Introduction and Overview
HOG x BMR x SSH is a three-way hybrid bred by Off Grid Seed Co., designed to combine heavyweight resin production with layered flavor and a balanced mind-body effect. This cultivar merges old-school indica density with modern sativa clarity, creating a versatile flower for both connoisseurs and cultivators. With an indica/sativa heritage, it typically expresses as a balanced hybrid that can swing either direction depending on phenotype.
Growers value this cross for its robust vigor and forgiving nature under a range of environments. Consumers often remark on the way its berry-forward sweetness from BMR meets the citrus-incense lift of Super Silver Haze, with HOG grounding the experience in hashy depth. Across gardens, it has earned a reputation for reliable yield potential and a terpene profile that stands out in a crowded market.
Because the cross integrates three distinct, well-known genetic pillars, it invites phenotype exploration. Expect variability in flowering time, internodal spacing, and terpene dominance, but with a consistently resinous finish. In most reports, the cultivar performs well indoors, outdoors, and in greenhouse settings when environmental basics are dialed in.
In sensory terms, the strain walks a line between dessert-like berry candy and classic Haze zest. For effect, it often begins with a bright, talkative onset before coalescing into a calm, body-centered afterglow. These dual qualities make it suitable for daytime creativity or evening relaxation depending on dosage and user tolerance.
History and Breeding Context
Off Grid Seed Co. engineered HOG x BMR x SSH to capture yield, resin, and complexity from three pedigree lines. The breeder’s goal appears to have been straightforward: stack the dense, Afghan-influenced productivity of HOG with the syrupy berry resin of Blue Moon Rocks (BMR) and the electric, citrus-incense lift of Super Silver Haze (SSH). The result is a hybrid that reads as classic yet distinctly modern in aroma and effect.
Historically, three-way hybrids like this have emerged to solve a common breeder’s equation—power plus flavor plus finished bag appeal. In the 2010s and beyond, consumer preferences shifted toward terpene-heavy cultivars with strong minor cannabinoid expressions and layered experiences. A cross like HOG x BMR x SSH aims squarely at that demand by combining terpene-rich parents known for distinct bouquets.
From a breeding mechanics standpoint, three-parent projects provide broader phenotypic variance but also a higher ceiling for standout selections. In practical terms, this means seed runs can deliver multiple keeper phenotypes that appeal to different niches—berries-and-cream dessert profiles, classic haze zest, or hashy, earthy depth. Off Grid Seed Co. cultivators have leaned into that diversity as a feature, not a bug, encouraging phenotype hunts.
Because each parent carries its own storied lineage, the cross acts as a living archive of cannabis breeding progress. It bridges pre-legalization flavor archetypes with modern resin and yield expectations. In the hands of skilled growers, this history translates into jars that smell like a walk through decades of cannabis terroir.
Genetic Lineage and Parentage
HOG contributes a stout, indica-leaning frame, often traced to Afghan-influenced stock prized for bulky colas and a musky, hash-forward bouquet. In many gardens, HOG-dominant phenotypes shorten flowering times and increase the calyx-to-leaf ratio, which improves trim efficiency by 10–20% compared to leafier haze-leaning expressions. HOG’s influence typically drives a sturdy lateral branching habit and strong apical dominance when untrained.
BMR, widely recognized as Blue Moon Rocks from the BOG Seeds lineage, injects blueberry-candy sweetness and heavy resin heads. This parent is known for sticky, glistening flowers and a terpene set that tends to lean on myrcene, pinene, and a berry ester profile. BMR also often contributes purple hues under cooler night temperatures, with anthocyanin expression visible even at 60–65°F night cycles.
SSH, or Super Silver Haze, is a classic sativa-leaning hybrid with lineage commonly listed as Skunk #1 x Northern Lights #5 x Haze. It brings elongated internodes, citrus-pepper incense, and a cerebral, enduring high. SSH-leaning offspring may extend flowering windows into the 10–11 week range but repay the patience with soaring aroma and top-shelf bag appeal.
Placed together, HOG x BMR x SSH creates a hybrid architecture with medium internodal spacing, improved resistance to bud rot from more open cola architecture, and strong trichome coverage. Phenotypes often cluster into three buckets: HOG/BMR-dominant with 8–9 week finish, balanced expressions at 9–10 weeks, and SSH-forward expressions at 10–11 weeks. Across these, resin output is a unifying thread, making the cross attractive for solventless extraction.
Morphology and Visual Appearance
Expect medium height with good lateral branching and a calyx-to-leaf ratio in the 1.8–2.4 range, depending on phenotype. BMR influence can tighten node spacing to 1–2 inches, while SSH can push nodes to 2–3 inches under high-intensity light. Final height indoors typically lands at 30–48 inches after a 4–6 week veg and a 1.5–2.0x stretch post-flip.
Flower structure ranges from golf-ball to conical spears, with densest colas on HOG/BMR-leaning plants. Trichome carpets are robust, with bulbous capitate gland heads favored by hashmakers for their 90–120 micron yield. Under canopy, sugar leaves often frost over fully by week 6, and mature pistils shift from cream to amber-orange as harvest nears.
Coloration is generally forest to lime green, with BMR phenotypes showing lavender to deep violet highlights given night temperatures at or below 64°F during weeks 5–8 of flower. Anthocyanin expression varies, but 30–50% of seed phenotypes commonly show some purple blush under cool finishing conditions. Resin sheen remains high even in non-purple expressions, lending strong bag appeal across the board.
Bud density is above average; careful airflow is necessary to avoid microclimates that encourage Botrytis in crowded rooms. Trim loss averages 12–18% by wet weight on balanced phenos and 10–15% on HOG-dominant, higher-calyx plants. Dried bud typically cures down to 0.45–0.55 g/mL bulk density in jars, offering a satisfyingly weighty hand-feel.
Aroma and Bouquet
On first break, HOG x BMR x SSH releases a layered bouquet combining berry compote, lemon zest, and incense-like spice. The top notes often register as blueberry candy from BMR, while middle notes reveal citrus-pepper haze from SSH and earthy hash from HOG. The overall nose is sweet-forward with a resinous backbone that reads old-school and modern at once.
Secondary tones can include cedar, pine needle, and faint floral lilac, especially in cooler-cured batches. HOG’s contribution sometimes manifests as a warm, humulene-driven woodiness that deepens the aroma on the exhale. The bouquet tends to intensify over a 14–21 day cure, with terpene volatility stabilizing as water activity settles into the 0.58–0.62 aw range.
Some phenotypes express a creamy vanilla or marshmallow whisper, likely ester-related and accentuated by slow curing. Others lean more zesty and metallic, a hallmark of terpinolene-forward haze lines. Both profiles can coexist in the same seed run, underlining the value of careful phenotype selection.
In jar tests, many growers report a two-stage aroma release: berry-candy sweetness upon opening and a resinous, peppery haze finish after 10–15 seconds of air contact. This delayed complexity often correlates with a terpene spread that includes myrcene, limonene, beta-caryophyllene, and terpinolene in meaningful amounts. The aromatic persistence on the palate is strong, typically lingering for 5–10 minutes after consumption.
Flavor and Palate
The inhale commonly starts with sweet blueberry and a sugared berry-syrup tone, quickly joined by lemon-lime sparkle and faint pine. Mid-palate, the flavor pivots to cedar, black pepper, and a soft vanilla-cream note that reads dessert-like without being cloying. The exhale is clean and resinous, often finishing with hashy spice and a gentle, zesty linger.
Combustion and vaporization both showcase the complexity, but flavor retention improves by 10–20% in vaporizers set to 370–390°F (188–199°C). At lower temps near 345°F (174°C), the berry-citrus top notes shine; at higher temps above 410°F (210°C), earthy hash and pepper dominate with a more sedative body feel. Many users prefer a stepped session to experience the full flavor arc.
A balanced phenotype will deliver a mouthfeel that is neither overly dry nor syrupy, with mild astringency only at higher temperatures. Resin density contributes to a glossy, enduring aftertaste, especially in joints and convection vapes. When properly cured, chlorophyll astringency is minimal, and flavor clarity remains intact through the last third of a joint.
Pairings work well with citrus seltzers, light-roast coffees, and dark chocolate in the 70–80% cacao range. Terpene synergy is notable with limonene-forward beverages that echo the SSH heritage. In food pairings, fresh blueberries, grilled lemon, and rosemary flatbreads provide complementary aromatic bridges.
Cannabinoid Profile and Potency
In the absence of strain-specific lab panels, typical hybrid outcomes for these parents suggest total THC frequently in the 18–26% range by dry weight, with standout phenotypes occasionally pushing 27–29% under optimized conditions. THCA commonly constitutes the bulk of this total; after decarboxylation, THC mass yields follow the 0.877 conversion factor due to CO2 loss. Total cannabinoids often land in the 20–28% range when counting minor contributors.
CBD is usually trace in this lineage, often testing below 0.5% and frequently under the 0.2% threshold. Minor cannabinoids such as CBG can appear between 0.1–0.8%, and CBC may register in the 0.05–0.3% range. These minor components, while small in absolute terms, can modulate perceived effects via the entourage effect.
Potency expression is sensitive to environmental parameters like light intensity (PPFD), nutrient balance, and harvest timing. Late-harvested flowers with higher amber trichome percentages (20–30% amber) often feel heavier and more sedative, despite similar THC numbers. Conversely, earlier harvests at cloudy-dominant trichomes can feel brighter and more cerebral even when lab potency is comparable.
Dose-wise, novice consumers often find 2.5–5 mg inhaled THC equivalent sufficient for a noticeable effect, while experienced users may prefer 10–25 mg per session. In combustion or vaporization, a typical 0.25 g flower serving at 20% THC contains roughly 50 mg total THC potential, though real uptake varies by device efficiency and user technique. Titration remains the best approach given inter-individual variability.
Terpene Profile and Chemistry
Terpene totals in well-grown HOG x BMR x SSH typically sit around 1.5–3.0% by weight, with exceptional runs reaching 3.5%+ under careful drying and curing. Dominant terpenes often include myrcene (0.5–1.2%), limonene (0.4–0.8%), beta-caryophyllene (0.2–0.6%), and terpinolene (0.2–0.7%), reflecting its mixed indica-sativa heritage. Secondary players like alpha-pinene (0.1–0.3%), linalool (0.05–0.2%), and humulene (0.1–0.3%) round out the profile.
Myrcene contributes the plush berry-candy sweetness and relaxed body tone, while limonene brings citrus brightness and mood lift. Beta-caryophyllene, which binds to CB2 receptors, adds peppery spice and a potential anti-inflammatory dimension. Terpinolene, common in haze lines, imparts the zesty, coniferous sparkle and cerebral clarity.
Environmental management materially impacts terpene retention. Drying at 60–65°F with 58–62% relative humidity for 10–14 days reduces terpene volatilization and can preserve 10–25% more aroma compared to hot, fast dries. Maintaining gentle airflow (0.2–0.5 m/s) and darkness during drying further protects monoterpenes like limonene and pinene.
Phenotype differences create two common terpene archetypes: berry-forward, myrcene-led and citrus-incense, terpinolene-led. Balanced cuts express near-equal contributions from myrcene and limonene with a pepper-spice caryophyllene finish. Each archetype correlates with subtle shifts in effect, with terpinolene-forward phenos feeling brighter and myrcene-forward phenos leaning more body-centric.
Experiential Effects
Most users report a fast-onset uplift within 2–5 minutes of inhalation, characterized by clearer headspace and easy conversation. This early phase commonly includes sensory sharpening and mild euphoria, consistent with limonene and terpinolene influence. As the session unfolds, a calming body ease arrives without immediate couchlock, offering functional relaxation.
Duration typically spans 2–3 hours for inhaled routes, with a pronounced arc: bright entry, balanced cruise, and a serene landing. Higher doses or late-harvest phenotypes can tilt the experience toward sedation in the last hour. Tasks like creative brainstorming, cooking, or low-intensity outdoor activity pair well with the balanced window.
At moderate use levels, anxiety rates are generally low to moderate, but sensitive users should avoid overstimulation by beginning with single, smaller inhales. Dry mouth and dry eyes are the most common side effects, with occasional dizziness at high doses. Food cravings can surface midway through, reflecting THC’s appetite-stimulating effects.
Music appreciation, flavor exploration, and light socializing are frequently enhanced. The strain’s terpene spread supports a “present but unhurried” tempo that many find ideal for post-work decompression. For sleep, users often reserve stronger, myrcene-heavy phenotypes or simply increase dose size to encourage a heavier finish.
Potential Medical Uses
While formal clinical data on this specific cultivar are not published, its cannabinoid-terpene pattern aligns with outcomes documented in broader cannabis research. The National Academies (2017) concluded there is substantial evidence cannabis is effective for chronic pain in adults, and hybrids like this often deliver meaningful analgesia at inhaled doses of 5–15 mg THC. Beta-caryophyllene’s CB2 affinity suggests potential anti-inflammatory benefits, with preclinical models supporting reductions in inflammatory markers.
For mood and stress, limonene and linalool have been associated with anxiolytic and antidepressant-like effects in preclinical and small human studies, though results vary. Users commonly report situational relief from stress, ruminative thinking, and low motivation, especially in terpinolene-forward phenotypes. The bright onset can aid daytime function without the heavy sedation typical of pure indicas.
Sleep benefits emerge at higher doses or with later harvests rich in myrcene and oxidized terpenes. Many patients find 10–20 mg inhaled THC equivalent in the last hour before bed helpful, though tolerance and individual neurochemistry matter. For appetite, THC reliably increases food interest, which can support individuals managing nausea or reduced intake.
Practical guidance suggests starting at 1–2 inhalations, waiting 10–15 minutes, and titrating slowly, especially for new patients. People with a history of panic reactions to high-THC sativas may prefer myrcene-led phenotypes or microdoses of 1–2 mg THC. As always, this is not medical advice; patients should consult clinicians familiar with cannabinoid therapeutics, particularly if using other sedatives or managing cardiovascular conditions.
Comprehensive Cultivation Guide
Genetics and phenotype range: HOG x BMR x SSH expresses as a balanced indica/sativa hybrid, with phenotype clusters that finish in 8–9, 9–10, and 10–11 weeks. Indoor yields typically reach 450–650 g/m² under 700–900 µmol·m−2·s−1 average PPFD, scaling higher with CO2 supplementation (900–1,200 ppm) and 900–1,100 µmol·m−2·s−1. Outdoors, expect 600–1,200 g per plant in 20–50 gallon containers with full sun and diligent IPM.
Germination and early veg: Aim for a 90%+ germination rate by hydrating seeds in 68–72°F water for 12–18 hours, then placing in a lightly moistened starter plug. Keep VPD gentle at 0.6–0.9 kPa, ambient 74–78°F, RH 65–75%, and 200–300 µmol·m−2·s−1 PPFD for seedlings. Transplant to 1–3 gallon pots at the 4–5 node stage to minimize stall.
Vegetative growth parameters: Run 18/6 or 20/4 photoperiods with 400–600 µmol·m−2·s−1 PPFD, 75–82°F day, 68–72°F night, and 60–70% RH for robust growth. In soilless coco, target pH 5.7–6.1 and EC 1.2–1.8 mS/cm; in living soil, water to 10–15% runoff as needed and avoid overfeeding. A 3-1-2 NPK ratio suits veg; introduce Cal-Mag at 100–150 ppm Ca and 30–50 ppm Mg to support SSH-influenced metabolism.
Training and canopy management: Top or FIM at the 5th–6th node, then low-stress train to create 6–10 main tops per plant. A single-layer ScrOG at 10–14 inches above the medium reduces stretch-related chaos and equalizes bud size. Defoliate lightly in veg and again at day 18–21 of flower to enhance airflow; avoid over-defoliation on haze-leaning phenos which rely on leaves for energy.
Transition to flower: Expect a 1.5–2.0x stretch; flip at 60–70% of target final height. Early bloom thrives at 700–900 µmol·m−2·s−1 PPFD, 74–80°F day, 58–65% RH, with a VPD around 1.0–1.2 kPa. Shift feeding toward a 1-2-2 NPK ratio; EC 1.6–2.0 mS/cm in coco/hydro is typical, noting that HOG/BMR phenos can accept slightly richer feeds than SSH-leaners.
Mid to late flower: Increase light to 900–1,100 µmol·m−2·s−1 if CO2 is available; otherwise, cap near 900 to avoid light stress. Lower RH to 50–55% mid-flower and 45–50% late-flower to mitigate Botrytis, especially on dense HOG-influenced colas. Transition to a 1-3-2 and later 0-3-3 NPK as ripening proceeds; monitor runoff EC to prevent salt lockout.
Environmental and IPM: Airflow goals include 20–30 total room air exchanges per hour and 0.3–0.5 m/s laminar canopy flow. Scout twice weekly for mites, thrips, and PM; integrated controls like predatory mites (Amblyseius swirskii), neem/karanja (veg only), and sulfur vapor (pre-flower) reduce risk. Maintain clean intakes, sterilize tools, and use sticky cards for early detection.
Mediums and irrigation: Coco coir delivers fast growth with 20–30% per-event runoff and 1–2 irrigations daily in mid-flower, increasing to 2–4 as root mass expands. In soil, aim for even moisture cycles, watering at 10–15% container weight loss and maintaining pH 6.2–6.8. Hydroponic DWC or RDWC can push growth rates but demands tight control of solution temps at 66–70°F and dissolved oxygen above 7 mg/L.
Phenotype notes: HOG/BMR-leaning phenos finish in 56–63 days, stack denser colas, and show berry-hashy terps with purple potential. Balanced phenos finish in 63–70 days with pronounced citrus-berry swirl and strong resin heads ideal for solventless, often washing 4–6% fresh-frozen. SSH-forward cuts run 70–77 days, stretch more, and deliver the loudest citrus-incense nose with slightly lower mold risk due to airier architecture.
Nutrient troubleshooting: Tip burn at EC >2.2 mS/cm is common in SSH-leaners; back off feed and increase frequency at lower EC for better uptake. Interveinal chlorosis mid-flower often flags magnesium deficiency; 50–80 ppm Mg or a foliar Epsom spray at 0.5–1.0 g/L addresses this quickly. Calcium demands rise under high PPFD; supplement to keep 120–180 ppm Ca in coco systems.
Lighting and DLI: Aim for daily light integrals of 25–35 mol·m−2·day−1 in veg and 35–45 mol·m−2·day−1 in flower, depending on CO2. LED spectra with 3500–4000K base, plus 660 nm red and a touch of 730 nm far-red for end-of-day treatments, encourage dense flowering and manageable stretch. Avoid sudden jumps in light intensity; ramp 10–15% per week to acclimate leaves.
Outdoor and greenhouse: Place in full sun, 7+ hours daily, with soil rich in organic matter and a baseline EC around 1.0–1.5 mS/cm. Stake or trellis early to support heavy BMR/HOG colas; prune interior shoots for better airflow in humid regions. In coastal climates, late-season rain management via roof cover and aggressive thinning is critical to avoid Botrytis in late-September to October harvest windows.
Flush and finish: Many growers report best flavor after a 7–10 day low-EC finish, watering to runoff with balanced pH and minimal salts. Watch trichomes: mostly cloudy with 10–20% amber often yields a balanced effect; 20–30% amber deepens body sedation. Cold nights (60–64°F) in the last 10 days can coax color without stalling ripening if day temps remain 70–75°F.
Drying and curing: Hang whole plants or large branches at 60–65°F and 58–62% RH for 10–14 days with gentle airflow and complete darkness. Target final moisture content of 10–12% and water activity of 0.58–0.62 aw, then cure in airtight containers burped daily for the first week. Proper cure can increase perceived terpene intensity by 15–30% and smooth the smoke markedly.
Harvest, Curing, and Post-Harvest Handling
Harvest timing is best guided by trichome color and pistil maturity rather than calendar alone, given phenotype variance. For balanced effects, pull when trichomes are mostly cloudy with 10–20% amber and 5–10% clear remaining. Pistils will have mostly turned orange or rust, with 5–15% still cream colored.
Wet trimming reduces drying density and can minimize localized moisture pockets on large colas, but whole-plant drying preserves terpenes better by slowing desiccation. Expect 70–75% weight loss from wet to dry in dense phenos and 65–70% in airier SSH-leaners. Final jar density near 0.45–0.55 g/mL indicates a good cure without excessive compression.
Maintain drying rooms at 60–65°F and 58–62% RH with steady air exchange and no direct airflow on flowers. Gentle circulation at 0.2–0.5 m/s prevents stagnant air layers that encourage mold. Darkness protects monoterpenes from photodegradation; even low-intensity light can drive terpene loss.
For curing, use glass jars or food-grade barrier bags and aim for stable humidity of 58–62% with two-way humidity packs if needed. Burp daily for 5–7 days, then weekly for 2–4 weeks; a 21–28 day cure substantially improves flavor cohesion. Properly cured flower retains peak aroma for 2–3 months in cool, dark storage and remains high quality up to 6–9 months if sealed and protected from heat.
Written by Ad Ops