
Cannabis seeds
by Dutch Passion
Orange Hill Special is a 50/50 Indica/Sativa hybrid cannabis seed strain that delivers massive yields from a compact, bushy plant barely reaching one metre tall. Bred by Dutch Passion — one of Amsterdam's original seed banks, active since 1987 — this cross of Orange Bud and Californian Orange packs 21% THC into crystal-coated buds dripping with orange pistils. If you want a heavy-yielding citrus strain that doesn't need a cathedral ceiling to thrive, this is where you start.
| Pack | Seeds | SKU |
|---|---|---|
| Small pack | 3 feminised seeds | CSDP0068 |
| Standard pack | 5 feminised seeds | CSDP0133 |
Running a single tent or a small outdoor plot? The 3-pack gives you enough to select a strong phenotype without overcommitting. If you're filling a proper canopy — say a 1.2m x 1.2m space — the 5-pack is the better shout, because these bushy plants fill out fast and you'll want a few to choose from.
Dutch Passion calls Orange Hill Special the best-yielding member of their entire "Orange" family, and having seen what growers pull from these seeds, we'd agree. The genetics come from two proven citrus lines — Californian Orange and Orange Bud — and the result is a plant that stays short, branches out like mad, and stacks bud sites from top to bottom. Under an expert hand, a single plant can produce up to 450 grams. That's serious weight from something barely a metre tall.
The real appeal, though, is the combination of yield and potency. At 21% THC, the dried and cured buds deliver a balanced effect: a cerebral onset that sits alongside a relaxing, full-body stone. The flavour is distinctly citrusy — think fresh orange peel, not artificial sweetness — and the buds themselves are covered in a thick layer of trichomes with bright orange pistils threading through the calyxes. You can smell the citrus terpenes before you even break a bud open. It's a strain that looks as good as it performs.
One honest note: Orange Hill Special is not particularly demanding during the vegetative phase, but once she flips to flower, she's a heavy feeder. If you're used to running light nutrient schedules, you'll need to step it up during the 8-9 week flowering window or you'll leave yield on the table. She tells you when she's hungry — watch for light green leaves as a signal to increase feeding.
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Seed bank | Dutch Passion |
| Genetics | Californian Orange x Orange Bud |
| Type | 50/50 Indica/Sativa hybrid |
| Seed type | Feminised |
| THC content | 21% |
| Indoor flowering time | 8-9 weeks |
| Outdoor harvest (Northern Hemisphere) | Mid October |
| Outdoor harvest (Southern Hemisphere) | Mid April |
| Plant height | Approximately 1 metre |
| Yield per plant (maximum) | Up to 450 grams |
| Grow environment | Indoor, outdoor, greenhouse |
| Growth pattern | Short, very bushy |
| Feeding requirement | Heavy feeder during flowering |
Growing Orange Hill Special indoors? Pair these seeds with a complete grow tent kit — the bushy growth pattern means you'll want good airflow and light penetration from the start. A carbon filter is also worth considering once flowering kicks in, because the citrus terpene profile on this strain is strong enough to announce itself through walls.
The name gives it away — Orange Hill Special is a citrus-dominant strain through and through. When you break open a dried bud, the first thing that hits you is a sharp, sweet orange peel aroma with an underlying earthiness from the Indica side of the genetics. The terpene profile leans heavily on limonene and myrcene, which accounts for both the citrus punch and the slightly musky, resinous undertone.
When smoked or vaporised, the flavour follows the nose: bright citrus on the inhale, a sweeter orange candy note on the exhale, and a lingering zesty aftertaste. It's one of the more genuinely flavourful strains in Dutch Passion's catalogue. If you've grown Orange Bud before, imagine that citrus character dialled up and backed by denser, more resinous buds. That's what Californian Orange brings to the cross.
Dutch Passion has built an entire family of orange-themed genetics, and it's worth knowing where Orange Hill Special sits in the lineup. Compared to the original Orange Bud, Orange Hill Special is bushier, shorter, and produces heavier yields — Dutch Passion themselves say it's the top yielder of the family. The THC content at 21% is also a step up from most Orange Bud phenotypes.
If you're choosing between this and something like Dutch Passion's Passion Orange, the key difference is structure. Orange Hill Special stays compact and bushy, making it a better fit for smaller tents or sea-of-green setups. The trade-off is that the dense canopy needs active management — airflow is critical to prevent moisture issues in those thick, crystal-coated bud clusters. We'd pick Orange Hill Special over the original Orange Bud nine times out of ten for indoor grows. The yield difference alone makes the decision easy.
Orange Hill Special rarely exceeds 1 metre in height, even with a generous vegetative period. The genetics favour bushy lateral growth over vertical stretch, making it well suited to tents with limited headroom. Expect most of your canopy management to be horizontal, not vertical.
Under optimal conditions with experienced cultivation, a single Orange Hill Special plant can yield up to 450 grams. Typical indoor yields will be somewhat lower depending on light intensity, pot size, and feeding regime, but this strain consistently outperforms other members of Dutch Passion's Orange family.
The vegetative phase is forgiving and the plant stays manageable in size. The one area that trips up newer growers is the heavy feeding requirement during flowering — if you underfeed, you'll see it in the yield. Keep an eye on leaf colour and step up nutrients gradually once buds start forming.
Indoor flowering takes 8-9 weeks from the flip to 12/12. Outdoors in the Northern Hemisphere, expect to harvest around mid October. Southern Hemisphere growers should plan for mid April. The shorter end of the flowering window (8 weeks) tends to produce a slightly more cerebral effect, while letting it run to 9 weeks adds more body.
Strong citrus — specifically fresh orange peel — with an earthy, resinous undertone. The flavour when smoked is sweet and zesty with a lingering orange aftertaste. The aroma is noticeable during late flowering, so plan for odour control if growing indoors.
Yes. Orange Hill Special is suited for indoor, outdoor, and greenhouse cultivation. Outdoors, the compact size and bushy structure make it relatively discreet. She handles Northern European climates well enough to finish by mid October, though a greenhouse will give you more control over late-season moisture.
She's a heavy feeder once flowering begins. A bloom-specific nutrient mix with elevated phosphorus and potassium is the standard approach. Watch for light green leaves as a sign she wants more. During veg, she's not particularly demanding — standard feeding schedules work fine.
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.