HLVd-free stock confirmed by qPCR
With only four household plants allowed in Oregon, you cannot afford to start with infected genetics. Every mother is PCR-tested before cuts are taken, and the COA is published for every variety.
Measure 91 has given Oregon households the right to grow up to 4 cannabis plants since 2015. The Pacific Northwest's wet, cool falls are the real variable — west-of-Cascades growers need genetics that can handle persistent maritime moisture. Every clone ships PCR-tested and traced to the original breeder.
Oregon's geography creates two fundamentally different outdoor cannabis growing environments. West of the Cascades — Portland, Eugene, Salem, the Willamette Valley — is defined by the Pacific maritime climate: mild, wet winters, dry summers that turn damp again in September. That September moisture arrival coincides precisely with the late-flower window for most cannabis varieties. This is why Oregon's west-side outdoor cannabis scene has always prized botrytis resistance above almost any other trait, and why the state's legendary outdoor culture was built on understanding and managing this exact pressure.
East of the Cascades, the story changes dramatically. Bend in Central Oregon sits in the rain shadow of the volcanic Cascades, receiving under 12 inches of annual precipitation. The Rogue Valley around Medford is even warmer and drier — a climate so mild it supports commercial wine grape production at scale. Outdoor cannabis growers in Medford and the Rogue Valley can run a substantially wider range of genetics with far less mold anxiety, provided they manage the hot summer temperatures with adequate irrigation throughout the season.
Indoor growing is deeply established in Oregon, driven partly by the west-side weather and partly by Oregon's mature cannabis culture. The state's progressive regulations and high consumer sophistication mean home growers often run professional-grade setups. For those growers, our bred-true cuts from verified mothers provide the documented starting point that quality-focused cultivators require.
Portland, Eugene, Salem, Gresham, Bend, Medford, Hillsboro, Corvallis, and communities throughout Oregon.
Oregon Measure 91 (approved November 4, 2014; implemented July 1, 2015) — 4 plants per household, not per person. Administered by the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission (OLCC).
With only four household plants allowed, each clone matters. These cuts offer documented lineage, structural mold resistance, and finishing windows that respect the west-side season.
Oregon outdoor growers on the west side of the Cascades should treat mold management as a season-long discipline rather than a late-season scramble. The foundation is canopy structure: a plant that allows good airflow through its interior dries out after rain events far more effectively than one with a tangled, dense interior. Top clones at week 2 through 3 of veg, select 4 to 6 main branches, and methodically remove any growth below those main colas. You want every bud site exposed to air and light throughout the finishing stretch.
Timing harvest correctly is perhaps the single most valuable skill for Oregon outdoor growers. Many growers leave plants out a week or two longer than ideal, chasing ripeness while fall weather deteriorates. In the Willamette Valley, if a multi-day rain forecast arrives and your plants are anywhere near 85% trichome ripeness, seriously consider harvesting early. An 88% ripe, clean harvest is always better than a fully ripe but botrytis-spotted one. Green Crack's 7-week finish is specifically valuable for Portland-area growers because it is typically ready to cut before the worst October weather arrives on the west side.
East-of-Cascades growers in Bend and Medford have fewer weather constraints but face their own challenges: intense summer heat and low humidity require a committed irrigation schedule. Outdoor plants in Medford can easily consume 3 to 5 gallons of water per day at peak summer growth. Drip irrigation with a timer prevents the under-watering that stunts yield and the over-watering that invites root issues. The reward is a long, warm season that allows even Gush Mints' 9 to 10 week finish to complete fully outdoors — a luxury that west-side growers rarely enjoy.
With only four household plants allowed in Oregon, you cannot afford to start with infected genetics. Every mother is PCR-tested before cuts are taken, and the COA is published for every variety.
Oregon's damp climate means packaging matters from the moment the box leaves our facility. We use moisture-resistant materials, calibrated heat or cool packs, and tracked carriers for reliable Portland, Eugene, and Bend deliveries.
Every variety carries the name of its original breeder and full parent lineage. Particularly important in Oregon's competitive and knowledgeable cannabis community, where provenance matters.
Fulfilled by Get Seeds Right Here since 2015, our merchant partner with a decade of experience shipping live cuttings across Pacific Northwest climates and transit conditions.
Yes. Oregon's Measure 91, approved by voters in 2014 and implemented in 2015, permits Oregon households to cultivate up to 4 cannabis plants. Note this is a household limit, not a per-adult limit, regardless of how many adults live at the address. Plants must not be visible from a public place without the use of binoculars or other optical aids.
It is the defining challenge for west-of-Cascades outdoor growers. The Willamette Valley, Portland metro, and Oregon coast experience persistent maritime moisture through September and October, exactly when cannabis is finishing flower. Botrytis cinerea (gray mold) can devastate an unprepared garden in days once it establishes in dense colas during wet weather. Strain selection, canopy management, and a rain contingency plan are non-negotiable for Oregon outdoor growing.
Significantly. Bend, Medford (Rogue Valley), and eastern Oregon communities east of the Cascades enjoy dramatically drier conditions. Medford has a warm Mediterranean-adjacent climate with hot summers and much less late-season moisture than the west side. Growers in Bend and Medford can run a wider range of genetics outdoors with substantially less mold concern than their Portland and Eugene counterparts.
Yes. We ship to all Oregon zip codes including Portland, Eugene, Salem, Gresham, Bend, and Medford. Our packaging is calibrated for Oregon's range of climates, with insulated, cushioned, and tracked delivery for 1 to 3 day transit across the state.
White Truffle and Gush Mints, both indica-dominant, have bud structures that resist moisture accumulation better than many dense hybrids. Green Crack's 7-week finish means it is typically harvested before the worst of fall rains arrive on the west side. Super Boof's vigorous resin production creates some natural resistance, but its dense bud structure warrants careful defoliation and monitoring during wet periods.
We cover 24 states with active legal pathways or limited-mail-order tolerance. Browse the full state directory to find your state.