Kinda curious because I want to target certain effects like energy and focus and avoid anything that would couch-lock me.

  • MycoMadness@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    I’m not sure where leafly pulls data for its effects, it could be terpene profile, customer review, or even minor cannabinoids.

    Terpenes can influence a high to feel certain ways, find out what terpenes have the effect you are looking for and target those.

    Of course, everyone is unique, so what works best for you for certain effects may differ. However with a little bit of trial and error, and paying attention to the characteristics of how that strain affects you will help you dial in what to look for :)

  • FiveMacs@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Reviews are ok, but honestly…the best way to look at it

    Indica = couch lock sleepy time smoke

    Sativa = party time energized smoke

    Hybrids will vary obviously.

  • nodoze313@lemmynsfw.com
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    1 year ago

    I think it’s a nature vs nurture issue, it can be accurate under ideal conditions, but grow conditions vary. With a grain of salt, strains seem to be sort of accurate, but also wildly variant, kind of like dog breeds.

  • TheAlbatross@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    I’m like pretty certain it’s mostly placebo so just keep telling yourself it does what you want it to and it should keep doing that.

    I buy “sativa” gummies fairly often and after taking them, I get active. I wanna clean, I wanna focus on tasks, I wanna paint and draw and sing.

    My roommate is weed clueless, but enjoys it, took some, and got a mild couch lock. He likes to take em to calm down to sleep when he’s stressed. I think companies will try to pitch you otherwise, but I think that’s mostly to, well, sell you two bags of grass instead of one.

    • aStonedSanta@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Sativa vs indica is the biological distinction. Personally I don’t believe it has much impact on effects. The active cannabinoids do more so. Aka CBG/A couch lock, THCV energy.

  • wildginger@lemmy.myserv.one
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    1 year ago

    On leafly? Basically useless.

    Unfortunately, you will need to taste test a strain yourself to see how it effects you.

    Theres no hard evidence on why different strains produce different experiences. Some think it is the terpene profile, or the plant age at harvest, or your mentality and expectations and mood, or your personal bodily chemistry, etc.

    Maybe its one of these, maybe its a mix. Maybe its something we havent considered.

    Sadly, this means no website or budtender can accurately tell you how a strain will make you feel.

    In my personal experience? Strains with similar terpene profiles have similar-ish effects. Sour, heavy citrus strains give me headaches and make me anxious, while pine heavy strains make me sleepy and mellow. I trust my nose with strains I do not know.

    Try and find a pattern that works for you. Stick with it until the science can catch up.

  • Whisper06@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    Pretty much the only thing you can trust is indicas will probably make you sleepy, sativas will probably make you not sleepy and hybrids will be somewhere in between. Keep in mind though there are overlaps and you might not get an indica that makes you sleepy. The terpenes won’t make a much of a difference other than flavor.

  • ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    THC and CBD are mind altering substances. Their concentration and ratio are what determine effects. We don’t measure alcohol strength by the grains used to make it; we measure it by alcohol content. You can buy indica with 30% THC and 0% CBD and indica with 0% THC and 30% CBD and they’re going to have way different effects in the same way you can buy grain alcohol at 2% and 40%.

    That being said, there isn’t a lot of studies on what ratios give what affects and in what dosages. Because of that, it isn’t bad to see how people rate a particular product, assuming the product always has the same amounts of THC and CBD.