| The farmer only knows one word when it comes to kif: KIF! Hash is kif, seed is kif, the plant is kif, the stuff is kif! Their choice of words is rather limited, and as long as something is in any way related to the plant, it's called kif! He distinguishes 4 clearly different qualities. Those who think the farmer is only calculating and therefore tampers with his hash, makes a mistake. The average farmer is more than happy when he can receive the current market price for his plants and doesn't care for tampering the product. |
| He distinguishes: | Spoetnik | The best! |
| Zero-Zero | Without plant particles | |
| Première | Normal but honest quality | |
| Trash | Known by everyone (including the farmer, unfortunately) |
| For all clarity: so called 'soaps' or 'mirrors', this supposedly beaten stuff, is simply made of garbage and preparations. Sorry, my dealer friends, but I've seen TOO much of what they do to get this quality. Quite disgusting actually! You better smoke your own homegrown than that stuff, believe me. Why don't you try Santa Maria, my favourite gal! |
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| One hundred kilos of kif produces about 400-600 grams of zerozero, discarding rare exceptions. Just like here, you can easily fool yourself in Morocco if you start to calculate before the harvest is done! Some fields yield a lot of hash from plants that didn't look so good at first, sometimes beautiful plants yield next to nothing. Many factors are involved. The orientation of the mountain, high or low, much or little rain, temperature, nutrition, time of sowing, too densely or too loosely sown etc. 100 kilos of kif can yield 1-1,5 kilo of premiere quality, but then there is no more zerozero, and only rubbish remains. When the farmer prepares sputnik or zerozero there is always something good left to process later on. As long as the kif is not sieved (but is stored dark and chilled) the resin remains of surprisingly good quality, and it definitely seems time can influence quality positively. Once sieved a decaying process starts. Sieved powder can be kept very long, but once pressed, quality decreases every day. Freezing is an option. The reason of this degradation is that with pressing you heat the resin, open the core of the drops by breaking the outer shell, and press it to one mass. The protective layer gets broken, and degradation sets in. |
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Since we are discussing the subject, I'd like to tell some of you to stop talking rubbish, which irritates the hell out of me. I'm talking about people who refer to 'seeing' THC on plants. The plant does not show visible THC! The stuff you can see is resin! And inside that resin you find a percentage of THC! And the amount of resin doesn't say a whole lot about the potency!
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