutas traced the language back to the Yamnaya people, herders from the southern grasslands of modern-day Ukraine who domesticated the horse.

In 2015 a series of studies sequenced the DNA of human bones and other remains from many parts of Europe and Asia. The data suggest that around 3500 B.C.—roughly the same time that many linguists place the origin of PIE and that archaeologists date horse domestication—Yamnaya genes replaced about 75 percent of the existing human gene pool in Europe. Together with the archaeological and linguistic evidence, the genetic data tipped the scales heavily in favor of the kurgan hypothesis. - “The domestication of the horse created a steppe bridge into India and Iran on the one side and Europe on the other side,” Anthony says. “When [the] Yamnaya people moved into eastern and western Europe, their genetic signature was very different from what was there before,” he explains. “That's what makes it paint such a clear picture [of how the root language spread] and why you can really see the migrations so easily on a map.” The origin of modern language revolves around this region. 

 

 

Kurgan Bashkortostan

$70.00Price

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