Growing Pineapple Haze Marijuana Seeds
Pineapple Haze seeds are legendary, producing a tall, high yielding plant from it's hybrid mix of a dominant 70% Sativa to 30% Indica Marijuana genetics. Pineapple Haze seeds grow best indoors, but it is advised that you use super-cropping techniques to control the height, which can be up to 250 cm tall.
The Sativa dominance requires a longer flowering period, approximately 85 days, however, those extra few weeks flowering will reap rewards of approximately 550 grams per square meter, given good environmental controls.
High THC levels of between 17% - 19% provide an uplifting, energetic high, while the Indica genes provide a body-stoned sensation, which leaves the user with a pleasant, all-round high.
The buds have a sweet, citrus flavor and taste very similar to pineapple fruit, which is also visible in the shape of the buds, as they take on a pineapple shape.
Although the CBD content is fairly low, medical marijuana users may be interested to know it's an ideal strain for helping with depression, stress and PMT as well as many other ailments and conditions.
Only female Pineapple Haze seeds produce buds, and as these seeds are all 100% feminized, you are guaranteed female-only plants.
The story of Haze Marijuana starts in the late 1960's in Santa Cruz, where a moderate climate and a dry autumn mix to allow farmers to increase their outdoor growing time beyond October. Right here, alongside the California shoreline, the Haze Brothers cultivated an unique assortment of cannabis that rapidly attained fame inside the areas small circle of cannabis connoisseurs at that time. The Original Haze, rumored to have tropical genetics from Thailand, Mexico, and Colombia, gave the user a huge sativa jolt. The feeling created was cerebral and uplifting, with almost no ceiling to the buzz.
Joe Haze, one of the aforementioned Haze Brothers, was quoted in American #sixty three (dated November of 1980) as follows: The plants they develop up there in Northern Cali is largely indica, but it is harvested early to get it in ahead of the frost. In our county the flowers pump out resin till December, and Haze weed is from sativa seeds.4 Haze phenotypes arose, nicknamed Gold, Silver, Purple, and Blue.
In spite of the buzz, Haze seeds remained scarce for several years until the late 1970s, when famed breeder Sam Skunkman started out making and refining his very own batches. By 1984, he had taken them to Holland and began marketing them beneath his Sacred Seeds moniker. With a flowering time from twelve to as much as sixteen weeks, the Original Haze gained a reputation as a finicky, difficult plant to grow, and many people favored planting Skunk and Northern Lights seeds as an alternative. (The Original Haze is still available today in seed form from Flying Dutchmen Seeds.)
However, people who did grow the Haze to fruition were rewarded with lengthy, sticky spears of spicy nuggets. These colas had to be coaxed out of the plant, with growers becoming careful not to overfeed or over-water. Stakes or trellises are a must, to prevent the tops from falling down beneath their own heavy weight. These lengthy, slim leaves and wispy buds are attribute of pure sativa's like the Haze.