Has anyone heard about this? It just seems bizarre. Notice how they only include cannabinoid testing.
CannabCo Pharmaceutical Corp. (CannabCo), a Canadian company located in Brampton, Ontario, is pleased to announce a milestone achievement with the testing of one of the industry’s most potent cannabis strains at 41% total quantifiable cannabinoid content. The strain features a lab tested cannabinoid count of 40.59% with a THC rating of 35%. The main distinguishing feature of the strain, other than its high THC content, is that it was created with Purecann™, CannabCo’s proprietary Odourless Cannabis™ technology.
The deployment of Purecann™ makes the product virtually odourless when smoked or stored allowing for a reduced impact on others sensitive to the pungent odour of cannabis. This is an industry first and a product the company claims is sorely needed in the marketplace.
The company has developed and tested multiple Purecann™ strains ranging from under .3% for the smoke-able hemp market, with numerous strains in the 20-32% range, culminating to the highest THC range currently at 35%.
Currently the highest THC dry flower in the Ontario Cannabis Store lists at a maximum of 32% THC. Mark Pellicane, CannabCo’s CEO, thinks they can do better. “We are always pushing the limits with our technologies” said Pellicane, “With the demand for high THC strains, it made sense to target the same in odourless variants and our result is one of the highest THC strains produced to date”. Pellicane also stated that the company has multiple strains in the high 30’s in the works, as well as market specific strains with targeted THC levels and cannabinoid profiles for specific markets and effects.
As someone from the northeast I would like to thank y’all for your tireless contributions to getting me stoned as fuck with good weed so I didn’t have to smoke brick mids my entire life in east chuckafuck CT
don’t think so… their technology makes it odorless when smoked. not when grown. they would appear to be REMOVING the volatiles after harvest.
least that is my reading of their “advertisement”.
which reads a lot like
convincing the plant to make 20% cannabinoids without the required co-solvents doesn’t seem like a well informed approach, but I guess there might be some low volatility options that still allow the synthase to do it’s job…