Description
SEED AND SOIL > OMAHA JAZZ (LAMBS BREAD X SWEET TOOTH)
The Omaha Jazz seed line is a dragon quest seeking the memory of the legendary “Sweet Jazz” clone-only strain. These layered complex flavors come to you from the jam band scene of Betsy’s homeland of Omaha, Nebraska circa 2010. It is the hands-down best smoke in the opinion of many seasoned revelers. One doob burning in a crowd of other doobies is said to have an unmistakable perfume begging the question “who’s got that Jazz?”. As a clone-only strain, it existed in only in the super secret indoor grows of Omaha Nebraska, not an early adopter of cannabis normalization! We offer it with humility and gratitude for the “traditional” market, people who took real risks to carry cannabis genetics forward when it was illegal. A Jamaican bag seed female (supposedly Lambs Bread) was crossed to Sweet Tooth and the Sweet Jazz unicorn was hunted from that cross. It has been said, “Sweet Jazz is like nothing else”. We agree that it cannot be described in much of a useful way... it has a floral note, and a camp-fuel lime-like twang. Even just a sniff is intoxicating. Terpinolene, Humulene and Bisabolol all appear in roughly equal concentration, together accounting for about 50% of total terpenes, while pungent Farnesene carries 10% of total terpenes. Farnesene while somewhat uncommon in cannabis, is the most abundant aroma compound in gardenias. Most eccentric of all, the Myrcene load in Omaha Jazz is a microscopic 3% of total. Effects are balanced - musical and dancey but without being too speedy. Omaha Jazz does quite well in our field. It grows very large plants without many inner branches, leaving plenty of airflow. It puts on weight and benefits from trellis. For the late finisher slot, there is no more reliable offering than this one. On average, later harvest means greater risk of mold or frost injury. But Omaha Jazz breaks this trend, reliably finishing thick colas with very little bud rot at the last minute in October. Mostly all green with some plants expressing light purple tips or, rarely, completely lavender colas. Septoria? Unquestionably our most resilient strain. One mustn't say resistant, because that's supposed to mean the plant can't get the disease, Omaha Jazz leaves any few pimples behind on the lower inner fans and doesn't miss a beat. Uniformity: 7/10. Oct. 20 (8 weeks)
Feminized Photoperiod