2009 Beginnings
San Francisco, 2009—Cookies was catching fire. Khash Treemason was a regular at Greendoor SF, dropping $1,400 a quarter pound on Platinum Cookies that later placed 3rd at the High Times Cup. One day, buried deep in a batch, he found a single seed. That seed became Grandma’s Cookies, his first true find.
The Second Seed
A few blocks away at the Hemp Center SF, Berner was still working the counter. Khash grabbed a half ounce of Girl Scout Cookies / Thin Mint for $200—and found another seed. That one sprouted into Cookie Dough. Two shops, two seeds, one year that rewrote his path.
From Bagseed to Blueprint
No clone trades, no breeder packs—just luck and instinct. Both seeds popped under Khash’s veganic living-soil program, run on slow flower cycles and clean feeds. What others might have tossed, he nurtured into history.
Refinement Era
Over the next few years, Khash pheno-hunted both lines, chasing ideal structure, balanced terps, and the gassy-dough nose that became his signature. By the mid-2010s, both cuts were fully dialed—distinct sisters grown under the same soil philosophy.
Bay Area Circulation
Before legalization, Grandma’s Cookies and Cookie Dough circulated quietly through SF and the greater Bay, passed collector-to-collector. Early reviews called them “pure Cookies before the flood,” a nod to their 2009 origin and uncommercialized purity.
Scarcity Economics
As whispers reached New York and Los Angeles, jars fetched $1,000–$1,800 an ounce in private rooms. No flashy bags or barcodes—just name weight and word-of-mouth validation among the real connoisseurs.
Two Phenotypes, One Philosophy
Both strains carried Khash’s mantra: patience, purity, preservation. Grandma’s Cookies embodied the legacy; Cookie Dough refined it. What began as chance evolved into lineage.
The Aura in the Seed
Two random bagseeds became some of the most sought-after flower on earth—small batch, flawless execution, zero shortcuts. Neither bred nor bought—just discovered, refined, and mastered. The aura isn’t hype; it’s the work.
Bagseed beginnings. Treemasonry endings.
YOUTUBE VIDEO
— Nugg Notes


SOURCE:
KHASH TREE MASON INSTAGRAM
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