Haze Heritage
Haze Heritage encompasses a broad lineage of sativa-dominant cannabis strains that emerged from 1970s–80s breeding work, primarily documented in Dutch and North American cultivar development. These strains are characterized by extended flowering periods, tall plant architecture, and terpene profiles commonly associated with citrus, spice, and floral aromatics. Haze lineages have been foundational to countless modern hybrid programs, as breeders frequently crossbreed Haze genetics with indica-leaning cultivars to balance growth cycles while preserving sativa expression. Records from established seed banks and breeding archives consistently cite Haze parentage in contemporary elite lines. The family encompasses several recognized subcategories, including pure Haze lines and Haze-hybrid crosses that vary in cannabinoid ratios and maturation timelines.
Haze Heritage strains
No strains tagged into Haze Heritage yet — they'll appear here as breeders submit lineage records under this family.
Haze Heritage encompasses a broad lineage of sativa-dominant cannabis strains that emerged from 1970s–80s breeding work, primarily documented in Dutch and North American cultivar development. These strains are characterized by extended flowering periods, tall plant architecture, and terpene profiles commonly associated with citrus, spice, and floral aromatics. Haze lineages have been foundational to countless modern hybrid programs, as breeders frequently crossbreed Haze genetics with indica-leaning cultivars to balance growth cycles while preserving sativa expression. Records from established seed banks and breeding archives consistently cite Haze parentage in contemporary elite lines. The family encompasses several recognized subcategories, including pure Haze lines and Haze-hybrid crosses that vary in cannabinoid ratios and maturation timelines.
Breeders working in sativa-hybrid development routinely incorporate Haze genetics to introduce vigor, extended flowering structure, and terpene complexity. Haze Heritage strains serve as proven parentage material for stabilizing sativa traits in photoperiod and autoflowering breeding projects.
Educational reference · Cultivar metadata only · No medical claims