Why Banjerine Seeds Deserve a Spot in Your Garden
Because citrus-forward fire that yields heavy and finishes in 9–11 weeks doesn’t sit around waiting. Banjerine brings real-deal potency with sativa lift and grower-friendly structure-no guesswork, just clean performance. If you want jars that smell like fresh tangerine peel and hit like a drum, this is the play.
Banjerine – Quick Facts
| Breeder |
Atlas Seed |
| Genetics |
Banjo x Cotton Candy Auto |
| Seed Type |
Feminized |
| Strain Type |
Sativa dominant |
| THC |
25%+ |
| CBD |
Less than 1% |
| Flowering Time |
9 to 11 weeks |
| Yield |
High Yield |
| Difficulty |
Intermediate |
| Aroma / Flavor |
Tangerine, citrus |
| Effects |
Uplifting, energetic, euphoric |
| Pack Size |
5+3 Seeds |
Banjerine Strain Overview
Atlas Seed built Banjerine to be a citrus-charged sativa-dominant hitter with real output. The 25%+ THC ceiling gives it the punch; the 9–11 week bloom keeps your schedule sane. If you’re upgrading from beginner basics and want clean structure, sticky resin, and high bag appeal, Banjerine fits. After 15 years running Seeds Here Now and judging more shows than I can count, I care about two things: consistent performance and legit flavor. Banjerine checks both-no hype tax, just results. Demand stays steady; when citrus trends spike, she moves fast.
- Built for vigor and yield without sacrificing terps
- Reliable feminized set-fewer surprises, tighter canopy
- Works indoors, greenhouse, or sun-grown with support
Lineage and Breeding of Banjerine Seeds
Banjerine blends Banjo’s lively citrus-funk with Cotton Candy Auto’s speed and resin influence-then lands it in a photoperiod feminized format. The idea: keep the tangerine pop and happy, energetic vibe from Banjo, while borrowing Cotton Candy Auto’s density, trichome coverage, and quicker maturation window.
- Banjo: drives the tangerine-citrus profile, uplift, and stretch
- Cotton Candy Auto: tight buds, sugary resin, finish discipline
- Result: sativa-forward tops with modern bag appeal and high output
Atlas Seed focuses on uniformity and vigor across packs. Expect consistent node spacing, pistil production that stacks early, and resin you can see by mid-flower. This cross works because the parents complement each other: Banjo brings the vibe; Cotton Candy Auto cuts the wait and sharpens structure. Translation: fewer headaches, more market-ready colas.
Flavor and Aroma Profile of Banjerine Weed
First note: fresh-torn tangerine rind. Then a sweet, candy-citrus echo that hangs in the room. It’s clean, bright, and loud.
- Primary terpenes: limonene, myrcene, terpinolene, beta-caryophyllene
- Flavor cues: tangerine zest, citrus syrup, light floral candy
- Bag appeal: lime-green nugs, orange hairs, frosty finish
Open the jar and it screams “citrus aisle,” not perfume. The sweetness rounds the edges without turning fake. Grind it and the peel oils jump out-sticky, sunny, and photo-ready.
Banjerine Effects and Benefits
Banjerine hits with a quick, uplifting spark-clear, energetic, a little giddy. Ride is social and creative, not couch-lock. It’s the “get stuff done” lane with a euphoric topcoat.
- Onset: quick lift, bright headspace
- Peak: steady energy, mood boost, easy focus
- Duration: medium-long, clean comedown with minimal drag
Great for daytime sessions, music, hikes, or knocking out chores without grumbling. If you want heavy sedation, look elsewhere. If you want a happy sativa wave with teeth, Banjerine delivers.
Phenotypic Variation in Banjerine Seeds
You’ll see tight variation with three common lanes, all citrus-forward:
- Pheno A: Tall sativa leaner; spear colas; intense tangerine peel; resin medium-high.
- Pheno B: Balanced hybrid; chunkier tops; sweet-citrus candy; resin high, great for washes.
- Pheno C: Compact frame; slightly shorter internodes; mixed citrus-floral; resin very high.
Colors stay mostly lime-green with bright orange pistils; late-flower can show light fades under cool nights. Pheno hunting is fun here-differences are useful, not chaotic, and the keeper is easy to spot by week 7: the loudest jar wins.
How To Grow Banjerine Seeds
Skill level: intermediate. She’s forgiving, but respect the stretch and feed rhythm.
- Environment: 68–80°F (20–27°C); RH 55–65% veg, 40–50% flower
- Training: top once or twice, LST, SCROG; trellis by week 3 flower
- Stretch: 1.5–2x-flip a touch earlier to manage height
- Feeding: moderate; watch calcium/magnesium during weeks 3–6 flower
Yield expectations:
- Indoors: 500–650 g/m² with SCROG and good PPFD
- Outdoor/Greenhouse: 700–1000 g/plant with full sun and support
Pro tips:
- Defoliate lightly around day 21 and day 42 of flower for airflow.
- Add silica early for stronger stems; her tops get weighty.
- Carbon filter ready-the citrus funk carries.
Timeline: veg 3–5 weeks, flower 9–11 weeks, dry/cure 2–3 weeks. From seed to jars: ~14–18 weeks depending on veg length. Simple math, serious payoff.
Banjerine User Reviews
“Indoor SCROG, 5x5, LED, coco.” Pulled 620 g/m² at 10 weeks flower. Tangerine soda smell was wild. Stretch was manageable with a single net. Resin was sticky-stupid-trim crew was laughing. – Alex, intermediate grower
“Greenhouse coastal.” Two plants averaged just under a kilo each. Pheno B was the keeper-sweet citrus with frosting for days. Easy feed, liked light defol. – Maria, advanced grower
Buy Banjerine Seeds Today!
High-yield citrus, 25%+ punch, and a 9–11 week finish-Banjerine gives you bright terps and dependable structure. The 5+3 pack goes quick during citrus crazes, so if jars need sunshine, now’s a good time.
Comparison Table
| Strain |
THC |
Flowering |
Aroma |
Edge |
| Banjerine |
25%+ |
9–11 weeks |
Tangerine, citrus |
High yield + bright sativa energy |
| Banjo |
20–24% |
9–10 weeks |
Citrus funk |
Classic profile; less candy sweetness |
| Mimosa |
22–26% |
9–10 weeks |
Orange, tropical |
Fruit-heavy; Banjerine yields more reliably |
Related Strains
- Banjo – Parent line; similar citrus vibe with more funk.
- Mimosa – Orange-forward sativa feel; great daytime lift.
- Clementine – Sharp tangerine notes; fast-flowering citrus option.
FAQs for Banjerine
Is Banjerine hard to grow?
It’s rated intermediate. Manage stretch with topping and a net, keep airflow clean, and feed moderately. If you’ve finished a couple runs, you’ll be fine. New growers can still win by flipping early and avoiding heavy nitrogen late.
How long does Banjerine take to flower?
Expect 9–11 weeks of bloom. Most phenos finish around week 10 under consistent light intensity and good environment. Outdoor timing varies by latitude but typically comes down mid to late season with support.
What does Banjerine smell and taste like?
Tangerine peel and bright citrus candy. Limonene leads with a sweet, zesty finish. Grind brings a louder, juicier note, and the smoke stays clean and citrus-forward without harshness when properly cured.
How potent is Banjerine?
THC typically lands at 25% or higher when grown well. The effect is uplifting, energetic, and euphoric-ideal for daytime sessions, creative work, or social hangs without the heavy crash.
Indoor or outdoor for best results?
Both work. Indoors, SCROG and steady PPFD drive uniform tops. Outdoor or greenhouse, give full sun, trellis support, and light defoliation. Watch late-season humidity; citrus terps can be loud, so use filtration.
What yield can I expect?
Indoors: 500–650 g/m² with training. Outdoor/greenhouse: 700–1000 g per plant in strong conditions. Proper nutrition, airflow, and light density make the difference between good and great.
Does Banjerine stretch a lot?
Moderately-around 1.5–2x after flip. Top once or twice in veg, spread the canopy with LST, and set a trellis by week 3 of flower to hold up the weighty colas.
Who is Banjerine best for?
Growers who want citrus terps, strong bag appeal, and sativa-forward energy without a long flowering time. If you love bright, happy strains with real yield, Banjerine deserves space in your garden.
Why Trust This Take
Fifteen years at Seeds Here Now, countless shows judged, and thousands of seed packs in the wild taught me what actually performs. Banjerine from Atlas Seed has the traits growers keep: vigor, citrus loudness, and honest yield. No fluff-just a reliable path to bright, jar-ready flower.