![]() Wedding Cake is the king of dessert strains. Wedding Cake’s leaf color isn’t as exceptional as its trichomes and pistils, but it usually has a subdued dark green hue. Most Wedding Cake cultivars also have a few sprinkles of bright orange pistils for extra “eye candy.”Īs a true indica hybrid, Wedding Cake has tight, dense nugs. For more info on the Cherry Wine strain, please check out this link.īefitting its name, Wedding Cake nugs have a delightful “drizzle” of white trichomes. While its flavors are fruitier, Cherry Wine has a similarly relaxing effect on hemp smokers. It’s far safer for new smokers to experiment with low-THC hemp hybrids before graduating to Wedding Cake. If you’re looking for a “Wedding Cake lite” experience, we’d recommend checking out a classic CBD strain like Cherry Wine. If you’re not used to THC, one toke of Wedding Cake will be way too intense. However, please remember that Wedding Cake has THC concentrations of around 25 percent. Most people who enjoy Wedding Cake use it to achieve a sense of calm just before bedtime. The sweet flavors combined with the indica effects make Wedding Cake ideal for relaxation after a long day. No matter what you call it, Wedding Cake is definitely an after-dinner dessert strain. Indeed, if you’re in the Canadian cannabis market, you may see “Wedding Cake” listed as “Pink Cookies.” A few dispensaries also use the name “Triangle Mints #23” to refer to Wedding Cake. However, there are a few alternative names associated with this hybrid. Many lab reports say Wedding Cake has a slight indica dominance with an average THC content in the 20 percent range.Īllegedly, cultivators named Wedding Cake after its sweet aromatics and shiny, icing-like trichomes. While some sites claim Wedding Cake is a mix of GSC and Cherry Pie, it’s more likely this hybrid has traces of Triangle Kush and Animal Mints. ![]() ![]() Most stories surrounding Wedding Cake’s origins suggest the LA-based Seed Junky Genetics created it in the 2010s. ![]()
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