Haze Fruit
Haze Fruit represents a lineage category combining sativa-dominant Haze genetics with fruit-forward terpene profiles. These strains typically emerge from crosses between Haze parent lines and fruity cultivars, resulting in plants often tagged with berry, citrus, or tropical aromatics alongside Haze's characteristic spicy-herbal base notes. Breeders working in this category frequently report extended flowering periods common to Haze ancestry, paired with moderate to vigorous plant structure. The family encompasses diverse phenotypes depending on which Haze generation and which fruit-bearing parent is employed in crosses. Lineage records show these hybrids became more prevalent in commercial breeding during the 2000s–2010s as breeders sought to balance Haze vigor with consumer-facing sensory traits. Contemporary seed banks maintain multiple Haze Fruit expressions reflecting regional breedi
Haze Fruit strains
No strains tagged into Haze Fruit yet — they'll appear here as breeders submit lineage records under this family.
Haze Fruit represents a lineage category combining sativa-dominant Haze genetics with fruit-forward terpene profiles. These strains typically emerge from crosses between Haze parent lines and fruity cultivars, resulting in plants often tagged with berry, citrus, or tropical aromatics alongside Haze's characteristic spicy-herbal base notes. Breeders working in this category frequently report extended flowering periods common to Haze ancestry, paired with moderate to vigorous plant structure. The family encompasses diverse phenotypes depending on which Haze generation and which fruit-bearing parent is employed in crosses. Lineage records show these hybrids became more prevalent in commercial breeding during the 2000s–2010s as breeders sought to balance Haze vigor with consumer-facing sensory traits. Contemporary seed banks maintain multiple Haze Fruit expressions reflecting regional breedi
Haze Fruit hybrids serve breeders as a bridge between sativa potency and hybrid vigor; the fruity aromatic layer can mask or complement Haze's sharp edge, making these lines useful for selecting phenotypes with broader commercial appeal. Growers also employ these genetics to develop region-specific cultivars with stable terpene expression and extended crop cycles.
Educational reference · Cultivar metadata only · No medical claims