Landrace Collection Strain Tee
The names tell a geography: Durban Poison, Malawi Gold, Swazi Gold, Kilimanjaro, Red Congolese, Lamb's Bread. Six African landrace strains arranged as botanical specimens, each one a genetic lineage that evolved over centuries in specific regions.
A landrace is cannabis that developed naturally in isolation, adapting to local soil, climate, and the cultivators who selected seeds season after season. These weren't products. They were ecosystems. Durban's coastal energy. Malawi's highland cerebral clarity. The particular red phenotype that emerged in Congo's equatorial forests.
What's at stake is genetic extinction through hybridization. As commercial cannabis spreads globally, these original populations are being replaced by hybrids, permanently erasing millennia of agricultural knowledge. The industry's genetic pool is shrinking while it appears to expand. Clone-only genetics aren't built to last.
The botanical illustration format isn't decorative. It's about documentation, about preserving what's disappearing. The circular frames, the regional annotations, the hand-drawn accuracy. This is field work.
That last strain traces the diaspora. African genetics carried across the Middle Passage, adapted in Caribbean soil, recognized worldwide while its origins stayed footnoted. Every variety on this shirt carries that pattern. Valued everywhere except where it came from.
The front carries a small olive PANGO mark. The education happens on the back.
Sand cotton. Two-color screen print. Oversized fit.
The names tell a geography: Durban Poison, Malawi Gold, Swazi Gold, Kilimanjaro, Red Congolese, Lamb's Bread. Six African landrace strains arranged as botanical specimens, each one a genetic lineage that evolved over centuries in specific regions.
A landrace is cannabis that developed naturally in isolation, adapting to local soil, climate, and the cultivators who selected seeds season after season. These weren't products. They were ecosystems. Durban's coastal energy. Malawi's highland cerebral clarity. The particular red phenotype that emerged in Congo's equatorial forests.
What's at stake is genetic extinction through hybridization. As commercial cannabis spreads globally, these original populations are being replaced by hybrids, permanently erasing millennia of agricultural knowledge. The industry's genetic pool is shrinking while it appears to expand. Clone-only genetics aren't built to last.
The botanical illustration format isn't decorative. It's about documentation, about preserving what's disappearing. The circular frames, the regional annotations, the hand-drawn accuracy. This is field work.
That last strain traces the diaspora. African genetics carried across the Middle Passage, adapted in Caribbean soil, recognized worldwide while its origins stayed footnoted. Every variety on this shirt carries that pattern. Valued everywhere except where it came from.
The front carries a small olive PANGO mark. The education happens on the back.
Sand cotton. Two-color screen print. Oversized fit.