Cali Terpenes Terps Spray — cannabis terpenes in a bottle
Cali Terpenes Terps Spray is an aromatic cannabis terpene spray that lets you add strain-specific aroma to food, flower, and concentrates with a single mist. Extracted from the cannabis plant (no synthetics, no solvents in the final product), propelled out of the bottle with pure nitrogen so nothing touches the flavour on the way out. Available in six strain profiles — the first product of its kind we've stocked since this category existed.
Which aroma should you pick?
| Variant | Profile | Good for |
|---|---|---|
| Blackberry Kush | Sweet, berry-forward, earthy indica notes | Desserts, dark chocolate, rolling tobacco swap-in |
| Gipsy Haze | Citrus, incense, classic haze sharpness | Cocktails, sparkling water, flower top-up |
| Holy Grail Kush | Earthy, piney, deep OG-style | Savoury dishes, concentrates that lost their punch |
| Amnesia | Bright citrus, peppery, energetic | Lemonades, marinades, reviving flat flower |
| Jamaican Dream | Tropical, sweet, slightly skunky sativa | Fruit salads, smoothies, summer vibes |
| Gelato | Creamy, sweet, dessert-like | Ice cream, pastries, sweetening a harsh strain |
Why Cali Terpenes Terps Spray is worth trying
Most terpene products on the market come as tiny 1ml vials with a pipette — great for extract makers, fiddly for anyone who just wants to flavour their dinner or freshen up a bag of flower that's been sitting too long. The spray format solves that. Shake, point, mist, done. No droppers, no maths, no sticky bottles.
The terpenes themselves are extracted directly from cannabis plants without synthetic enhancements — Cali Terpenes builds these profiles to match specific strains, so Blackberry Kush actually smells like Blackberry Kush rather than a generic "berry" note. Research suggests terpenes aren't just passive aroma molecules either: according to a 2020 review on the entourage effect (Ferber et al., PMC7324885), terpenes from plants including lavender and citrus species show measurable biological activity alongside their flavour profile. And according to a 2021 study on cannabis terpenes (PMC8489319), certain terpenes can modify cannabinoid receptor activity — which is part of why strain-specific aroma matters to people who care about it.
The nitrogen propellant is the other thing worth flagging. Aerosol sprays using butane or propane leave a taste; nitrogen is inert, so what comes out of the bottle is pure terpene mist. You can spray it directly onto food without it tasting like a lighter.
How to use Terps Spray
Dead simple, and the manufacturer's guideline is 1ml of terpenes per 100–200g of product — which for a spray format translates to a light mist rather than a soaking.
- Shake the bottle well — terpenes separate, so this matters.
- Hold the bottle 35–45cm from whatever you're spraying. Closer and you'll oversaturate one spot.
- Give it one short burst. You can always add more; you can't take it back.
- Wait 10–20 seconds for the mist to settle and the aroma to develop before tasting or smoking.
- For flower or concentrates: let it air for a minute before packing, so the spray doesn't affect the burn.
What you can actually do with it
The use cases are broader than people expect. A few that come up from customers:
- Food: A quick spritz of Gelato over vanilla ice cream. Jamaican Dream on a fruit salad. Holy Grail Kush over a steak marinade — sounds mad, works surprisingly well.
- Flower that's lost its punch: Old bud goes flat fast because terpenes evaporate. A mist of matching (or complementary) aroma brings it back to life. Not the same as fresh flower, but a noticeable improvement.
- Concentrates: Shatter or rosin that's oxidised and gone one-dimensional gets a second act with a terp top-up.
- Drinks: One spray per glass is plenty. Amnesia in sparkling water is a genuine favourite behind our counter.
- Room aroma: Two sprays and the room smells like a dispensary without actually being one.
Specifications
| Brand | Cali Terpenes |
| Origin | Spain |
| Source | Cannabis-derived terpenes, no synthetic additives |
| Propellant | Nitrogen (flavour-neutral) |
| Application distance | 35–45cm |
| Manufacturer dosing guideline | 1ml per 100–200g of product |
| Variants | Blackberry Kush, Gipsy Haze, Holy Grail Kush, Amnesia, Jamaican Dream, Gelato |
| Food-safe | Yes |
| Age restriction | 18+ |
Honest limitations
Two things worth knowing before you buy. First: terpenes are concentrated. The first time you use it, you will probably overspray — everyone does. Start with one short burst further away than you think you need, then adjust. Second: this won't turn CBD flower into THC flower or weak bud into strong bud. It changes aroma and flavour, not cannabinoid content. If you're expecting a psychoactive boost, that's not what this is.
Also worth noting — the spray is for external application. Don't drink it neat from the bottle. It's designed to be dispersed in a fine mist across food or material, not consumed in concentrated form.
Pairs well with our Cali Terpenes dropper-bottle terpene profiles if you want to make your own vape liquids or edibles with the same strain aromas. Also worth considering an airtight storage jar for any flower you're re-terping — keeps the new aroma locked in properly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Terps Spray safe to use on food?
Yes. The terpenes are food-grade and the nitrogen propellant is inert. Use a light mist from 35–45cm distance — one short spray per dish is usually enough. Terpenes are concentrated, so less is more.
Will this get me high?
No. Terps Spray contains only terpenes — the aromatic compounds from cannabis — and no THC or other cannabinoids. It changes how things taste and smell, not how they affect you.
Can I spray it directly on my joint?
You can, but let it air for 30–60 seconds before lighting. Spraying too close to the point of combustion gives you a harsher hit. A better approach is to spray lightly on the flower before grinding.
How long does one bottle last?
Depends entirely on how much you use, but because terpenes are potent at low concentrations — the manufacturer suggests 1ml per 100–200g of product — a bottle stretches a long way when used correctly. Most customers report months of regular use from one bottle.
Which variant should I start with?
If you're new to terpenes, Gelato or Blackberry Kush are the easiest wins — sweet, approachable profiles that work on food and flower alike. Amnesia and Gipsy Haze are brighter and more divisive. Holy Grail Kush is the most "weedy" of the six.
Does it work on dry herb vaporisers?
Yes, but use it sparingly and let the flower dry for a few minutes before loading. Too much liquid in a conduction vape causes uneven heating. A single light mist on the ground flower works better than spraying the chamber directly.
Last updated: April 2026




