H.A.F.
a.k.a. Rusty Nails
Makes a lot of sense.Well after the landraces were brought into the US and bred/crossed mostly outdoors (probably over 95% back in the day), they picked up and/or altered some traits, traits that were brought out by the plants acquiring nutrients from our native soils. My belief is that one in particular (sulphur) played a huge role in the skunk smell of what became ‘skunk’. After decades of the plants being grown indoors those traits diminished, and A LOT of growers completely quit trying to grow skunk indoors because of the risk involved, furthering the demise. I believe it’s still around in seed form, but these seeds are gonna be owned by some old timers that actually unaware of what they have, and they could care less what ‘we’ want or are looking for. But this is just my thoughts. It’s still here, someday soon somebody will find a jar/can/sack full of skunk beans.
First, I think it's an "American" strain or it would have been called ferret, or muskrat, or some other stinky animal found in other countries more predominantly than skunks.
The mountains in VA and West VA have super stinky well water - right up into the Ohio valley. And that area produced a lot of skunk.
Would have been the easies strain for the Gubmint Nazi's to find and eradicate during their war on pot.
And I stand by my theory that it is merely a pheno - not a strain. And it's a recessive pheno that is hard to nail down and reproduce.