from our Pacific Pie pheno hunt. The nose prominently features fruit funk and rubber aromas from its Apples and Bananas and Georgia Pie lineage. The taste comes through just like it smells. A perfect example of a potent hybrid, Pacific Pie #8 packs a punch with an invigorating head high, followed by a cradling and relaxing body experience.
[Ryan] Chimera no. 6 instantly stood out as a truly special plant right at the beginning of our pheno hunt. She has a strong structure, tolerant, and great spacing of flower sites and flower size.
She is stunning and absolutely covered in trichomes. Bright orange pistils in a light green flower. Her flower is almost white because of heavy trichome coverage. The aroma from Chimera no. 6 has a very sweet ripe fruit aroma with a mix of funky musky smell in there as well. Overripe pineapple, reminds me of Hawaiian Punch.
[Sully] Chimera was a standout from the beginning. Uniform flowers, so frosty you can’t just walk by without admiring her. Unique appearance, but also unique terpenes. Cracking open a jar of Chimera, you are hit with a strong aroma made up of a mix of hazelnut, butterscotch, Mountain Dew/Monster with notes of black licorice.
Effects set in quickly and pack a punch. You can feel the vapors expand in your lungs and the flavor comes through all the way to the end.
[Jamison] Chimera no. 6 has great trichome density which for us is a great indicator of oil production and bag appeal. Her jagged leaf serrations and the way she starts to frost up super early in flower set her apart from some of the other phenos.
While she is growing she smells like a can of Red Bull. Once harvested that changes to more of a sweet butterscotch or hazelnut smell and a nutty/chocolate taste. The effect is a relaxed sedative body stone and a focused head.
Temperature, humidity, and exposure to oxygen and light all affect the shelf life and experience of your flower.
Store your Ritual flower in an air-tight glass jar in a cool, dark place.