qPCR-tested for HLVd
Every mother in our propagation library is tested via quantitative PCR for Hop Latent Viroid. The Certificate of Analysis is published — not hidden behind a sales pitch.
Arizona's Proposition 207 gives every adult 21+ the right to cultivate up to 6 plants per person, with a household cap of 12, inside an enclosed locked space. These cuts are chosen for the Sonoran Desert's two-season rhythm — spring gardens that beat the summer heat and fall gardens that finish before December.
Cannabis cultivation in Arizona runs on a two-season model that no other state quite replicates. In Phoenix, Tucson, and the low desert, summer temperatures above 110°F make outdoor growing impractical from June through August. Smart cultivators launch a spring garden in late February or early March, choosing fast-finishing strains that wrap up by late May, then pivot to an autumn garden seeded in late August after monsoon season breaks the worst heat. Each window offers roughly 10–12 weeks of workable outdoor conditions — enough for most cultivars, provided you start with robust clones rather than seedlings.
Flagstaff and the White Mountains operate on a more conventional temperate calendar. Elevations above 6,000 feet can see frost into late March and again in October, so growers there benefit from clones that root in late April under protection and finish before the first hard freeze. In either region, the desert's intense UV exposure and low humidity keep fungal pressure minimal — a meaningful advantage over humid-climate states where powdery mildew and botrytis are constant threats. The trade-off is heat stress during the shoulder months, which is why vigorous, well-established clones outperform seeds in Arizona's narrow windows.
Water availability shapes Arizona grows as much as temperature. Low-desert gardens typically rely on drip irrigation and shade cloth in the 90–105°F range, while mineral-heavy municipal water in the Phoenix metro benefits from pH management at the root zone. Strains with sturdy, resinous structure and demonstrated heat tolerance — Trop Cherry, Green Crack, Super Boof, Sour Diesel — consistently outperform more delicate cultivars in this environment.
Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, Chandler, Scottsdale, Tempe, Gilbert, Glendale — and rural AZ addresses statewide.
Arizona Proposition 207 (November 2020) — adult-use recreational, 6 plants per adult, 12 per household, enclosed locked space required.
Each cultivar below was chosen for heat resilience, a finishing window that fits Arizona's spring or fall slots, and confirmed HLVd-clean mother stock. Sativa-forward strains dominate this lineup because they energize through the desert's bright, long-day spring without stalling under intense UV.
Arizona's arid environment eliminates most of the fungal headaches that plague growers in the Southeast or Pacific Northwest, but it introduces its own set of challenges. Heat stress is the primary concern: daytime temperatures above 95°F slow photosynthesis, cause leaf curl, and — if sustained above 105°F — can bleach flower resin and reduce potency. Using shade cloth rated at 30–40% during peak afternoon sun in June and July is recommended even for fall starts that overlap with the monsoon shoulder period.
Spider mites thrive in Arizona's dry heat and can colonize a grow in days when temperatures climb. Introduce predatory mites (Phytoseiulus persimilis or Neoseiulus californicus) early as a preventive measure — they establish better when populations are low. Russet mites are also present in the Phoenix valley; weekly foliar inspections under a loupe from clone arrival through mid-flower will catch infestations before they spread.
For growers in the Phoenix metro running fall gardens, the monsoon window (July–mid-September) delivers welcome humidity but can spike moisture levels enough to invite powdery mildew on dense canopies. Space plants generously, keep airflow moving, and harvest Sour Diesel — the longest finisher in this lineup at 11 weeks — no later than mid-November to beat the cooling nights that slow resin production. Indoor grows in Arizona benefit enormously from the dry ambient air; dehumidification load is lower than nearly anywhere else in the country, reducing both electricity cost and mold risk.
Every mother in our propagation library is tested via quantitative PCR for Hop Latent Viroid. The Certificate of Analysis is published — not hidden behind a sales pitch.
Clones arrive in insulated boxes with temperature-appropriate packs sized for Arizona's heat. Tracked carriers, 1–3 business day typical delivery across the state.
Each cut carries documented breeder credit — Relentless Genetics, Cecil C, Blockhead, AJ — so you know exactly what genetics you are propagating, not a renamed phenotype.
Fulfilled by Get Seeds Right Here, our merchant partner since 2015 — more than ten years refining packaging protocols, transit timing, and post-delivery recovery guidance.
Yes. Proposition 207, passed by Arizona voters in November 2020, legalized adult-use cannabis and permits anyone 21 or older to cultivate up to 6 plants per person at their primary residence, with a household maximum of 12 plants regardless of how many adults live there. Plants must be grown in an enclosed, locked space not visible from a public area.
In the Phoenix and Tucson low desert, the spring window opens in late February through March, after the last frost (typically January–February at those elevations). Plants started then finish by late May before summer heat peaks. The fall window begins after monsoon season breaks — late August or early September — with harvest targeted for October through November. Flagstaff growers at higher elevation should wait until late April or early May for spring transplants.
Yes — we ship to Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, Chandler, Scottsdale, Tempe, Gilbert, Glendale, and addresses statewide including Flagstaff and Yuma. All orders are packed with insulated liners and temperature-management packs appropriate for current Arizona conditions. Typical transit is 1–3 business days.
Arizona growers should plan around the two-season calendar rather than attempting to grow through summer. For the spring window, fast-finishing sativas excel: Green Crack at 7 weeks and Trop Cherry at 8–9 weeks both complete before June heat becomes punishing. Super Boof and Sour Diesel suit the fall window. All four selections in the Arizona lineup have demonstrated heat tolerance and low susceptibility to the dry-climate pests (spider mites, russet mites) common in the Sonoran Desert.
Hop Latent Viroid (HLVd) is a submicroscopic RNA pathogen that spreads through contaminated cutting tools, clones, and plant contact. Infected plants exhibit "dudding" — stunted internodes, reduced trichome production, and dramatically lower potency and yield — with no cure once established. Starting with PCR-certified, HLVd-free clones is the only reliable way to keep your garden clean. Every mother we propagate from is tested and the results are public.
We ship to 24 states with active legal pathways. Browse the full state directory to find your region.