BLUECHEESE and CHEESE SMOKERS ONLY!

DST

Well-Known Member
Nice friend you got trazodone. There are loads of pictures of cheese above, or is it the forced Purple cheese you want to see (not really sure what this is). I have had cheese go purple, but it was crossed with something else. If you grow outdoors in a cold enough climate you may see the original cheese going purple.
 

sonar

Well-Known Member
So who is considered to have developed the original Cheese strain? It's been my understanding that Homegrown Fantaseeds developed the strain and won the cannabis cup for it in 2004. You really don't hear much about Homegrown Fantaseeds though.
 

colonuggs

Well-Known Member
So who is considered to have developed the original Cheese strain? It's been my understanding that Homegrown Fantaseeds developed the strain and won the cannabis cup for it in 2004. You really don't hear much about Homegrown Fantaseeds though.
Shunk #1 is the original Exodus Cheese... from back in the 1980-90s
 

colonuggs

Well-Known Member
So who is considered to have developed the original Cheese strain? It's been my understanding that Homegrown Fantaseeds developed the strain and won the cannabis cup for it in 2004. You really don't hear much about Homegrown Fantaseeds though.
The Exodus collective were a group of like minded people from Luton England. The Exodus Collective openly campaigned for the immediate legalization of cannabis during the late 1980’s into the early 1990’s. As part of their campaign for a sane drug policy the exodus collective challenged the criminalization of cannabis by openly smoking and growing cannabis.

The exodus collective also helped spearhead the underground Rave Scene in the early 1990’s by organizing free rave party once monthly. A unique feature of the exodus collective and exodus raves was the NO DEALING policy which was strictly adhered to at events. So much so when undercover police finally infiltrated the raves they found no evidence of drug dealing they could act upon. One police officer actually praised the exodus collective or there sensible approach to drug use. The Exodus Collective also managed there own ‘Fair Trade policy at events’. The collectives own price policy ensured that no one was making excessive profits from the sail of food and drinks at the parties.

Following a series of Free Partys several plots of farmland were occupied. An abandoned hotel, and empty warehouse and so on. The idea was to clean up the local neighbourhood a series of community projects. The land became known as HAZ manor (Housing Action Zone).

..............................................................UK cheese................................................................

The exact origin of cheese is hotly debated by cheese fanatics online. Some suggest that it desends from a packet of Skunk#1 by sensi-seeds others indicate that it came from a packet of skunk#1 from sacred seeds.

................All do agree however that cheese is a clone of skunk#1 from the 1980’s.

During this time sam the skunkman who is accredited as the original breeder of skunk#1 had moved from California to Holland to grow weed. Here Sam was still breeding his Skunk#1 line. Sams skunk was called skunk because it omitted a strong pungent smell when grown or smoked. Similar to that given off by a skunk. Growers in Holland loved sams skunk because it yielded more and finished sooner then other strains at the time.

The only problem was the smell!! Landlords were reporting growers and people were busted all over. Sam the skunkman intestinally bred out the smell in favour of a sweeter smell Over the next few generations the skunk smell was intestinally lost.

The Exodus collective obtained a packet of seeds before these changes took place. The seeds were sown out and cuttings were taken. The clones were freely distributed among the collective.

On flowering out one of the plants the collective discovered it had a very special smell. Folklore suggests that there was a slight panic to fint a cutting still in veg so genetics could be preserved for later. Further investigation found that an old lady still had a few plants growing on her bathroom window. She said it smelt like cheese.

For many years after cheese clones were distributed freely as gifts from the exodus collective. Grateful home growers still distribute the original cheese to home growers for free.

 

trazodone

Member
I wanted to know what it means to force purple. I just planted one clone of cheese and i can't wait for it to grow. I snuk a clipping from my friend. He deserves it, he took my sour purple diesel so now I'm getting even with him.
 

3eyes

Well-Known Member
I wanted to know what it means to force purple. I just planted one clone of cheese and i can't wait for it to grow. I snuk a clipping from my friend. He deserves it, he took my sour purple diesel so now I'm getting even with him.

Let them get cold like this
 
it will! i griw the barneys farm version and it was exactly what i expected one i got a feel for how to grow it.


anybody else use the cheese for anger managment, i mean thats why i smoke, blue cheese makes me nics and mellow some bluecheese hash would probably be the best tasting shit but i dont think i could bring myself to waste the bud i think it is perfect the way it is!


Blue Cheese keeps me from eating FACES!!!!!!!!
Hey man, if you’re growing blue cheese you got to try making some hash! It’s SO tasty! I don’t even use buds, just make a kief box and put all the trichy trimmings in it.
 

polyarcturus

Well-Known Member
im not really a hash guy, but i make some tasty ISO hash with my trimmings that i smoke from time to time. mostly when its time to sleep
 

RollupRick

Active Member
I'm seriously considering a SoG full of cheese (or multiple strains in the same grow of various cheeses) for my next grow.

Recommendations? Got a 3 x 3' grow area, so looking at 9-12 plants.
 

polyarcturus

Well-Known Member
I'm seriously considering a SoG full of cheese (or multiple strains in the same grow of various cheeses) for my next grow.

Recommendations? Got a 3 x 3' grow area, so looking at 9-12 plants.
pick a cheese any cheese.

the overall rsounding favorites by growers are BFarm Blue Cheese and Exodus Cheese
 

FranJan

Well-Known Member
Anyone want to comment on this little story. I stumbled on this story on THCTalk and wondered how "true" it is.



"Supposedly, this is the true history of Exodus Cheese as told by the original grower, Wing Commander Blue, and published in Weed World magazine.

--

The True Origin of UK Cheese

I recently went on holiday to the Canary Islands, a friend of mine gave me a copy of Weed World magazine to read while I was there (issue 56). To my surprise, was the article by Big Buddha Cheese? On reading this I decide to tell the story from the beginning.

Back in the late 80’s early 90’s, a friend-of-a-friend of mine came back from the Sensi Seed Bank in Amsterdam with some seeds.Most of the plants were males but 4 of them were girls – 3 of the 4 were wankers and one was kind of OK. This plant was cloned and passed on to 3 or 4 different people who grew it alongside some Northern Lights and Silver Pearl plants in their well built grow rooms.

I am 45 years old now and have been growing my own weed for about 25 years, 10 of them outside in the wild. My best friend and I decided that we would build ourselves our own grow rooms but didn’t see the need for getting too technical so, we made them out of anything we could lay our hands on – we called them “orange crates” coz that’s what they looked like. As for lighting, we went on a commando raid to a local disused cement factory and helped ourselves to some Sodium and Metal Halide 400’s. We made our own shades from some aluminium sheeting from a local scrap yard. Now all we needed was some nice cuttings. I managed to get some N/L and S/P plants and also one of the Skunks. Most of the other growers concentrated on the N/L and S/P because they are good all rounders.

I think one of the Skunks went to Crewe and another to Cornwall. I quite liked the Skunk so I kept it going. Now over the next 7 or 8 years of constant cloning, the Skunk started changing – don’t know why – it just did. It started to get really smelly – I mean really stink. The smell would get everywhere and I was often creosoting the fence to try and mask the smell (a little tip there for Cheese farmers, creosote or burnt toast). Cropping was a nightmare and I wouldn’t even go out because people would often say “you stink”.

I was giving some of this weed to my close friends and they all loved it and, as the taste was changing it seemed the strength was too. This weed had become so strong and so smelly that it reminded me of something I had smelt before, but I couldn’t think what it was. Then one day the penny dropped.

When I was 17 or 18 and living at home with my parents, I would go out a lot with a friend who worked in a food essence factory. Some days I would see him and he would stink of all different kind of things: fish, beef, vanilla etc. He would bring me small test tubes of concentrated liquids home and use them in my fishing bait (the carp loved the vanilla). One day he put one under my nose and said “smell this one, its called blue cheese, and it’s a real minger”. This was the smell I had been trying to remember. The weed smelt just like it and so she was born. I gave the weed the name “Cheese”. The only cuttings I let out were to people who were incapable of doing their own cloning and only wanted a plant for their own garden in the summer months. Another close friend of mine, known as “Of the Hill”, came to me one day and asked me if I would do him 21 cuttings as he was building a big lab for the Exodus people in Luton. I was a bit unsure of this as I didn’t know ay of these people but, I did it for him because he is a good egg and has dug me out of plenty of holes over the years. Anyway, off he went with his cuttings and I didn’t here too much more about it, other than a good harvest festival was had.

“Of the Hill” arranged for a cutting to make it’s way to a coffee shop in Amsterdam in 2003 (Home Grown Fantasy). It was cloned and put on the menu as ‘Cheese’ and went on to claim 3rd place in the cannabis cup in 2004. I recently met an American at a Hawkwind gig in London who had heard of the Cheese in Washington. He had come to the UK to see Hawkwind and smoke Cheese. His face lit up when I pulled a big fat Cheese straw out of my pocket! It’s kind of annoying really – I wish I could have put a patent on the word “Cheese” in the context of marijuana but, it’s kind of difficult when things are illegal. All over the place now I hear people calling all sorts of weed “Cheese” and I say to them “no mate, this is Cheese”.

As for Mr Big Buddha? I have plenty of respect for him, but the Cheese is not yours no matter what you call it and, as for crossing her? She does need help –over the years she has started to show signs of stress. Growers will notice that some plants get brown spotty leaves during growing & flowering that results I leaf drop. I don’t know what the cause is, it’s not the soil, the water, the food, or the air quality (possibly a virus of some kind), so I suppose a cross of some kind to introduce some new vigour to her would be a good thing so, like I said, respect to Big Buddha for trying.

So for nearly 14 years, the Cheese was living at only a couple of places but now it seems to be everywhere for people to enjoy. I don’t know what she has become – some sort of mutant freak, but she sure hits the spot and everyone who smokes her loves her to pieces.

So there you have it – the truth about the origin of Cheese. You can all rejoice that I kept her going for all these years and now you all know how it came about its name. In the grand scheme of things it’s not very much, but I wanted to set the record straight.
Wing Commander Blue

WeedWorld Magazine"
 

polyarcturus

Well-Known Member
somewhat "true" it sounds like but it seems that they did not have a clone of skunk, but rather a clone of cheee and obiosly his growing skill got better overtime, the orgional skunk story a few pages back precedes this one chronologically. cheese aint nothing new. more thsn 20 years old at least.

and to further the point this goes to show how many breeders have a legitimate cut of the cheese strain which i dont see as a problem IMO since this will only lead to better cheese genetics.
 
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