How to grow Auto Duck
Seb's take
Frisian Duck crossed with Auto White Widow, and the resulting leaves look so little like cannabis that the neighbours are none the wiser until flowering starts. Spice, pine and citrus on the nose; the high is relaxed, happy and energetic — dense, thick buds arriving in under three months for a grower who prefers to keep things quiet.
Growing Auto Duck: what to expect
Auto-flowering, so the light-schedule homework is largely done for you. Less control, fewer mistakes on offer — a fair trade for a first grow. Details in autos versus photoperiods.
Allow 12 weeks of flower, possibly more. Long-flowering lines reward the grower who doesn't count the days aloud — knowing the harvest signs matters more than the calendar here.
Not a heavy producer, and untroubled by that fact. Grow her for what she is rather than for the scales — though good practice will still add a little.
Potency sits in the milder band — 15% THC on the breeder's sheet. No embellishment from us; the figure is the figure.
The aroma is citrus-forward: zest first, everything else in its wake.
Grower reports give her a relaxed lean: unhurried company for an unhurried evening.
Learn to grow her properly:
Common questions about Auto Duck
How long does Auto Duck take to flower?
Around 12 weeks of flowering, by the breeder's numbers. She takes her time; the result is the argument for it.
Is Auto Duck an autoflower or a photoperiod strain?
An autoflower — she flowers on age rather than light hours, which simplifies the schedule considerably.
How strong is Auto Duck?
The breeder lists THC around 15%. The gentler end of the scale.
What does Auto Duck smell and taste like?
Citrus leads the nose — sharp, clean, and inclined to announce itself.