Mexican Red Hair Autoflower Seeds
Mexican Red Hair sensimilla is a legendary strain descended from high-quality landraces.It’s highly resistant to pests and mold, and only grows to around three to four feet tall. The buds are a gorgeous dark green, looking every bit the part of a tropical flower with their abundant red hairs, dew drops of dark resin, and occasional pops of dark blue or purple in its curling calyxes.
With 18-20% THC and < 1% CBD, this Sativa dominant hybrid can give indoor growers more than a pound per square meter in 8-10 weeks. It can tolerate cooler climates thanks to its ruderalis genes and does well anywhere that has a sunny summer. Where these plants really shine is outdoors in warm and bright Mediterranean climates, like California, where they can stretch. The high on this plant is uplifting and focusing, perfect for motivation and bad mood-busting. It’s also used for migraines and chronic pain associated with inflammation.
Mexican Red Hair Autoflower Strain Flowering
It takes roughly 8–10 weeks for red hair sensimilla to flower, and they do best when they’re not rushed into a harvest. Autoflowering plants start to bloom on their own time and require no lighting change. Fertilizers should be higher in potassium and phosphorus during thr flowering period, and always remember that autoflower plants need less food than photoperiod plants do. Whenever in doubt, start slow and low. While pest and mold resistant, they prefer drier environments, especially during flowering. Keep the airflow high and humidity low, keeping the relative humidity at around fifty percent during vegetation down to the low forties during flowering. This strain is known for its distinct deep auburn pistil hairs that grow in abundance all over the bud. Buds are dark forest green, long, and curly. Flowers can appear fluffy from a distance thanks to their spindly calyxes and the aforementioned hairs. Up close, the buds are often covered in obvious drops of resin. They look much more like tropical hothouse flowers when compared to the highly manicured nugget crops that many American consumers have gotten used to over the years. Shocking these plants with nighttime temperatures in the fifties or sixties during the flushing phase can bring out blue and purple colors in the flowers. It’s also possible to lollipop these plants around four weeks into flowering, by defoliating much of the bud sites and flowers under a certain level to increase energy and focus on higher up, larger buds. Inflorescences grow on branches like tall cones, spitting out plentiful sugar leaves.
Fragrance, and Flavors of Mexican Red Hair Sensimilla
It takes a while for the scent of these plants to build up enough to be noticeable. When they do, the fragrance is classically earthy, with hints of fruit, lemon and pine. Plants of this strain can smell quite skunky near the end of their growing cycle, with a pungent depth that matches the rich soil it does best in. The drying and curing process lightens this smell and does away with some of the more disagreeable and sharp pongs. Cured buds smell closer to a lumberyard or a room full of woody incense, with higher and more acidic notes wafting as the scent dries down thanks to terpinolene. The grinder brings out the spiciness of caryophyllene in the buds, with a more fermented and sour smelling dank underneath courtesy of musky b-myrcene. The smell of anise is also vaguely present, as well as hints of sweetness. A toke gives hints of the former skunkiness, but with a rounder and more herbal silage. The first inhale is deliciously lemony, full of light and fruity limonene. Despite its citrus flavor, the smoke is quite smooth and not sour, with deep incense wood undertones that make it taste more like a lemon black tea than a dose of lime juice. Classic phenotypes of this strain are said to taste like pineapple and smell like sandalwood. Like partaking in organically grown tobacco, a peppery and woody scent fills the room with its incense-like smoke. Notes of diesel, lemon, and mint stick to the lips and tip of the tongue upon exhaling. The aftertaste is a combination of camphor and light tropical fruits that could be sold as a sophisticated cologne. This strain is anything but sour.










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Milton Landes –
I grow good weed now. Laura at Kindseed helped me. Mexican Red Hair Auto Fem easy to grow. Good yields!