qPCR HLVd testing on every mother
Hop Latent Viroid testing performed via quantitative PCR before any cuts are taken. Certificate of Analysis published, not paywalled or hidden behind customer service requests.
Nevada Question 2 (2016) legalized recreational cannabis but applies a distinctive restriction to home cultivation: you may grow up to 6 plants per adult (12 per household) only if you live more than 25 miles from a licensed dispensary. Most Las Vegas and Reno metro residents do not qualify — but rural Nevadans in counties with limited retail access do. These cuts were chosen for Nevada's searing summer heat and alkaline desert conditions.
Nevada's approach to home cultivation is unique in the recreational landscape. Unlike most states where homegrow is either broadly permitted or broadly prohibited, Nevada carves out a middle path: it permits home cultivation only for residents who lack reasonable retail access — defined as living more than 25 miles from the nearest licensed dispensary. In practice, this means the overwhelming majority of Nevadans in the Las Vegas Valley, Henderson, North Las Vegas, Reno, Sparks, and Carson City do not have a legal right to cultivate at home. The dispensary network in these areas is extensive enough that the 25-mile threshold is rarely met by urban and suburban residents.
Rural Nevadans are a different story. In Elko County, Nye County, Esmeralda County, Lander County, and other large, sparsely populated regions of eastern and central Nevada, licensed dispensaries are scarce or nonexistent within 25 miles. Residents in these communities who verify their address qualifies under the distance rule have access to one of the more generous plant-count allowances in the country: 6 per adult, 12 per household — and Nevada's extreme arid climate, while formidable in summer, offers a nearly fungal-free growing environment that is the envy of East Coast growers.
Nevada outdoor cultivation follows a two-season model strikingly similar to Arizona. At Las Vegas elevations (2,000 ft), last frost falls in January–February, and summer temperatures exceed 110°F from June through August. Spring gardens go in late February, finish by late May. Fall gardens start in late August or September, finish in November before temperatures drop. At Reno and Carson City elevations (4,500 ft), the season is more compact — last frost in late April, first frost in early October — requiring faster-finishing cultivars.
Las Vegas, Henderson, Reno, North Las Vegas, Sparks, Carson City — and rural NV addresses statewide.
Nevada Question 2 (November 2016) — adult-use recreational; home cultivation of 6 plants per adult (12/household) permitted only if the grower resides more than 25 miles from the nearest licensed cannabis retail establishment.
These four cuts were chosen for heat tolerance, spring-or-fall finish windows suited to Nevada's two-season outdoor calendar, and a track record in arid, alkaline growing environments. No mold pressure to worry about — but summer heat management is everything.
Qualified Nevada home growers work in one of the most extreme environments for cannabis in North America. At Las Vegas elevations, temperatures from June through August routinely exceed 110°F — well beyond the 95°F threshold where most cannabis cultivars begin to show heat stress symptoms including leaf curl, bleached tips, and suppressed resin production. The strategy, as in Arizona, is to avoid those months entirely: spring gardens launched in late February or early March finish by late May, and fall gardens begun in late August finish in October or early November before overnight temperatures drop below 45°F. This two-season model gives Nevada growers up to 24 weeks of workable outdoor conditions — just split across two windows rather than one continuous run.
Nevada's alkaline desert soils and mineral-heavy well water (common in rural counties) require pH management. Cannabis prefers a root-zone pH of 6.0–7.0 in soil; Nevada's native soils and water supplies often push above 8.0. Amendments with sulfur, peat, or pine bark fines can buffer pH downward in-ground. Container growing with a commercial potting mix largely sidesteps soil alkalinity, provided irrigation water is pH-adjusted before application. Spider mites are Nevada's dominant pest — the hot, dry conditions are ideal for their reproduction. A preventive regimen of predatory mites (Phytoseiulus persimilis) established before populations spike is far more effective than reactive treatment once an infestation takes hold.
Cap Junky at 9–10 weeks and Sour Diesel at 11 weeks are the two longest finishers in this lineup and should be reserved for Nevada's fall garden window (late August transplant) where they have adequate time without butting against summer heat or early winter cold. Trop Cherry and Green Crack, finishing in 8–9 and 7 weeks respectively, are ideal spring-window candidates for both southern Nevada's two-season low-desert and northern Nevada's shorter single-season window around Reno and Carson City.
Hop Latent Viroid testing performed via quantitative PCR before any cuts are taken. Certificate of Analysis published, not paywalled or hidden behind customer service requests.
Insulated liners and heavy-duty heat packs calibrated for Nevada's extreme summer temperatures. Tracked delivery, with Las Vegas and Reno metro orders typically arriving in 1–2 business days.
Relentless Genetics, AJ's original cut, Cecil C, Seed Junky × Capulator — every cultivar listed with its documented genetic origin. No unnamed "exclusive" phenotypes, no mystery lineage.
Fulfilled by Get Seeds Right Here since 2015 — a decade-plus of refining heat-season live-plant transit protocols for the Southwest's most demanding conditions.
Only if you live more than 25 miles from the nearest licensed cannabis retail dispensary. Nevada Question 2 (2016) permits adults 21+ to cultivate up to 6 plants per adult (12 per household), but applies this right exclusively to residents without nearby retail access. Most residents in the Las Vegas Valley, Henderson, North Las Vegas, Reno, Sparks, and Carson City are within 25 miles of a dispensary and therefore may not legally cultivate at home. Rural Nevadans in counties with sparse retail coverage should verify their specific address before cultivating.
Check the Nevada Cannabis Compliance Board's licensed establishment directory for your county and measure the road or straight-line distance to the nearest licensed retailer. If all licensed retail locations are more than 25 miles from your primary residence, you qualify to cultivate up to 6 plants per adult (12 per household) at that address. When in doubt, consult a Nevada-licensed attorney — the consequences of non-compliant cultivation are significant.
Southern Nevada (Las Vegas area) runs two seasons: spring gardens transplanted in late February through March, targeting harvest by late May before summer heat peaks; and fall gardens started in late August through September, finishing in October–November. Northern Nevada (Reno, Carson City at ~4,500 ft) has a single, shorter season — transplant after last frost in late April, harvest by early October before first fall frost.
Yes — we ship to Las Vegas, Henderson, Reno, North Las Vegas, Sparks, Carson City, and rural Nevada addresses statewide. We pack with insulated liners and heat management sized for Nevada's extreme summer conditions. Most Nevada urban orders arrive in 1–2 business days; rural addresses may take 2–3 business days.
Yes. If you qualify under the 25-mile rule, the law does not restrict indoor vs. outdoor cultivation — it requires an enclosed, locked space not visible from public areas, which an indoor setup naturally satisfies. Nevada's low ambient humidity makes indoor growing especially efficient: dehumidification energy costs in late flower are far lower than in humid coastal states, and the arid air dramatically reduces fungal disease pressure. A well-ventilated indoor grow in Nevada can run perpetual harvests with minimal environmental control overhead.
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