I read something like last year about.... I think it's Terpinolene maybe ? Anyway, it's one of the Terpenes in Weed, and it actually can help repel insects and apparently is used for that very reason in certain sprays. I imagine a plant that has that as the dominant Terpene would be pretty bug free for the most part.
Now in my personal experience (Though I don't have lab test data to see how much of which terpenes were in there) Blue Cheese doesn't get hit too hard outside. We had Gypsy Moth Caterpillars ALL over last year and they went after pretty much EVERY plant and Tree.... Now, Strawberry Diesel, and Bubblegum and Cactido took the brunt of the insect attack, and almost EVERY bug that we have that attacks plants, went right after the Bubblegum, but Blue Cheese ? A few Beetles and others tried.....I never actually saw a single Caterpillar actually ON the Blue Cheese plant; I DID see a few that would climb up the side of the pots I had them in, but as a Bass Player, my fingers were fully capable of "The flick of death" so they never got to the plant, though at night, I wasn't out there, and they could have ended up on them, but they didn't seem to ever go for it.
Now that isn't because I'm some black belt in Bug Fu, but from what I've read, and seen myself; Blue Cheese is pest resistant (And Mold resistant if online grow docs are to be believed). Then again Blue Cheese is one of the EASIEST strains to grow, and, 2 years in a row, the buds on small Blue Cheese plants were humiliating the MUCH larger plants I had out there.
I got over 2 pounds of weed off a single Motor Breath plant last season, and the plant was about 10 or so feet tall, so you'd think the buds on it would have been huge compared to a 6 foot Blue Cheese, but they weren't. Even that giant 15 or so foot Grease Monkey plant had smaller Colas than Blue Cheese. Produces like a champ, resists pest and mold, and finishes usually by the end of September or early October. So no matter what your climate is, you should TOTALLY grow some
LOL.