How to grow Black Domina
Seb's take
This cut of Black Domina takes its name from a near-midnight colouring, built on the same Ortega, Hash Plant, Northern Lights, and Afghani lineage as her sisters. Small and long-leaved, she's easy to manage in tight spaces and delivers the familiar relaxed, sleepy, euphoric indica landing. A dark strain, honestly named.
Growing Black Domina: what to expect
Feminized photoperiod stock. You control when she flowers, which is a responsibility as much as a convenience; the light schedule guide keeps you on the right side of it.
Flowering is done in roughly 7 weeks. The calendar will suit the impatient; the flowering notes will suit everyone.
Expect 400-500 g/m² — a working grower's yield, reliable rather than theatrical. The harvest guide will see it in safely.
The listed THC is 12% — the gentler end of the scale, stated plainly. Harvest timing moves the needle more than most growers realise.
Earthy on the nose — the old-school profile, done properly.
Reported effects lean relaxed — the sitting-down sort.
Learn to grow her properly:
Black Domina from other breeders
The same name, several hands. Every breeder’s version below is its own cut — different figures, different temperament, same family. The particulars above describe the lead listing.
- Herbies Seeds feminized Seeds at Herbies →
In less of a hurry (~64 days against the ~50 above), a bigger number on the breeder's sheet (21% THC), lists a heavier harvest.
- Sensi Seeds regular Seeds at Herbies →
The traditional regular-seed article, tests stronger on paper (20% THC).
Common questions about Black Domina
How long does Black Domina take to flower?
Around 7 weeks of flowering, by the breeder's numbers. Quick, as these things go.
Is Black Domina an autoflower or a photoperiod strain?
A feminized photoperiod strain — flowering starts when you switch the lights, so the timing is yours to control.
How strong is Black Domina?
The breeder lists THC around 12%. The gentler end of the scale.
What does Black Domina smell and taste like?
She smells of earth and heritage; nothing invented, nothing added.