
- Clear-headed uplift, reliable garden performance
Hurricane
Hurricane is a sativa-leaning hybrid that delivers clear, uplifting effects paired with earthy-citrus flavours.
- Fast-finishing hybrid for temperate gardens
- Robust terpene profile with citrus-pine notes
- Performs well under controlled indoor conditions
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18-22% |
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<1% |
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NORTHERN LIGHTS x HAZE |
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Hybrid (Sativa-leaning) |
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Intermediate |
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8-10 weeks |
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Medium-tall (1.2–2.0 m outdoors) |
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Medium-High (indoor 450-600 g/m²) |
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Citrus, Earthy, Pine |
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Feminised |
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Temperate; suited to regions with a short outdoor growing season |
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Uplifting, Relaxing, Focused |
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Indoor and Outdoor |
About Hurricane
Hurricane is bred for a balance of cerebral clarity and mellow physical ease, suited to growers who want reliable resin production and terpene complexity. It thrives under attentive care and rewards careful timing, particularly where seasons are short and humidity is high.
Hurricane is a balanced hybrid leaning slightly sativa. It delivers clear mental energy alongside gentle physical relaxation.
Hurricane typically tests between 18 and 22% THC. That potency suits users who want a noticeable cerebral lift without overwhelming sedation.
CBD levels are low, generally below one percent. The cultivar is therefore primarily chosen for psychoactive effects rather than CBD therapy.
Hurricane traces back to a cross of Northern Lights and Haze lineage. That parentage gives it both resin production and lively terpene character.
Seeds are supplied as Feminised to ensure consistent female crops. The genetics show stable phenotypes for predictable runs.
Growing Hurricane in a short outdoor growing season requires careful timing and vigilant canopy management. It is moderately demanding and needs attention to mould prevention and watering during the condensed summer window.
Flowering usually takes around eight to ten weeks under good conditions. Outdoors, accelerated ripening and cool autumns can stretch or stress that window.
Yield is moderate to high when plants receive steady light, nutrients and airflow. Outdoors in Northumberland, final weights depend heavily on summer length and late-season weather.
Plants develop a medium-tall structure with a pronounced central cola and lateral branches. Expect roughly 1.2 to 2.0 metres outdoors with a bushier, more compact form indoors.
Indoors Hurricane responds well to SCROG and SOG techniques to manage limited space. Outdoors in Northumberland, choose a sheltered, sunny spot and protect plants from driving rain and wind.
Growing Hurricane in Northumberland means working against a short outdoor growing season, so choose early-finishing phenotypes and time outplanting carefully. Protect plants from autumn rains and use containers or raised beds to improve drainage and microclimate.
The high is bright and uplifting with a clear-headed focus. A gradual body ease follows without heavy sedation.
Flavour notes favour citrus and pine layered over a solid earthy base. The finish is lightly sweet with herbal spice on the exhale.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about this strain, covering growth, effects, and suitability for UK conditions.
For high humidity cannabis cultivation, increase airflow, remove lower foliage, and avoid overly dense canopies; also monitor watering and harvest early if rot appears.
Start seeds indoors 4–6 weeks before the last expected frost and harden off seedlings carefully to make the most of the short outdoor growing season.
Hurricane can work for discreet outdoor growing but its medium-tall height and visible flowering smell make concealment and site selection important.
Low-stress training and topping combined with a light SCROG will promote even bud development and reduce mould risk in damp climates.
Water less frequently but deeply, and improve drainage with pots or raised beds to avoid waterlogged root zones that encourage mould.
Use a balanced NPK regime with moderate nitrogen during veg and higher phosphorus and potassium during flowering to support bud set.
Rely on trichome colour and pistil maturity rather than calendar days, and be prepared to harvest early if heavy rain or mould threat appears.
Yes; selective pruning and removing lower bud sites increases airflow and light penetration, lowering the risk of mould in damp summers.
Avoid foliar feeding late in the day when humidity is high, as wet foliage overnight raises mould risk; apply treatments in the morning with good airflow.
Dry slowly in a controlled indoor environment with stable 50–60% relative humidity and good airflow to reduce bud rot and preserve terpenes.
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