Every article is sourced, evidence-labeled, and reviewed for unsupported claims, weak science, disputed lineage, and cannabis marketing folklore.
Every claim is labeled strong evidence, weak evidence, or anecdote — because the difference matters.
If the science is murky, we say so. If a strain's lineage is disputed, we show the dispute. If a "fact" everyone repeats turns out to be marketing, we name it.
Each page goes through a structured fact-check pass and stays open to correction as laws, research, and product claims change. No black boxes.
Washington grew hemp for rope and canvas, not cannabis for smoking — and his own diary doesn't say what stoners claim it says.
CultivationWhen cannabis flowers turn white or pale yellow from excessive light intensity, usually a sign of stress rather than quality.
CultivationA common cannabis nutrient problem where lower leaves yellow between the veins, usually fixed by correcting pH or adding Epsom salt.
A modern hype-cultivar marketed as a gassy, fruity hybrid with limited public chemistry da...
An obscure cannabis strain with sparse public documentation, often marketed as a balanced...
A short, honest look at why organized cannabis activism barely existed behind the Iron Cur...
An obscure ruderalis-influenced strain notable for red and purple foliage, with very littl...
The visible bloodshot eyes that follow cannabis use, caused by THC dilating ocular blood v...
A sesquiterpene with green-apple and woody notes, common in plants but a minor and inconsi...
A look at how cannabis became part of Britain's biggest festival, from the 1970s free fest...
A dessert-leaning hybrid attributed to Compound Genetics, more notable for flavor marketin...