hybrid

Strawberry Mentz

aka Strawberry N' Mintz, Strawberry Mint


Origin 1: Strawberry Mentz is most commonly linked to Michigan cultivator Crane City Cannabis, where the strain traces back to a proprietary ITZ-Straw selection crossed with Mentz. Crack the jar and the profile lands somewhere between strawberry candy, cooling mint, and earthy gas — with a sharp berry sweetness that lingers longer than the mint itself. The inhale leans creamy and fruit-forward before flipping into pine, pepper, and a chilled herbal finish on the exhale.

Those who keep Strawberry Mentz in rotation describe the high as bright and functional without drifting into raciness. The cerebral side tends to arrive first — upbeat, chatty, and creatively dialed-in — before the body settles into a loose, steady calm that doesn't flatten the experience. Dense buds covered in ripe trichomes push heavy bag appeal, flashing deep greens and purple patches beneath tangled orange pistils.

Origin 2: Some commercial listings and retail menus attribute Strawberry Mint or Strawberry N' Mintz to a separate lineage — a Strawberry Guava and Kush Mints pairing that shares enough flavor overlap to make the confusion understandable. The two versions appear to circulate independently under nearly identical names, and the mint-forward, berry-bright character holds across both — so whichever jar you find, the experience tends to rhyme.

Strawberry Mentz is a moderate-difficulty grow that reaches 3–4 feet indoors and can stretch to 5–6 feet outdoors, with a compact, dense structure and strong lateral branching. Flowering takes roughly 8–9 weeks, producing moderate-to-high yields of dense, resinous buds covered in thick trichome layers. It thrives in both indoor and outdoor environments and prefers a warm, Mediterranean-style climate with temperatures between 70–82°F and humidity kept around 40–50% during flowering. The plant's compact frame and manageable height make it a versatile option across different grow setups. Buds display rainbow hues of green, purple, and orange with fire-orange pistils and a thick, frosty trichome coating.
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