
Durban Poison Clones
A energetic, uplifting Sativa
- Earthy
- Woody
- Spicy/Herbal

Strong genetics, thriving plants.
Green Dragon Farms is California’s dark horse. They are the ultimate source for premium clones and flowers.
Green Dragon empowers patients and adult users to have a cannabis garden of their own, supplying healthy clones with strong genetics. Patients who are choosy about what they smoke or enthusiasts seeking to take their love of cannabis to the next level can grow at home with one of Green Dragon Farms premium clones.
History
The founder of Green Dragon Farms is a longtime grower who has been caring for and harvesting cannabis since 2005. He was inspired to begin growing cannabis out of necessity. Finding premium flowers was difficult to near impossible, and as the old saying goes, “if you want something done right, you’ll have to do it yourself.”
Today, Green Dragon Farms makes it possible for patients and enthusiasts alike to cultivate and enjoy the finest strains of flower.
Process
There are few facilities quite like Green Dragon Farms, and their uniqueness isn’t just the scale of their garden, it's the quality of their clones. Green Dragon Farms master growers carefully tend to their mother plants and provide the best cuts of fully feminized cannabis. For clones with superior genetics look no further than Green Dragon Farms.
Products
Green Dragon Farms offers a myriad of strain varieties derived from the healthiest and most stable mother plants. Folks can’t get enough of their San Fernando Valley OG clones or flowers. This phenotype of OG Kush provides a large yield with buds blanketed in trichomes. Find the strain you love and bring those buds to life with Green Dragon Farms.
Durban Poison has deep roots in the Sativa landrace gene pool. The strain’s historic phenotypes were first noticed in the late 1970s by one of America’s first International strain hunters, Ed Rosenthal. According to cultivation legend, Rosenthal was in South Africa in search of new genetics and ran across a fast flowering strain in the port city of Durban. After arriving home in the U.S., Rosenthal conducted his own selective breeding process on his recently imported seeds, then begin sharing. Rosenthal gave Mel Frank some of his new South African seeds, and the rest was cannabis history.
Frank, who wrote the “Marijuana Grower’s Guide Deluxe" in 1978, modified the gene pool to increase resin content and decrease the flowering time. In search of a short-season varietal that could hit full maturation on the U.S. East Coast, Frank’s crossbreeding efforts resulted in two distinct phenotypes, the “A” line and “B” line. The plant from Frank’s “A” line became today’s Durban Poison, while the “B” line was handed off to Amsterdam breeder David Watson, also known as “Sam the Skunkman.”
Durban Poison has a dense, compact bud structure that’s typical of landrace Indica varieties, but the flowers’ elongated and conical shape is more characteristic of a Sativa.