Summer 2016. South of France. My neighbor had this beautiful terraced garden and she let me use the back corner for eight large pots. I spent a lot of that spring getting everything ready — big fabric pots, good soil mix, the whole deal. Plants went in mid-April and I was feeling good about things.
Anyway. Four of them were male.
My friend who gave me the seeds had said they were “probably mostly female” which, looking back, is an incredible thing to say to someone who’s about to invest five months into a garden. By the time I figured out which plants were male — I was still not great at reading pre-flowers at the time and kept second-guessing myself — one of my females had gotten pollinated. That plant put everything into making seeds. So I ended up with two usable female plants out of eight.
I’ve been buying feminized cannabis seeds ever since.

What Feminized Seeds Actually Are
Here’s what I should’ve known: regular cannabis seeds are basically a coin flip for sex. Half male, half female, more or less. In a normal grow where you want sensimilla — unseeded buds, which is what everyone wants for consumption — males are dead weight. Worse than dead weight actually, because a single male that pollinates your females causes them to divert energy from resin and terpenes into seed production. You end up with seedy, lower-quality buds at best, a total seed crop at worst.
Feminized seeds solve this by being specifically bred to produce female plants. The way it works: you take a female plant and chemically stress it — usually with colloidal silver spray — into producing male flowers with pollen. Then you use that pollen to fertilize another female. Since the pollen donor was genetically female, all the resulting seeds are too. Plant them, get female plants.
Sounds almost too simple, right? But it genuinely works. In maybe six years of buying feminized seeds from decent breeders, I think I’ve had three or four hermaphrodites total, and those came from one sketchy batch from a breeder I shouldn’t have trusted in the first place. From reputable genetics, feminized means female.
The thing I want to be clear about though — feminized doesn’t mean high quality. I have grown some truly mediocre feminized weed. Stuff that was correctly, definitely female, and also deeply unimpressive. The female guarantee is about sex. Everything else — the terpenes, the potency, the yield, how easy it is to grow — comes from the underlying genetics.
Strains I’ve Actually Grown and Liked
White Widow has been around since the early 90s. Amsterdam coffeeshop classic. The feminized version is so stable and so consistent that it’s genuinely the best teaching strain I know. Every plant from a good White Widow fem pack grows basically the same. Same height, same stretch, same roughly 9-week flower time, same white-crystal covered buds. When you’re learning, consistency is a gift.
Gorilla Glue #4 feminized is something else. GG4 comes from Chemdawg parentage — the chemdawg.com site has the actual origin story if you’re curious and it’s genuinely kind of wild how this strain happened — and the resin production is unlike anything I’d seen before the first time I grew it. The buds are coated. Like, really coated. Your fingers stick together if you touch the plant in late flower.
Blue Dream feminized — read the background at bluedream.com and you’ll see it’s actually an interesting strain with real history. Blueberry crossed with Haze. Sativa dominant, runs tall, flowering time around 9-10 weeks, but the yield is good and the effect is clear-headed and functional. Good daytime strain.
Sour Diesel feminized — info on the original at sourdiesel.com — is one where the terpene profile is so specific and recognizable that nothing else fills that niche. Fuel-lemon-skunk. Long flower time, 10-11 weeks, but worth it. Browse the full strains directory if you’re looking for other high-terpene options.

How to Actually Grow Feminized Photoperiod Seeds
The veg period is your decision with photoperiod feminized seeds. You keep your lights at 18 hours and the plant stays in veg as long as you want. Flip to 12 hours and flowering begins. I typically veg for 5-6 weeks for medium-sized indoor grows. Longer veg generally equals higher yield because more veg time means more branching and bud sites.
Training: photoperiod feminized plants handle training way better than autoflowers because you can recover in veg before the flip. Topping, LST, SCROG — these all make sense on photoperiod plants. The growing guides at Seedbanks go into training technique specifics.
Light leaks are a real concern once you’re in flower. Any light during the dark period can mess up the flowering signal. Stressed photoperiod plants can develop hermaphrodite tendencies — pollen sacs alongside female buds. Check your tent seams. Seriously.
For seed browsing: seedbanks.com/feminized-seeds/ has the full feminized selection. The complete growing guides can help you figure out which setup makes more sense for your situation.
Expected numbers: indoors on a proper setup, 450-600g per square meter is realistic. Outdoors in a warm climate with a full season — I’ve seen 600-700g from a single well-grown outdoor photoperiod plant.
The summer of 2016 cost me five months and a lot of plants. I regret nothing except running regular seeds when feminized were available. Don’t make that mistake.