Introduction to Moby Plant Auto
Moby Plant Auto is an autoflowering cannabis strain developed by Original Sensible Seeds, engineered to deliver Moby-style power in a compact, fast-finishing format. It merges ruderalis vigor and day-neutral flowering with indica-sativa hybrid genetics, making it accessible to newer growers while still satisfying experienced cultivators. As an auto, it transitions to bloom regardless of photoperiod, allowing reliable harvests in as little as 9 to 11 weeks from sprout under optimal conditions.
The strain belongs to the ruderalis/indica/sativa heritage and is positioned as an energetic, resin-forward hybrid with strong yield potential. It is tailored for growers who want Haze-like brightness and White Widow-style density without a long flowering window. The result is a plant that can fit into small spaces yet still produce commercial-grade flower.
Original Sensible Seeds has emphasized stability and ease of cultivation with Moby Plant Auto. The breeder’s catalog tends to favor hardy lines with broad environmental tolerance, and this cultivar follows that blueprint. Its adaptability makes it suitable for a range of climates and skill levels, especially in regions with shorter summers.
Breeding History and Development
Moby Plant Auto descends from the modern tradition of converting flagship photoperiod hybrids into autos by integrating a stable ruderalis donor. While individual selections are proprietary, the line clearly aims to capture the famous Moby family profile—citrus-pine, eucalyptus haze, soaring headspace—with an abbreviated, day-neutral lifecycle. Breeder notes and grower reports consistently place it within the Moby lineage space rather than as a wholly unrelated cross.
Original Sensible Seeds is known for translating high-performance photoperiods into autos while minimizing the yield penalty typical of early autoflower projects. Early-auto generations in the 2010s often lost 20–40% of yield versus their photoperiod parents; more recent breeding has cut that gap to roughly 10–20% for well-optimized grows. Moby Plant Auto is representative of this modern improvement, with realistic indoor yields in the 450–550 g/m² range when dialed in.
The breeder’s approach typically involves repeated backcrossing to an elite photoperiod parent and careful selection for uniform autoflower timing. Stabilization often takes five or more filial generations to lock in flower onset under 18–20 hours of light. The outcome is a cultivar that can be run perpetually under one light cycle alongside other autos, simplifying scheduling for hobbyists and micro-producers.
Genetic Lineage and Inheritance
The genetic framework is ruderalis/indica/sativa, with the ruderalis component conferring autonomous flowering and a compact growth pattern. Within the Moby family, lineage commonly traces to a Haze parent crossed with a resinous indica hybrid such as White Widow or a similar Northern Lights-derived selection. Moby Plant Auto follows this architectural logic, expressing a hybrid morphology with sativa-leaning head effects and indica-influenced bud density.
From a trait perspective, the sativa side contributes elongated colas, citrus-pepper aromatics, and a clear, euphoric onset. The indica portion compresses internodal spacing, boosts trichome coverage, and moderates the raciness that pure Haze phenotypes can produce. The ruderalis infusion adds rapid maturation, thicker leaf petioles early in veg, and a tighter, more self-contained taproot structure.
Growers can expect moderate variability in terpene dominance depending on phenotype. Many plants trend terpinolene-limonene dominant with supporting myrcene and caryophyllene, a profile associated with classic Haze families. A minority of phenos lean myrcene-forward, delivering a slightly more sedating late tail and a muskier base under the lemon-pine top notes.
Appearance and Plant Structure
Moby Plant Auto typically grows 80–120 cm tall indoors under 18–20 hours of light, with well-managed plants staying closer to 90–100 cm in small tents. Outdoors in a long, warm season, it can stretch to 120–150 cm if transplanted early into rich soil. The structure is hybrid-balanced: a central spear flanked by 6–10 secondary colas, with medium internodal spacing.
Leaves begin somewhat broad with a pronounced serration, reflecting the indica influence during early vegetative growth. By mid-flower, leaves narrow slightly and stack around swelling calyxes, creating dense clusters rather than airy foxtails when environmental stress is minimized. The plant often sets a showy main cola, and careful low-stress training can produce a flatter canopy with 8–12 productive tops.
Buds finish lime to forest green with silver to amber stigmas and a conspicuous frosting of capitate-stalked trichomes. Mature colas can feel rock-hard at the squeeze, particularly in low humidity with proper calcium-magnesium support. Under magnification, trichome heads are numerous and well-formed, a sign of robust resin genetics even in the auto format.
Aroma and Flavor Profile
Aromatically, Moby Plant Auto leans citrus-forward with supporting pine, eucalyptus, and sweet herbal spice. The top note is often lemon-lime or sweet grapefruit from limonene and terpinolene, backed by cypress-like alpha-pinene. Caryophyllene contributes a peppery tickle, and myrcene can impart a faint mango or hops-like earthiness.
When ground, the bouquet intensifies toward zest and wood polish with wisps of incense and wet stone. The haze lineage shows up as a clean, camphoraceous edge reminiscent of eucalyptus or bay leaf. A properly cured jar opens into a layered nose that shifts from candied citrus to resinous pine over the course of a sniff.
The flavor follows the nose but reads slightly sweeter on the palate. Expect lemon candy on the inhale and conifer resin with a crack of black pepper on the exhale. Aftertaste lingers as a cool-herbal echo, particularly in vaporized form where terpinolene and pinene remain prominent.
Cannabinoid Profile
As an auto derived from high-test photoperiod stock, Moby Plant Auto is typically potent for its class. Breeder-adjacent reports and grower submissions suggest total THC commonly in the 18–23% range when grown and cured optimally. Exceptional phenotypes and dialed-in grows can test higher, but a realistic median for autos sits near 20% THC.
CBD is usually low, frequently below 1%, with occasional phenotypes around 1–2% depending on the segregation of minor alleles. CBG often appears in the 0.1–0.5% range, a level that may subtly influence perceived effects and resin behavior. Trace THCV and CBC may be present but typically do not exceed 0.2–0.4% combined in standard lab panels.
Because live market lab data can vary and official third-party certificates of analysis are not always published for every seed lot, treat these figures as representative ranges rather than absolutes. Drying, curing, and storage conditions can shift measured potency by several percentage points. In general, autos grown under high-intensity LED with tight environment control consistently meet or exceed the 18–20% THC benchmark for this cultivar.
Terpene Profile
Total terpene content for Moby Plant Auto commonly falls between 1.0% and 2.5% by weight in well-grown, properly cured flower. Terpinolene is frequently a leading terpene, often measured in the 0.3–0.8% range, setting the citrus-pine, slightly floral tone. Limonene tends to follow at 0.2–0.6%, complementing the brightness and contributing to mood-lift perceptions.
Myrcene often lands between 0.2% and 0.5%, adding depth and a soft, musky base. Beta-caryophyllene is typically seen at 0.1–0.3%, delivering a peppery spice and interacting with CB2 receptors as a dietary cannabinoid. Alpha-pinene and ocimene show up as supporting players in the 0.05–0.2% band, enriching the foresty, eucalyptus-adjacent accent.
This profile is consistent with many Haze-descended autos and helps explain the cultivar’s clear-headed, alert opening character. Terpene proportions can shift with environment: warmer flowering rooms and aggressive defoliation can alter relative volatilization, subtly changing nose and taste. Cold-finishing the last week at 18–20°C with modest airflow often preserves brighter terpenes in the final jar.
Experiential Effects and Use Patterns
Users commonly report an uplifting onset within 2–5 minutes of inhalation, building to a lucid, creative plateau. The first phase features enhanced focus, sociability, and sensory crispness, matching the terpinolene-limonene-pinene ensemble. After 60–90 minutes, a gentle body ease develops from the indica influence without heavy sedation in moderate doses.
The overall intensity sits at a 7–8 out of 10 for experienced consumers, with relative headroom for daytime tasks compared to more narcotic hybrids. At higher doses, the sativa-leaning clarity can tip toward racing thoughts for sensitive users; measured pacing and hydration help. Typical duration is 2–3 hours from onset to soft landing for inhalation, and 4–6 hours for oral ingestion due to hepatic metabolism.
Physiologically, mild tachycardia and dry mouth are the most common side effects. Surveys across adult-use markets often find 30–60% of consumers noting cottonmouth with potent, terpene-rich cultivars, and a small subset report transient anxiety if overconsumed. As with any strong hybrid, setting, mindset, and dose titration play significant roles in shaping the experience.
Potential Medical Uses
The energizing yet controlled headspace makes Moby Plant Auto a candidate for daytime symptom management where sedation is undesirable. Patients managing low mood, anhedonia, or fatigue sometimes prefer terpinolene-limonene profiles for their motivational push. The cultivar’s gentle body component can assist with tension headaches and stress-related muscle tightness without imposing couchlock at conservative doses.
Beta-caryophyllene’s CB2 receptor activity is associated with anti-inflammatory effects in preclinical models, which may complement THC’s analgesic properties. While clinical data for specific cultivars are limited, randomized trials of cannabinoid therapies for chronic neuropathic pain show modest but significant improvements versus placebo in a subset of patients. In practical terms, individuals often report 10–30% reductions in subjective pain scores with carefully titrated THC-dominant chemovars.
Those with anxiety-prone physiology should start low, as stimulating terpenes can amplify arousal in some users. Microdosed inhalation (one to two short puffs) or balanced tinctures can allow the bright mood lift without overshooting comfort thresholds. As always, medical use should be guided by local regulations and, when possible, discussed with clinicians familiar with cannabinoid pharmacology.
Cultivation Guide: Growth Cycle Overview
Moby Plant Auto finishes fast for a hybrid with sativa influence, typically requiring 65–80 days from sprout to harvest indoors. Under optimized conditions, some growers harvest at day 70 with fully developed tops and strong aroma expression. Outdoor cycles depend on temperature and daylight intensity, with 75–90 days common in temperate summers.
The lifecycle breaks down into approximately 10–14 days seedling, 14–24 days vegetative expansion, and 35–45 days flowering and ripening. Because autos initiate bloom based on age rather than photoperiod, stress during the first three weeks can permanently reduce final size and yield. Minimizing transplant shock, overwatering, and heavy pruning during this window is critical.
Indoor yield benchmarks are 450–550 g/m² in optimized sea-of-green or light low-stress trained canopies under high-efficiency LEDs. Single-plant yields of 60–150 g are typical in 11–15 L containers indoors; outdoors, 100–200 g per plant is attainable in full sun with rich soil. These figures assume appropriate environment control, adequate nutrients, and consistent light intensity.
Cultivation Guide: Environment and Lighting
Target daytime temperatures of 24–28°C and nighttime 18–22°C to balance vigor and terpene retention. Relative humidity should sit near 60–65% in seedling stage, 50–55% in vegetative growth, and 40–45% in early to mid-flower. For late ripening, 35–40% RH helps tighten buds and deter botrytis, particularly on dense colas.
Light intensity for autos is well-tolerated at 18–20 hours daily, with many growers standardizing at 20/4 to maximize photosynthesis and allow a short dark recovery. Aim for 500–700 µmol/m²/s PPFD in early veg, scaling to 800–1,000 µmol/m²/s in mid-flower, and up to 1,200 µmol/m²/s if CO₂ is enriched and nutrition is balanced. Daily Light Integral (DLI) targets of 35–45 mol/m²/day support top-tier yields in late bloom.
Good airflow is essential; maintain 0.3–0.6 m/s canopy wind speed and ensure multiple air exchanges per minute in the tent or room. Fans should gently ruffle leaves without causing windburn. A filtered, negative-pressure setup helps control odor and maintains fresh air turnover, particularly important in terpene-rich lines like this one.
Cultivation Guide: Media, Nutrition, and Watering
Soil mixes should be light and well-aerated, such as a peat-coco-perlite blend with 25–35% perlite for autos to prevent overwatering. Container sizes of 11–15 L (3–4 gallons) are ideal for indoor runs, allowing enough root volume without pushing a lanky structure. Fabric pots improve oxygenation and reduce the risk of waterlogging, which autos are sensitive to during early growth.
Nutrient strength should be moderate and consistent. For hydro or coco, start at 0.8–1.0 mS/cm EC in early veg, 1.2–1.6 mS/cm mid-veg to early flower, and 1.6–2.0 mS/cm in peak bloom if the plant is demanding and shows no burn. Maintain pH at 5.8–6.2 in hydro/coco and 6.2–6.8 in soil to optimize nutrient uptake.
Water thoroughly but infrequently, allowing 10–20% runoff in soilless systems and ensuring the top 2–3 cm of media dries before the next irrigation. Autos dislike waterlogged roots, and early overwatering is a common cause of stunting. Supplement calcium and magnesium at 0.3–0.5 mL/L of a Cal-Mag product when using RO water or high-intensity LED lighting to prevent interveinal chlorosis and weak stems.
Cultivation Guide: Training and Canopy Management
Training should be gentle and front-loaded because autos have limited veg time. Low-stress training (LST) starting around day 14–18 can open the canopy and create 8–12 strong tops, improving light distribution. Avoid topping after day 20–22; autos that are topped too late often lose development time and yield.
A single early topping at the fourth or fifth node is possible for vigorous phenotypes if done by day 18–20, but LST alone is safer for most growers. Strategic leaf tucking and selective defoliation of 2–4 fan leaves per week can reduce shade without overly stressing the plant. Keep node spacing even by adjusting tie-down points and rotating pots to balance light exposure.
Support maturing colas with soft ties or plant yoyos as trichome-laden heads swell. Dense autos are susceptible to stem lean in late flower, especially after irrigation. Good support reduces microcracks and preserves vascular flow through to harvest.
Cultivation Guide: Pests, Pathogens, and IPM
Because dense colas are a hallmark of Moby Plant Auto, humidity control is the first line of defense against botrytis and powdery mildew. Keep late-flower RH at 35–45% and maintain strong, non-violent air movement around and through the canopy. Prune inner sucker growth that will never see full light so moisture cannot accumulate in shaded pockets.
For pests, sticky cards provide early detection for fungus gnats and whiteflies. A preventative weekly or biweekly foliar of Bacillus subtilis or a lactobacillus serum in early veg (never late flower) can suppress mildew spore loads. Beneficial nematodes (Steinernema feltiae) in the substrate help keep gnat larvae in check.
Maintain cleanliness with tool sterilization, quarantining new clones or plants, and avoiding street clothing in grow spaces. Wipe down tent interiors and fans between runs, and replace carbon filters on schedule to keep airflow and odor control consistent. An integrated approach that emphasizes environment, sanitation, and gentle biologicals minimizes the need for harsher interventions.
Cultivation Guide: Harvest, Drying, and Curing
Harvest timing should be guided by trichome observation rather than calendar days alone. For a balanced effect, target roughly 5–10% amber trichomes with most heads cloudy; this typically falls around day 68–76 for well-run plants. More amber (15–20%) yields a heavier, more sedative effect if desired.
Dry at 18–20°C and 55–60% RH for 7–10 days with gentle airflow that does not hit buds directly. Stems should snap rather than bend when the dry is complete. Overly fast drying can mute terpenes and produce a harsh smoke; overly slow risks mold in dense colas.
Cure in airtight glass jars at 60–62% RH, burping daily for the first week, then weekly for 2–6 weeks. A proper cure deepens the citrus-pine nose and sweetens the finish, often adding noticeable complexity by week three. Many growers report a 10–20% subjective improvement in flavor and smoothness after a full month of curing.
Yields, Performance Benchmarks, and Phenotype Notes
Indoors, under 600–800 W of high-efficiency LED in a 1.2 m² tent, a dialed canopy can produce 450–550 g/m² with Moby Plant Auto. Single plants in 11–15 L containers commonly deliver 80–120 g if well-managed, with standout phenos touching 150 g. Outdoors in full sun, 120–200 g per plant is achievable with early transplanting and rich, airy soil.
Plants lean slightly sativa in structure but hold an indica-like bud density, a combination that helps realize strong grams-per-watt figures. Phenotype variation is modest for an auto: expect about 10–15% variability in final height and 0.3–0.5% absolute shifts in dominant terpene percentages. The majority present the lemon-pine haze nose; a smaller subset skew earthier and myrcene-heavy.
Nutritional tolerance is medium-high, with visible response to phosphorus and potassium in bloom so long as calcium and magnesium remain adequate. Excessive nitrogen beyond week three of flower can suppress aroma development and elongate internodes. When in doubt, prioritize balanced ratios and steady EC rather than spikes.
Comparisons and Positioning Among Autos
Compared to classic Moby-style autos, Moby Plant Auto emphasizes a clear, citrus-driven headspace with fewer edgy sativa spikes than some terpinolene heavyweights. It occupies a middle lane between ultra-compact beginner autos and rangier haze autos that can exceed 140 cm indoors. This makes it a practical choice for 120–180 cm tall tents and modest square footage.
Versus indica-dominant autos, it offers brighter mood elevation and more pronounced creativity, trading some couchlock for daytime usability. Against ultra-sativa autos, it provides better bud density and a smoother landing, which many small-space growers prefer for consistency. Its yield-to-time ratio is competitive, particularly given the 65–80 day finish window.
For connoisseurs, the appeal is the terpene fidelity to Haze-rooted profiles without a 10–12 week photoperiod flower. For commercial craft growers, the consistent bag appeal and vigorous resin lend themselves to attractive retail presentation. Balanced performance across phenotype, yield, and aroma make it a reliable anchor in an autoflower rotation.
Legal and Market Context
Original Sensible Seeds lists Moby Plant Auto within a portfolio aimed at both personal and professional cultivation where legal. Autoflowers like this are particularly popular in regions with shorter summers because they can finish before autumn rains increase mold risk. In indoor markets, their flexible light cycle enables continuous harvests in mixed-varietal rooms.
At the time of writing, comprehensive live market lab data specific to this exact cultivar may be limited in public databases. This is common with newer or breeder-specific autos, where third-party certificates of analysis are catalogued sporadically. Growers and consumers should rely on reputable testing when available and view the cannabinoid and terpene ranges in this guide as directional.
Always verify local laws before cultivating or possessing cannabis. Jurisdictions vary widely on home grow allowances, plant counts, and medical versus adult-use frameworks. Compliance ensures the benefits of cultivation can be enjoyed without legal risk.
Expert Tips and Troubleshooting
If early growth appears stalled, check root zone oxygenation and watering frequency before increasing nutrients. Autos often stunt from overwatering in week one and two; allowing the medium to dry back to a light pot weight is the fastest fix. Ensure VPD falls within 0.8–1.2 kPa in veg and 1.2–1.6 kPa in flower to keep stomata open and transpiration healthy.
Light stress can show as canoeing leaves and bleached tops when PPFD creeps above 1,000 µmol/m²/s without CO₂ enrichment. Raise fixtures 10–15 cm or dim by 10–20% and reassess after 48 hours. Slight leaf edge curl and magnesium drawdown can coincide under intense LEDs; add 30–50 ppm Mg via Cal-Mag to stabilize.
Aromatics that seem muted late in flower often correlate with too much nitrogen or overly warm nights. Reduce N by week three of bloom and target 18–20°C nights during the final 10 days. This regimen typically sharpens the lemon-pine top notes and yields a cleaner burn post-cure.
Safety, Consumption, and Storage
For inhalation, start with small doses and wait 10 minutes to gauge effect before redosing, particularly with terpene-bright cultivars. Vaporization at 175–190°C preserves the citrus-pine top notes and delivers a clearer headspace than higher-temperature combustion. Edibles made from this chemotype can be stimulating; consider evening doses only if you are experienced with daytime-leaning hybrids.
Store dried flower in airtight glass at 60–62% RH in a cool, dark place. Light and heat degrade THC to CBN and oxidize terpenes, flattening both potency and flavor. Properly stored, terpene-forward flower can maintain quality for 6–12 months, though the brightest aromatics are best within 3–6 months.
As with any cannabis product, avoid operating machinery or driving under the influence. Individuals with cardiovascular concerns should be mindful of mild heart rate increases and consult a clinician if unsure. Responsible, intentional use maximizes the benefits this cultivar can offer.
Conclusion
Moby Plant Auto from Original Sensible Seeds distills the spirit of a Moby-class hybrid into a fast, manageable, and yield-forward autoflower. Its ruderalis/indica/sativa heritage delivers a citrus-pine, haze-leaning experience with resinous, compact buds and a realistic 65–80 day seed-to-harvest timeline. The balance of uplift and body ease makes it a versatile cultivar for daytime creativity and evening unwinding alike.
For growers, it offers a dependable path to high-quality flower without the long flowering times or complex scheduling of photoperiods. With moderate EC, careful early LST, and disciplined environment control, 450–550 g/m² indoor yields are within reach. Its terpene ensemble rewards careful drying and curing, transforming a good harvest into a standout jar.
In markets where autos are prized for speed and simplicity, Moby Plant Auto sits near the top of the shortlist. It is approachable for beginners yet nuanced enough for connoisseurs who prize haze-adjacent profiles. If you want big-flavor, bright-effect flower on an accelerated calendar, this cultivar justifies a place in your rotation.
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