“The seeds are huge and the smell of the flowers are incredible! Germinated 2seeds, got 1male and 1female. Crossed female with with a Hawaiian Sativa. Week 4 of flower”
“Sprouted 2 seeds, both came out fem, but one slightly indica dominant, the other huge and sativa dominant. Both have a similar smell, and were easy to grow outside in searing hot temps, in 30gallon pots. I'm a sativa fan who has begun to appreciate the relief of nerve pain that having some indica in the mix provides, and this strain is my favorite so far. I waited for around 15% of the trichomes to turn amber, which was the 9th of October for the indica pheno, & November 1st for the sativa pheno. Have not tried the indica pheno yet, but the sativa is a soaring sativa high that lasted half the day, settling into a mellow body buzz that was perfect to get some sleep. Forgot about my nerve pain and was able to skip prescription medication until the next day. Similar to Nirvana's Black Jack, but stronger.”
“I tended to prefer to harvest at around 12 weeks with this one. The description of the flavor doesn't really do it justice. It is one of the more potent varieties with distinctly orange flavor. There were two pheno with this flavor and comparable effects and only minor differences in growth. One pheno had a complex funky, mango chutney thing going on. The smoke of the orange pheno is superior though. You will know it when you find it. It's not a "I guess that smells a little like oranges" sort of a thing.
The cola on a Satori plant is going to be gigantic and fairly dense, in other words control your humidity levels. Also topping or lst would be strongly advised to spread that density around.
One final note: when I was growing her, I was in a toxic relationship, almost defined by lots of very heated arguements. This herb is some of the most incredible "peace pipe" herb that I have ever encountered. It would take the nerves from 12 (in a scale of 1-10) and turn the volume down to 1-2 instantly. Really fantastic stress weed... Can't say this more emphatically.”