SUN-GROWN CBD FLOWER
Hemp flower grown under natural sunlight. Richer terpene profiles, longer growing cycles.
Sun-Grown CBD Flower Products
Rainbow Sherbet CBD Flower Sun grown
Citrus • Fruity • Gassy
Lavender Cupcakes CBD Flower Sun grown
Chocolate • Earthy • Berry
Lemon Octane #13 CBD Flower Sun grown
Lemon • Gas • Citrus
Critical Berries CBD Flower Sun grown
Berry • Spiced • Forest Earth
Sour Lifter CBD Flower Sun grown
Sour Citrus • Gas • Chemical
Bubba Kush 59 CBD Flower Sun grown
Earthy • Skunky • Magnolia
Fyre OG CBD Flower Sun grown
Lemon • Gas • Spiced Pine
Puff Pastries CBD Flower Sun grown
Lemon Cream • Vanilla • Pastry
Allium OG CBD Flower Sun grown
Garlic • Tropical • Peach Ring
Royal OG CBD Flower Sun grown
Lemon • Woody • Sweet Candy
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Originals is a UK CBD shop built on doing things properly. Every review below is from a verified UK buyer, in their own words.
SUN-GROWN & OUTDOOR
What sun-grown CBD flower means
Sun-grown flower is grown the old way: under real sunlight, on the plant's own clock. No sealed room, no light timer, just the season doing its thing. It's the most natural end of the range, and it comes with a character all its own. It's also how cannabis was grown for most of human history, long before grow lights existed, so there's a tradition behind it as much as a method. Here's what to expect.
Part of the full CBD flower range — everything we stock, across all strains, grow methods, and price points.
Grown under the sun
Sun-grown flower gets its light from the sun, whether that's fully outdoor or under an open polytunnel. The plant follows the natural season, which means a longer cycle than an indoor grow forces. It finishes when it's ready, not when a timer says so. That patience is part of what gives the flower its character. The grower's job here is less about controlling the plant and more about working with the conditions, choosing the right site, the right soil, the right window to plant and harvest, then letting the season do the rest.
Why the terpenes get complex
A longer season under real sun gives the plant more time to develop its terpenes, and the day-to-day variation in weather adds character you don't get from a perfectly controlled room. Rainbow Sherbet and Critical Berries both come through with that fuller, more layered aroma. The full spectrum of natural sunlight, and the small stresses of real outdoor conditions, push the plant to produce a broader, more rounded range of terpenes than a fixed indoor environment tends to. We frame this as what the growing does to the plant, nothing more.
The terpenes you tend to find
Sun-grown profiles tend to read earthy and layered rather than sharp and single-note, because the plant's had a full season to build them up. Rainbow Sherbet leans sweet and fruity with a soft, candy edge, Critical Berries pushes a ripe berry note, and Lavender Cupcakes brings a floral, linalool-led softness. There's often an earthy, grounded base note running underneath the sweeter top notes, which is part of what people mean when they call sun-grown flower "natural" on the nose. This is sensory character from the cultivation, not a claim about effect. The dominant terpenes are listed on every page.
What to expect from the bud
Sun-grown bud tends to have a looser structure than dense indoor flower, with a more rustic look and a distinctive, earthy aroma. That's not a downgrade. It's the honest signature of a plant grown outside in real conditions. If you like flower that smells and looks like it came off an actual plant in a field, this is your end of the range. A looser, more open bud is just what the sun and the season produce, and plenty of people prefer it for exactly that reason: it looks and smells like what it is.
The value angle
Sun-grown leans almost entirely on the sun for its light, so it runs on a fraction of the energy a fully artificial indoor grow needs. That lower running cost often shows up as a keener price on the shelf, without touching the lab standard we hold across the whole range. It's the most natural end of the range and frequently among the better-value, which is a fair part of why a lot of regular smokers keep it in the rotation. Good flower, sensibly priced, because of how it's grown.
Sun-grown strains in our range
You'll find sun-grown flower across this collection, Sour Lifter, Lavender Cupcakes and Rainbow Sherbet among them. Open any product page and you'll see the three things we list on everything we sell: the dominant terpenes, the cannabinoid breakdown, and the genetics and origin. Read those and pick on character. With sun-grown, the aroma and the look are usually what win people over, so the terpene profile on the page is the part worth reading closely.
Sun-grown at a glance
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Not by default. Strength comes down to the cannabinoid breakdown of the individual batch, not the grow method, and that figure is printed on every product page. Sun-grown bud is often looser and more rustic than dense indoor flower, but looser structure isn't the same as weaker, so compare the numbers page to page.
It leans almost entirely on the sun for its light, so it runs on a fraction of the energy an indoor grow needs, and that lower cost often shows up in the price. The saving is in the method, not in the standard, which stays the same across the whole range.
Sun-grown is fully outdoor or under an open polytunnel, taking the weather as it comes, while greenhouse adds a cover and some climate control to smooth out the rough patches. Sun-grown tends to be looser and more rustic; greenhouse tends to come through a bit more even. Both get real sun and list their full spec on the page.
A plant grown outside on its own clock, through real weather, tends to throw looser, more open buds than one grown in a tightly controlled room. That rustic look is the honest signature of outdoor cultivation, not a flaw. Plenty of people seek it out for exactly that reason.









