I can see both sides of this issue. If I were to try to turn my grandparents on to cannabis for their ailments, I wouldn't want to say, "here, try this Thunderfuck". but as both a medical and recreational user myself, I don't mind weird and creative names.
I think it is a bit similar to beer, in that there are now many microbreweries making some damn good brew, and a lot of them use creative and interesting names for their beers, not all of which are family friendly, to stand out from the rest and differentiate themselves from the big producers. but alcohol is only for adults, so adult themes aren't so out of place among people looking for a buzz.
with cannabis, the recreational market is much like the beer thing, appealing to adults looking to have fun. but then we also have children, elderly, and those who don't like to get high, using cannabis for serious life threatening conditions and as a pure medicine. and in that context, I can see how some strain names might turn some people away. they could always do like the pharmaceutical companies do, and give them names that are weird made-up words that don't really mean anything. that would probably appeal to more mainstream folks.
and for the legalization movement, I can see how some names get used by opponents to try to shine a negative light. but I would hope that any thinking person would look past the names and look at the substance behind the name. I wonder if the repeal of alcohol prohibition would have gone differently if underground hooch had names like Skullsplitter, Bitch's Brew, or Arrogant Bastard?
but, honestly I don't really care what a strain is called, I only care about how it grows, smells/tastes, and what mental/physical effects it has. hell, I had this one plant a few years ago from a random seed that I called "Pussy Finger" because, well, it stank in a good way
I think it is a bit similar to beer, in that there are now many microbreweries making some damn good brew, and a lot of them use creative and interesting names for their beers, not all of which are family friendly, to stand out from the rest and differentiate themselves from the big producers. but alcohol is only for adults, so adult themes aren't so out of place among people looking for a buzz.
with cannabis, the recreational market is much like the beer thing, appealing to adults looking to have fun. but then we also have children, elderly, and those who don't like to get high, using cannabis for serious life threatening conditions and as a pure medicine. and in that context, I can see how some strain names might turn some people away. they could always do like the pharmaceutical companies do, and give them names that are weird made-up words that don't really mean anything. that would probably appeal to more mainstream folks.
and for the legalization movement, I can see how some names get used by opponents to try to shine a negative light. but I would hope that any thinking person would look past the names and look at the substance behind the name. I wonder if the repeal of alcohol prohibition would have gone differently if underground hooch had names like Skullsplitter, Bitch's Brew, or Arrogant Bastard?
but, honestly I don't really care what a strain is called, I only care about how it grows, smells/tastes, and what mental/physical effects it has. hell, I had this one plant a few years ago from a random seed that I called "Pussy Finger" because, well, it stank in a good way
