Short Wave - Why Weed's Signature Scent Has Changed Over Time
Episode Date: June 16, 2025The skunky smell of cannabis may be going out of style. NPR's science correspondent Pien Huang visited the grow facility for District Cannabis, which sells weed in Washington D.C. and Maryland. On her... tour, she learned why cannabis smells the way it does. Plus, how many strains have been bred — to smells like lavender, citrus and even cookies. Read more of science correspondent Pien Huang's reporting on this topic here, or check out the entire special series, "How safe is your weed?" Questions about the science behind the mysteries, events and... smells... all around us? Email us at shortwave@npr.org – we'd love to hear your ideas!Listen to Short Wave on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to Shortwave from NPR.
Hey, short wavers, Regina Barber here.
And I love long walks.
And sometimes on my walks around the city, I get some distinct smells.
One of them is cannabis.
I hear you, Gina.
It's that skunky, gassy smell that whops out from doorways and windows and people stoop.
It is that unmistakable smell of weed.
Ping Wong, NPR health reporter, friend of the show.
I understand you went on a journey lately to learn about why cannabis smell.
the way it smells. Yep, it's true. It went to the depths of Western Maryland. And today I'm going to
take you along with me. We're going to a hydroponic cannabis grow farm where they produce 15,000
pounds of cannabis flour each year. That is a lot of pot. That's what he said. It's a lot of weed.
So who's he? So that's Androsh Kirshner. He's the founder and head grower at District Cannabis.
They sell in Washington, D.C. and in Maryland. And he's going to be our tour guide today. He's going to
take us around the facilities.
That's our grow facility.
It's our weed factory.
It's a dream come true.
So this is a facility that opened in 2020, and they do a lot here.
They grow baby cannabis plants to maturity.
They harvest and dry them.
They process and package them for retail sale.
And to take the tour, we got suited up.
Jacket, we should get you a lab coat.
And then we're going to have to put your shoes in a little wrap to protect the plant.
And Gina, you and the listeners are going to come with us.
I'm excited. Let's do it.
We're going to dive into what's behind that distinctive smell of marijuana and how it's evolved
to incorporate more notes of lavender and citrus and less overwhelming funk.
So today on the show, we'll take you on a smell tour of a cannabis factory
and talk about why weed smells the way it smells and how that knowledge is leading to more varieties.
You're listening to Shortwave, the science podcast from NPR.
Okay, so Ping, tell me more about this grow farm you went to in western Maryland.
So it's out in Hagerstown. It's about an hour and a half northwest of D.C.
And it's just off the highway and just down the street from the sheriff's office.
Okay.
And it is a big warehouse and greenhouse compound locked behind barbed wire gates.
We started in the nursery where they have racks of these little plants stacked on top of each other.
So young plants in the vegetative state, they like high temperatures.
humidity. So that's how we keep the environment in here. And Ping, what did it smell like at this
point in the nursery? Honestly, not a lot. Okay. I mean, when I was driving in, I got like a hint of that
skunky smell. But in the first grow stages, cannabis doesn't really smell like a whole lot. Just
earthy, like plants growing. It's only when the plants bloom that it really starts giving off
smells. And that was our next stop, the indoor flowering room. So what you're going to see in here is our
famous gelato cake strain. You are here just about five days before harvest.
It's this warm, humid room with rows and rows of blooming cannabis plants, about 1,500
and all. Squeeze it a little bit, and then you get the essence in your fingers.
Okay, so to back it up, last year, Andrash won the grand champion title in a competition
with other weed growers from D.C., Maryland, and Virginia. Oh, wow. Congratulations to him.
Yeah, it's called the National Cannabis Championship. And he won a
with a strain called layer cake.
Now, the room that we're in now,
it was filled with a cousin to it called gelato cake.
It's one of their top-selling strains.
And Kyle Pearl, who's the general manager of operations here,
described the smell for us.
So this is definitely one of our more complex profiles.
Its dominant terpenes are cariophylline,
limine and linole.
Okay, so wait a second.
What are turpines?
Okay, good question.
Yes, thank you.
So these are one of several types of,
of chemical compounds that are in cannabis.
These turpines in particular are chemical compounds that are found in a lot of plants,
from herbs and citrus to pine trees.
And in cannabis, they're largely responsible for the different smells and flavors in the plants.
Now, with gelato cake, those turpines were giving sweetness and grapes with some cognac
on the finish.
Wow.
That was their description.
It smelled a little floral, a little hoppy to me.
Okay.
And it had some notes of kerosene as well, or as Andrash calls it.
it gas. It was what a lot of the breeders wanted when they started breeding cannabis. And so a lot of
the strains started to really exhibit that skunk smell. Right, that skunk smell, like that classic
smell of wheat. And I spoke with Pamela Dalton, who's a smell scientist at the Minnell Chemical
Census Center, which is this nonprofit research institute. They focus on smell and taste. And she
She said that that classic weed smell used to be attributed to a skunky terpen, but more recently,
research has found a different culprit.
Oh.
And they found out that it was actually a sulfur compound, which, to my way of thinking,
would absolutely be what would be responsible for a sulfur odor, right?
The smell of skunk spray or anything like that.
She says it's that sulfur compound mixed with the fresher-smelling turpines that gives
marijuana its signature smells.
And in some strains, that skunk note really dominant.
We are extremely sensitive to sulfur compounds. So if you have a range of compounds in your cannabis, it's likely that what you're going to smell first are the sulfur compounds.
Wow, that's like really fascinating. So like even if there's just a little bit of that sulfur, our noses are so sensitive that it's going to like be the main thing they smell.
That's right. But Pamela says that there's been a trend in cannabis cultivation towards new strains and hybrids that are more pleasant.
to more people. I'm almost 70 years old, and the cannabis I smelled when I was 13, 14, 15
smelled way skunkier than anything that I experienced now. And Androsh, our cannabis farmer, has
seen this too. He says that in the early days, cannabis breeders and growers were really going
for that skunk smell. But in more recent years, as recreational use has grown, cannabis breeders and growers
are developing new strains, and there's been a blossoming of varieties with more smells and
flavors.
From berry to citrus, lemon, lime, cherry, and a lot of the popular strains are kind of a combination
between the gas and another flavor.
I mean, lemon, lime, cherry, citrus, it all sounds a lot like candy.
That's true.
And in fact, Jamila Hogan.
who goes by Jay Mills.
She's a longtime weed educator,
head of a cannabis experience company
called Abiddy Green.
She says that all these varieties
have been trending in the same direction.
It's the Runtz, picky, cake, gelato profile.
You know it because the buds are oftentimes
a little bit purple, super frosty.
Those buds are coated in these tiny glands
that produce resin and kind of sparkle in the light.
She calls the whole lineage
runcice a cake lotto.
The nose on it is musky, gassy, sweet, and skunk.
I like to call it the bad girl after brunch smell.
Tell me a little bit more what she means by that.
I had the same question.
I was like, say more.
She's sweet, but she's funky.
She needs to take a shower.
But it's a good sweet funk.
She had a good time.
J-Mill says that this cakey gelato profile has been dominated.
for the past five or six years. Before cake, it was cookies, before cookies, it was gas.
But back at the Grove Farm, we're going from room to room through the production process.
Kyle, that general manager, he pointed out a strain called Pavay, which is named after
super sparkly jewelry. It was flowering in the greenhouse.
It's an overwhelmingly, kind of cushy, earthy, it's almost a little minty, a little
spear minty. There are stocks of cherry lime made cake that were hanging upside down to
dry in the cure room. In the trim room, Andrash says that they're processing a new hybrid called
Barry Payton. It is a tropical runts times Gary Payton. Those are the parents. You can definitely
smell the fruity profile. Did you smell it? I mean, I smelled all these different rooms. Like
literally every room smelled a little bit different. I wish he could smell it. It was like a different
combination of musky, fruity gas. Okay, so Pink, nobody buys cannabis just for the smell.
right. It's true. Yes. That is the fact. The main reason people buy cannabis is for its psychoactive
properties to get high or to relax or to treat a medical condition. And that comes from a whole
other class of chemicals, like cannabinoids. And marijuana is big business. There's this national
survey from 2022 that showed that people in the U.S. are now using cannabis more regularly than
alcohol. Wow. This room's going to be a little loud. We've got a lot of machines firing off in this space.
So the weed grown here is headed for the local market, and Andrash says that some of it gets packaged and sold as flour, or extracted for edibles and dabs and baits or pre-rolled into joints.
So we have a machine here that is automated and can make four million pre-rolls in a year.
We're currently not selling that many, but we can make them.
And in Maryland, where cannabis has been allowed for recreational use,
used since 2023. Consumers have spent more than $180 million on cannabis products in the first
two months of the year. So clearly there's a lot of demand for this. Ping, thank you so much
for bringing this reporting. I had a great time. Thanks so much. Me too. This episode was produced by
Rachel Carlson. It was edited by showrunner Rebecca Ramirez and fact check by Ping Wong and
Tyler Jones. Quasey Lee was the audio engineer. Beth Donovan is our senior director and Colin
Campbell is our senior vice president of podcasting strategy. I'm Regina Barber. Thank you for listening
to Shorewave from NPR.
