Thai Citrus Crosses
Thai Citrus Crosses represent a lineage family built around Thai landraces crossed with citrus-forward cultivars, often featuring Sour Diesel, Lemon Skunk, or other limonene-dominant parents. These crosses emerged primarily in the 2000s–2010s as breeders sought to combine the sativa vigor and extended flowering of Southeast Asian genetics with bright, terpene-driven profiles. Lineage records frequently report these crosses as sativa or sativa-dominant hybrids, with plant structure often reflecting the tall, stretchy phenotypes common to Thai heritage. The resulting families are commonly associated with lemon, lime, and herbal aromatics, alongside variable cannabinoid profiles depending on parental selection. These genetics remain of interest to breeders working in both photoperiod and autoflowering programs seeking extended growth vigor and citrus terpene expression.
Thai Citrus Crosses strains
No strains tagged into Thai Citrus Crosses yet — they'll appear here as breeders submit lineage records under this family.
Thai Citrus Crosses represent a lineage family built around Thai landraces crossed with citrus-forward cultivars, often featuring Sour Diesel, Lemon Skunk, or other limonene-dominant parents. These crosses emerged primarily in the 2000s–2010s as breeders sought to combine the sativa vigor and extended flowering of Southeast Asian genetics with bright, terpene-driven profiles. Lineage records frequently report these crosses as sativa or sativa-dominant hybrids, with plant structure often reflecting the tall, stretchy phenotypes common to Thai heritage. The resulting families are commonly associated with lemon, lime, and herbal aromatics, alongside variable cannabinoid profiles depending on parental selection. These genetics remain of interest to breeders working in both photoperiod and autoflowering programs seeking extended growth vigor and citrus terpene expression.
Breeders use Thai Citrus Crosses as sativa backbone material for vigor, branching architecture, and extended flowering windows. The crossing strategy allows stabilization of citrus terpenes while maintaining Thai sativa characteristics valued in warm-climate outdoor and greenhouse cultivation.
Educational reference · Cultivar metadata only · No medical claims