Shark Attack is a 100 % Indica-looking plant: compact, branchy, with short internodal spacing and wide leaves. Her appearance is dense and squat, with a large main cola and several surrounding branches that give her a bushy look.
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Shark Attack is little but still a thug, and her bite could knock out even the most experienced user. This strain, derived from the cross of a Super Skunk and a White Widow, turns into thick and compact Indica-looking marijuana plants that are perfect for indoor growers or for discretion-seekers. Her high THC levels make her one of the favourite strains of the Dinafem team when they need to relax. Don't let her size deceive you! This plant is a real monster-yielder.
Shark Attack is a 100 % Indica-looking plant: compact, branchy, with short internodal spacing and wide leaves. Her appearance is dense and squat, with a large main cola and several surrounding branches that give her a bushy look.
Shark Attack is surprisingly productive for her size. In optimal outdoor growing conditions, she could produce up to 1 kg/plant. Her buds are large, compact and highly resinous. Not in vain, one of her most coveted traits is her ability to produce resin. The flowers of Shark Attack are particularly striking, full of orangey hairs and trichomes forming an alluring white layer all over her leaves too. For this, she’s a great choice for those looking for a strain to make hash or extractions with.
Shark Shock showcases an intense and delicious aroma of lemon and fresh flowers.
Another one of the traits that have made Shark Attack a legendary strain in our catalogue is her high THC count, as well as her strong Indica effect, which is by the way incredibly physical. Shark Attack can be a great choice for people suffering from insomnia or anxiety because she relaxes both mind and body, provoking a state of profound sleepiness.
Shark Attack is very easy to grow. Almost any kind of grower, regardless of their experience and expertise, could make the most out of her. Shark Attack is not particularly greedy, so a standard diet should do. Her compact size makes it unnecessary to monitor her growth and to use any trellising or staking to support the weight of her buds during the flowering. And this is quite an accomplishment if we remember her impressive yields: each plant could produce up to 1 kg of buds outdoors. Another great asset of Shark Attack is her fast flowering, lasting no more than 55 days.
Her Achilles’ heel is moisture. The density of Shark Attack could turn this plant into a paradise for fungi, which love wandering around in humid conditions. Indica plants come from dry and hot regions such as Afghanistan. That’s where their morphology comes from. Their thick and stumpy structure, with wide leaves, is ready to make the most of the little water they receive. The issue here is that, in other environments, this strength becomes a weakness. That’s why, at the end of the flowering phase, particularly if we're growing outdoors in a humid climate, we have to be careful with the appearance of fungi such as botrytis.
If you're indeed cultivating in the open air, we recommend harvesting before the first half of October in the northern hemisphere, and in March in the southern hemisphere. But, if there’ve been heavy rains before that time, you’ve no choice but to keep a close eye on her.
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