Nostalgia | Trainwreck | 70's | Popcorn Flower | 14g
Lineage: (Mexican x Thai) x Afghani Landrace (Sativa)
Profile: Earthy, Floral, and Citrus
Dominant Terpenes: Myrcene, Linalool, and Limonene
Trainwreck is a legendary sativa-dominant hybrid believed to have originated in Northern California during the late 1970s to early ’80s. According to lore, the strain was created by blending Mexican and Thai sativas with a resin-rich Afghani indica.
- Woody
- Earthy
- Pine
A tribute to the strains, stories, and spirit that shaped cannabis culture, revived for a new generation. NOSTALGIA exists to bring back what made cannabis special in the first place: the culture, the community, the connection.
Every strain tells a story, each one carefully selected to revive the legends that shaped the scene. We blend the roots of cannabis history with today’s most advanced cultivation to create something that feels both familiar and new. Nostalgia celebrates the moments that made us fall in love with cannabis, the laughter, the creativity, the calm. It’s a bridge between generations, where heritage meets innovation and the past still has a place in the present.
Trainwreck is a cultivar with mysterious origins, most particularly about the meaning behind its name. Legend has it Trainwreck was so named because the original cut grew on a hill the same summer there was a train crash in the Humboldt region. Other sources claim the strain was named for the immediate slam of mental invigoration it had on users, which hit the mind like a runaway train.
According to the Seedsman blog, Trainwreck first emerged sometime in the 1980s from the Emerald Triangle region of Northern California. Trainwreck itself is thought to be a cross of several landrace strains, namely a Mexican Sativa, Thai Sativa, and Afghani Indica.
Lab tests show Trainwreck with high levels of the terpenes terpinolene, myrcene, and limonene, all of which contribute to its reported lemon and pine aroma. Consumers can point to its limonene content and moderate 14%-18% THC content for Trainwreck’s energy-inducing effects.