Burmese Kush by Kera Seeds
The compact height of Burmese Kush by Kera Seeds says only part of the story. This feminized, photoperiod cannabis strain combines Trainwreck with White Widow and is listed as 90 percent sativa and 10 percent indica, yet its visible plant frame stays much more manageable than that sativa shaped ratio might suggest.
Indoors, Burmese Kush usually remains around 55 to 65 centimetres, while outdoor plants are placed at roughly 90 to 140 centimetres. Instead of forming a tall, drawn out Haze structure, it develops a more contained frame with enough stability for clear flower formation. That contrast is the useful point here: a sativa leaning line inside a relatively compact Kera build.
In cultivation, Burmese Kush should not be treated too casually. It is not described as especially difficult, but it asks for more attention than very simple short cycle varieties. A clean frame, steady airflow and side growth that is not crowded too much help the White Widow side show more clearly in the flower structure.
Flowering time is listed at about 9 weeks. Indoor yield is usually given at around 350 to 400 grams per square metre, with outdoor plants reaching roughly 115 to 165 grams per plant. That makes it a solid rather than exaggerated yield profile, carried more by orderly handling and strain character than by inflated output claims.
The aromatic side is unusually direct: peppery, spicy and rather dry instead of sweet or fruit heavy. Within the Kera Seeds range, Burmese Kush stands as a more individual line between Trainwreck movement, White Widow structure and a compact frame, with a sharper profile than many of Kera’s fruit leaning varieties.