Neighborgoods Blue Zushi Hybrid Flower: The Land of Linalool

I know a guy named Dave who has an impeccable palate for pot. Anytime he gives something a good review, I am eager to try it myself. He has guided me towards many well-tasting products including the Standard Farms Cranberry Kush disposable and the Arnie P iKrusher from Certified.

I was surprised when I got a text from him about the Blue Zushi hybrid flower from Neighborgoods. Any time I had seen the buds I wasn’t thrilled with the look. The nugs looked kind of small with lots of shake and trim in the jars. Dave said the stuff was “Decent quality, good moisture…grinds nice. I liked it enough to want to try more strains from them.”

When I was finally able to do so I bought one of the last Blue Zushis in stock at my dispensary. I didn’t get a chance to weigh it before initial consumption. I didn’t even think I’d get a chance to consume the stuff at first thanks to the lid! I fought with that thing for several minutes trying to separate it from the jar. At one point I was convinced the only way to access the cannabis would be to smash the plastic jar with a hammer.

After somehow finally opening it I was able to smell the sweet, gassy skunkiness. The stuff won’t totally blow up a room like some old school Death Star, but you’ll be able to smell it several feet away. I was surprised with the robust smell strength.

The flower was not dry. There was some slight stickiness throughout. It broke up good with fingers and held its own through a grinder. It was not very dense, there was a sponginess to it. However, it did pass the squeeze test, which is something I do when assessing weed. If the bud loses its form or feels thin when squeezed, it fails the squeeze test.

Medium green color painted the buds with some darker notes peppered across. A smattering of small orange pistils stuck close to the nugs. There was a clean, tight trim. It seems like they threw in a bit of loose leaf to bring the weight up to the full 2.83 grams. I wish I would have weighed this tenth.

To me the Blue Zushi didn’t taste or smell like blueberry. It was sweet and skunky in flavor with a floral, weedy aroma. It burned with medium speed and left behind a light-colored ash. It was not harsh on the throat and did not generate phlegm.

The medical effects were relaxing and soothing. Despite this, I didn’t feel zonked out or lazy. My pain went down the drain and my aches applied their brakes. The Blue Zushi was a unique middle-of-the-road hybrid that I hope makes it back to store shelves.

The terpene profile sets Neighborgoods’ version apart from the Standard Farms Blue Zushi I’ve seen on menus. While the Standard version has limonene, caryophyllene, and myrcene as the top terpenes, Neighborgoods’ cut has linalool, limonene, and myrcene.

Linalool is the top terpene, a rarity with Ohio marijuana! Maybe that explains the comforting medical effects boasted by this bodacious bud.

I gave Neighborgoods Blue Zushi an 8 for taste, 4 for harshness, 8 for strength, 7 for smell strength, and 60 minutes for length of medical effects.

Total THC 25.1%, Delta-9 THC 2.47%, THCa 25.8%, CBG 0.11%, CBD 0%.

Terpenes: Linalool 0.55%, d-Limonene 0.53%, b-Myrcene 0.37%.

Manufactured by CannaMed Therapeutics. Harvested 05/22/2024, tested 07/09/2024 by North Coast, packaged 07/15/2024, expires 05/22/2025.


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