How to grow Hawaiian Snow

20% indica - 80% sativa
FuelSweetUpliftingFocused
Hawaiian Snow — Green House Seeds

Seb's take

Seb Silverback

Hawaiian Sativa crossed with a Laotian landrace, the aroma turning toward caramelised, almost roasted onion rather than anything sweeter — an unexpected note for a strain named after snow. Sweet and skunky underneath, pungent throughout; the high uplifts slowly into a sociable, energetic mood built for company. Useful against pain and low spirits alike.

Growing Hawaiian Snow: what to expect

Feminized photoperiod seed: every plant a female, and flowering starts when you change the lights — which puts the calendar in your hands. The photoperiod lesson covers using that control well.

Flowering takes 12 weeks — she is not to be hurried. Patience is the price of entry; the flowering guide will help you pay it gracefully.

The yield is, in plain terms, heavy — 700 g/m² when she's looked after. Branches will need support before they need sympathy; see supporting heavy colas.

Breeder figures put THC around 23% — firmly in the strong band. The number speaks for itself; we'll not add adjectives to it.

Fuel on the nose — she does not travel discreetly.

Effects report as chiefly uplifting — she raises the tone of a room rather than lowering the lights.

Learn to grow her properly:

Common questions about Hawaiian Snow

How long does Hawaiian Snow 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 Hawaiian Snow 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 Hawaiian Snow?

The breeder lists THC around 23%. Firmly in the strong band.

What does Hawaiian Snow smell and taste like?

The aroma leans fuel: forecourt sharpness with intent behind it.