
- Fast-finishing citrus clarity for coastal growers
Citrus Daydream
Citrus Daydream is a compact hybrid that finishes quickly and offers bright citrus notes with a clear uplift.
- Rapid finish ideal for short seasons
- Bright citrus flavour with clean smoke
- Compact habit for sheltered coastal sites
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18-22% |
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<1% |
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Lemon Skunk x Early Durban |
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Hybrid |
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Intermediate |
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8-9 weeks |
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Short to medium (1–2 m) |
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Medium (350-450 g/plant outdoors) |
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Citrus, Pine, Sweet herbal |
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Feminised |
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Coastal, cool temperate, windy |
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Uplifting, Relaxed, Creative |
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Both - performs well indoors and outdoors, suited to short seasons |
About Citrus Daydream
Citrus Daydream is bred for rapid outdoor finishes and pronounced lemon-citrus terpenes. The plant stays compact, tolerates cooler coastal climates with the right shelter, and rewards attentive growers with clean, flavourful buds and a balanced, uplifting high.
Citrus Daydream is a balanced hybrid with a slight sativa lift. The plant combines energetic clarity with a gentle physical ease.
THC typically runs between 18 and 22 percent in good conditions. This level gives a clear cerebral high without overwhelming sedation.
CBD content is low, usually under one percent. The cultivar is not aimed at high-CBD medicinal use but retains useful terpenes.
The lineage pairs Lemon Skunk with an early-flowering Durban line to speed finish time. Selection focused on preserving citrus terpenes and reliable outdoor ripening.
Seeds are offered as feminised genetics to ensure consistent flowering females. Regular seed availability is limited as breeders favour stable feminised runs.
Growing Citrus Daydream outdoors requires intermediate skills due to wind exposure and the need for quick, decisive pruning. In windy coastal growing areas extra staking and wind protection are essential to prevent branch damage.
Flowering finishes in around eight to nine weeks under controlled light cycles. Outdoors it reliably ripens within a short season if planted early enough.
Yields are moderate for a short-season strain, commonly 350–450 grams per plant outdoors under good conditions. Indoor yields per square metre are comparable when plants are trained and fed correctly.
Plants stay compact with a dominant main cola and sturdy side branches. Typical outdoor height is between one and two metres depending on training and exposure.
Indoors the strain responds well to SOG and SCROG setups with controlled light and ventilation. Outdoors in Snowdonia it benefits from sheltered spots to reduce salt spray and wind damage.
In Snowdonia you must choose sites that shelter plants from prevailing winds and salt spray. In windy coastal growing areas a sheltered terrace or a windbreak will significantly improve bud quality.
Initial effects are uplifting and cerebral with a steady easing into relaxed focus. Many users report a creative boost and improved sociability without heavy sedation.
The flavour profile opens with bright lemon and orange zest. Underneath are pine and a sweet herbal backbone.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about this strain, covering growth, effects, and suitability for UK conditions.
Start seedlings indoors in late April and transplant after the last heavy spring frosts, aiming for a sheltered spot to avoid strong winds.
Use windbreaks, plant behind hedging or walls and rinse foliage lightly after storm events to reduce salt accumulation.
Low-stress training and single-cola or SCROG work well to produce even canopies and reduce wind leverage on branches.
Moderate feeding with a balanced NPK schedule during veg and a lower nitrogen, higher potassium regimen during bloom is ideal.
Yes, damp late seasons can raise mould risk so keep plants airy and remove any infected material promptly.
Yes, Citrus Daydream was bred for quicker finishes and is suitable for short season outdoor cannabis growing when planted early and protected.
Feminised seeds are reliable outdoors, while clones ensure uniformity and known vigour for marginal sites.
Monitor for aphids and caterpillars and use integrated pest management, encouraging predators and applying organic controls when necessary.
Harvest typically falls in late September to early October in cooler coastal regions if plants are timed correctly.
A final two-week flush and reduced feed late in bloom help preserve citrus terpene clarity without masking with excess fertiliser.
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