How to grow Marula Fruit
Seb's take
Mozambica and Mendocino meet across continents here, an African landrace crossed with California's own — a passport stamp of a lineage. Tropical fruit sits over an earthy base; the high is relaxed, happy and euphoric, a proper stone by any measure. Worldly in origin and effect alike.
Growing Marula Fruit: what to expect
Regular seeds — males and females in the packet, as nature intended and breeders prefer. You'll be sexing plants around the flip, so know what you're looking for before it matters.
She finishes flowering in around 8 weeks — brisk work by any standard. Read up on the flowering stage before she starts, because she won't wait while you do.
A middling 140 cm or so at maturity — tall enough to yield, short enough to manage. Standard tent territory; the light planner sorts the hanging height.
A solid, dependable yield — 425 – 475 g/m² under decent conditions. Nothing that requires bragging; everything that justifies the effort. The yield lesson covers getting to "decent conditions".
Breeder figures put THC around 20% — firmly in the strong band. The number speaks for itself; we'll not add adjectives to it.
Fruity across the nose — orchard rather than sweetshop.
Reported effects lean relaxed — the sitting-down sort.
Learn to grow her properly:
Common questions about Marula Fruit
How long does Marula Fruit take to flower?
Around 8 weeks of flowering, by the breeder's numbers. Quick, as these things go.
Is Marula Fruit an autoflower or a photoperiod strain?
Regular photoperiod seed — expect males and females in the packet, and plan to identify the males early.
How tall does Marula Fruit grow?
Around 140 cm. Standard tent territory.
How strong is Marula Fruit?
The breeder lists THC around 20%. Firmly in the strong band.