
Feminized seeds
by Azarius
Skunk #1 is a feminized photoperiod cannabis seed that crosses Afghani, Acapulco Gold, and Colombian Gold into one of the most recognisable strains ever bred. At 65% indica and 35% sativa, it delivers a balanced effect that leans into physical relaxation without switching your brain off entirely. If you've been around cannabis for any length of time, you already know the name — and the smell.
| Pack | Seeds | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| 1 seed | 1 | Testing the genetics before committing — one plant, one pheno, zero pressure |
| 3 seeds | 3 | A small indoor run with room to pick your favourite plant |
| 5 seeds | 5 | A proper grow with backup — our most popular pack |
| 10 seeds | 10 | Pheno hunting or multiple cycles without reordering |
We'd grab the 5-pack for a first run. You get enough seeds to account for any variation in phenotype expression, and if one doesn't germinate (rare, but it happens), you're not starting from scratch.
Skunk #1 is a three-way cross of Afghani, Acapulco Gold, and Colombian Gold — landrace genetics from three different continents bred together in the late 1970s in the United States. The result was a stable, vigorous hybrid that essentially wrote the rulebook for modern cannabis breeding. Half the strains in any seed bank catalogue have Skunk somewhere in their lineage.
The Afghani parent brings the indica structure: compact growth, dense buds, fast flowering. Acapulco Gold contributes that golden-era sativa energy — cerebral, creative, uplifting. Colombian Gold rounds it out with resin production and a tropical sweetness underneath the funk. At 65% indica and 35% sativa, the balance tips toward physical relaxation, but there's enough sativa influence to keep things interesting upstairs.
What makes Skunk #1 genuinely special isn't just the genetics — it's the stability. This strain has been backcrossed and stabilised over decades. You're not rolling the dice on wildly different phenotypes. Plants grow predictably, flower on schedule, and produce consistent results. That reliability is why breeders still use it as a parent strain and why growers keep coming back to it.
Skunk #1 smells exactly like you'd expect from the name — sour, pungent, and unapologetically loud. The dominant terpene is myrcene at roughly 30%, which drives that deep, earthy, almost musky base note. Caryophyllene sits at around 20%, adding a spicy, peppery edge. Limonene contributes about 15%, lifting the profile with a citrus brightness that keeps the whole thing from being one-dimensional.
On the nose, you get the classic skunky funk first — that sharp, almost sulphurous hit that fills a room in seconds. According to research published in ACS Omega, the characteristic "skunky" odour of cannabis was historically misattributed to various terpenes, but is actually driven by volatile sulphur compounds (Oswald et al., 2022). Underneath the initial blast, there's earthy sweetness, herbal notes, and a diesel tang that lingers on the palate.
| Terpene | Proportion | Flavour Contribution |
|---|---|---|
| Myrcene | 30% | Earthy, musky, herbal base |
| Caryophyllene | 20% | Spicy, peppery warmth |
| Limonene | 15% | Citrus brightness, slight sweetness |
| Other terpenes | 35% | Pine, cheese, diesel undertones |
Honest warning: this strain is not subtle. If you're growing indoors and discretion matters, a carbon filter isn't optional — it's survival. We've had customers tell us they could smell their Skunk plants through two closed doors. The funk is real, and it starts well before harvest.
Skunk #1 is one of the most forgiving strains you can grow, which is exactly why it's been a go-to recommendation for first-time growers since the 1980s. These feminized photoperiod seeds produce all-female plants, so you're not wasting time identifying and removing males.
The one thing to watch: Skunk #1 can be a magnet for pests precisely because it's so resinous. Spider mites love it. Keep your grow space clean, check the undersides of leaves weekly, and don't skip preventative measures.
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Genetics | Afghani x Acapulco Gold x Colombian Gold |
| Strain Type | 65% Indica / 35% Sativa |
| Seed Type | Feminized |
| Flowering Type | Photoperiod |
| Flowering Time | Up to 9 weeks |
| Dominant Terpene | Myrcene (30%) |
| Secondary Terpenes | Caryophyllene (20%), Limonene (15%) |
| Aroma | Skunky, earthy, citrus, diesel |
| Available Packs | 1, 3, 5, or 10 seeds |
Running Skunk indoors? Pair it with a complete grow tent kit — you'll want proper ventilation and a carbon filter from day one with this strain. A digital pH meter is also worth grabbing; Skunk #1 is forgiving, but dialling in your pH between 6.0-6.5 in soil makes a noticeable difference in resin production and overall vigour.
There's a reason this strain has survived over four decades of breeding trends, hype cycles, and flavour-of-the-month genetics. Skunk #1 just works. It grows predictably, finishes fast, and produces dense, resinous buds that smell like nothing else on earth. In a market flooded with exotic crosses and 30%+ THC claims, Skunk quietly delivers what actually matters: consistency.
We've been selling seeds since 1999, and Skunk #1 has never left the catalogue. New growers love it because it doesn't punish mistakes — miss a feeding, run your pH slightly off, forget to water for a day, and it bounces back. Experienced growers love it because the genetics are so stable you can plan your harvest schedule around it with confidence. Up to 9 weeks of flowering means you're not waiting around for months watching trichomes develop.
The honest limitation? If you're chasing the absolute highest THC numbers on paper, there are newer strains that test higher. But THC percentage on a lab report doesn't tell the whole story. The terpene profile on Skunk — that myrcene-caryophyllene-limonene combination — creates an experience that pure potency chasers often miss. According to a review in Frontiers in Psychiatry, cannabinoids interact with the endocannabinoid system in ways that are modulated by the presence of terpenes and other plant compounds (Katz et al., 2021). The whole plant matters, not just the headline number.
Compared to something like Northern Lights — another classic indica-leaning strain — Skunk #1 has more sativa influence in its effects and a far more pungent aroma. Northern Lights is the quiet one; Skunk is the one that announces itself three rooms away. If you want stealth, go Northern Lights. If you want character, grow Skunk.
We get asked at least once a week: "Is Skunk still worth growing when there are so many new strains?" Short answer: yes. Longer answer: the genetics in Skunk #1 are the foundation that most of those new strains are built on. Growing it is like listening to the original recording after years of hearing covers — you suddenly understand where everything came from.
One thing we always mention to customers buying Skunk seeds: plan your odour control before you germinate, not after. We've heard more than a few stories of growers who thought they'd "sort the filter out later" and ended up with neighbours asking questions by week 4 of flower. A carbon filter and inline fan are non-negotiable with this strain. The 30% myrcene content alone guarantees your grow room will be fragrant, and that's before the volatile sulphur compounds kick in during late flower.
According to research in the British Journal of Psychiatry, high-potency cannabis strains — including those commonly referred to as "skunk" in the UK — contain higher concentrations of THC relative to other cannabinoids (Di Forti et al., 2009). This is worth knowing: start low, go slow, and respect the plant. A review in Frontiers in Pharmacology noted that pinene and linalool — terpenes present in many cannabis strains — have been studied for potential anxiolytic and anti-inflammatory properties in clinical settings (Weston-Green et al., 2021).
Skunk #1 is the original — the specific Afghani x Acapulco Gold x Colombian Gold cross that started the entire "skunk" family. Other skunk-type strains (Super Skunk, Lemon Skunk, Skunk Haze) are descendants that cross Skunk #1 with other genetics. If you want the uncut source material, this is it.
Extremely strong. The 30% myrcene content combined with volatile sulphur compounds makes this one of the most pungent strains you can grow. A quality carbon filter and extraction fan are absolutely required for indoor growing. Without them, the smell will escape your grow space within the first few weeks of flowering.
Yes — it's one of the best. The genetics are incredibly stable after decades of selective breeding, so plants grow predictably and tolerate minor mistakes. Flowering completes in up to 9 weeks, and the indica-dominant structure keeps plants manageable in small spaces. It's been the default beginner recommendation since the 1980s for good reason.
Just quantity. The genetics are identical across all pack sizes. The 5-pack is the sweet spot for most growers — enough seeds for a full run with a spare or two. The single seed is there if you want to test the strain before committing to a larger grow.
Flowering takes up to 9 weeks, with most phenotypes finishing around 7-8 weeks. Add 4-6 weeks of vegetative growth (depending on your target plant size), and you're looking at roughly 11-15 weeks total from germination to harvest. Drying and curing adds another 3-4 weeks for best results.
Absolutely. Skunk #1 is robust and adapts well to outdoor conditions in temperate climates. The indica-dominant structure handles wind and rain better than tall sativa strains. Outdoors, expect harvest around late September to mid-October in the Northern Hemisphere. Just be aware that the smell carries — your garden won't be a secret.
The flavour mirrors the aroma: a sour, skunky base layered with earthy sweetness, a peppery spice from the caryophyllene, and a citrus lift from the limonene. There's a diesel undertone that lingers on the exhale. Vaping at lower temperatures (around 180°C) brings out more of the citrus and herbal notes before the heavier flavours emerge.
Last updated: April 2026
Medical disclaimer. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before use of any substance.