TL;DR
- Lean: Sativa-leaning haze hybrid, 22 to 28 percent THC
- Flavor: Medicinal Band-Aid floral over Cuban hashplant funk
- Effect: Fast electric lift, warm tingly body, borderline psychedelic. Real haze, not the dispensary nine-week version.
- Best for: Free afternoons, creative work, conversation, outdoor sessions
- Bottom line: The Doc D keeper from Bodhi’s A5 Haze x Cuban Black Haze, she heals all wounds
Buy Band Aid Haze #7 Clones ($249)
HLVd-screened. Free 2-day shipping to all 50 states.
Verified Doc D selection from Bodhi’s A5 Haze x Cuban Black Haze cross
Rooted and ready to plant the day it arrives
Shop Band Aid Haze #7 clones at GSRH
Strain Overview
This is one of the loudest haze cuts in modern circulation, full stop. Band Aid Haze #7 is the phenotype Doc D pulled from Bodhi’s A5 Haze x Cuban Black Haze cross, and the name comes from a single line both breeders settled on after running the plant. She heals all wounds. That is the joke and that is the experience. The smell is a chemical-medicinal floral that genuinely reads like a cartoon Band-Aid out of the wrapper, layered over a thick Cuban hashplant funk and a black-pepper haze backbone. There is nothing else in the cannabis catalog that smells like her. She is the kind of cut that hash makers, breeders, and serious haze smokers seek out by name, and she is the reason this clone is priced above the rest of the menu. Heritage genetics, real provenance, and a flavor experience you will not duplicate elsewhere.
Quick Facts For Smokers
| Price | $249 (free 2-day shipping) |
| THC | 22 to 28 percent |
| Dominant terpenes | Terpinolene, ocimene, caryophyllene, pinene |
| Lineage | A5 Haze/Thai/Mirakel x Cuban Black Haze |
| Breeder | Bodhi (cross) and Doc D (#7 selection) |
Quick Facts For Growers
| Flowering time | 11 to 12 weeks indoor |
| Yield | Medium, long airy haze colas |
| Stretch | 2x to 3x |
| Difficulty | Advanced (long flower, careful feed, training required) |
| Climate | Indoor, greenhouse, warm dry outdoor |
Lineage and History: A Heritage Haze With Two Famous Names On It
The Band Aid Haze project starts with a 2013 seed germination at Bodhi’s. The story, as Bodhi and Doc D have told it across forums for years, goes like this. A Spanish grower in South Holland from the A5 crew sent some seeds out from a Thai-pollinated room, where the genetics traced back through Northern Lights Number Five, Haze A, and a Mirakel cross. Those seeds got passed around, eventually landing with Bodhi via a cultivator known as e.T. Bodhi popped them and got one male, an A5 Haze x Mirakel, which he then used to pollinate his prized Cuban Black Haze cut, one of the most intense and unforgiving American haze females in the underground.
The cross produced a small pool of seeds. Doc D ran them, hunted them carefully, and pulled the now-legendary #7 phenotype, which both he and Bodhi named Band Aid Haze together because, as the line goes, she heals all wounds. That single phenotype became the keeper. She has since been used as a parent in dozens of preservation projects, from Katsu’s Bandaid Haze breeding line to Xanadu, Katsu’s Pre-98 Bubba Kush cross. She is one of the most important haze-line females in the modern American underground, and the original cut still moves carefully from grower to grower the way the great clones always have.
Flavor and Aroma
She earned the name. Crack the jar and the first wave is genuinely Band-Aid. Sterile gauze, a sharp medicinal sweetness, a touch of antiseptic. It sounds wrong on paper. It works in practice. Behind the medicinal note there is a thick floral perfume, somewhere between hibiscus and lavender, plus an underlying Cuban hashplant funk that reads spicy and dark like cured tobacco leaves. Break a nug and the haze terps wake up. Black pepper, sandalwood, and a sharp green incense note that signals real haze chemistry under the hood.
Smoke is a full sensory ride. The inhale is floral and slightly perfumed, like burning a high-end stick incense in a small room. Mid palate the medicinal note from the smell shows up on the tongue. It is unmistakable, unique, and divisive. Some smokers describe it as exotic and intoxicating. Others call it polarizing. Exhale is where the haze takes over. Pepper, sandalwood, and a long resinous finish that holds on the back of the throat for a full three to four minutes. She is one of the longest-finishing flavor profiles in cannabis. Vape low to taste the floral. Burn her in glass to taste the haze.
Effects and What to Expect
This is haze. Real haze. Not the modern dispensary version that finishes in nine weeks. The come-up is fast and electric, three minutes from first pull, hitting hard behind the eyes and pushing forward into the temples. Thoughts move quick. Music gets bigger. Anything visually rich becomes more interesting. About twenty minutes in the body component arrives, warm and tingly, with a noticeable lift in the chest that some smokers describe as borderline psychedelic at higher doses.
This is not a casual smoke. She is potent, the come-up is fast, and the headspace is real. For experienced haze smokers she is a peak experience strain, the kind you save for a free afternoon and a project worth getting lost in. For newer smokers, one pull and wait twenty minutes. She will surprise you. The peak runs about two hours and the tail goes long, three to four hours of clear-headed lift before the comedown is even on the radar. Pair her with creative work, conversation, or being outdoors. She is wasted on a couch.
Growing Band Aid Haze #7
She is a haze, with everything that implies. Long flowering, hungry feeder, aggressive stretcher, and absolutely worth the patience if you have it. In veg she throws thin bladed leaves and a tall central stem with widely spaced internodes. Top her early and often. Plan three or four topping passes during a six to eight week veg, plus aggressive low-stress training, or you will end up with a five-foot single-cola plant that does not produce what she is capable of.
Flip her at 12 inches and she will easily double or triple in stretch. She finishes long, narrow, and tall, with foxtailing colas full of widely spaced calyxes that pack heavy resin during the late finish. She runs 11 to 12 weeks indoor and chopping her at 10 is leaving thirty percent of the terps and twenty percent of the potency on the table. Watch the calcium and magnesium during the back half. She is a heavy feeder and prone to fade if you starve her in week eight or nine.
Outdoor she wants a warm dry climate with a long season. She is not a finish-by-October plant in northern latitudes. Greenhouse with light dep is the move if your latitude does not give her until late October or early November. For hash she presses to a haze rosin that is genuinely unique on the modern menu, with the medicinal floral pulling through in a way no commercial seed-line haze has matched. This is the cut hash makers ask for by name.
Buy Band Aid Haze #7 Clones ($249, A Heritage Haze You Cannot Find Elsewhere)
You are paying for provenance. This is the verified Doc D #7 phenotype, the same plant Bodhi and Doc D named together, traveling out of GSRH HLVd-screened, healthy rooted, with free 2-day shipping to all 50 states.
Shop Band Aid Haze #7 clones at GSRH
If You Like Band Aid Haze #7, Try
- Uptown Haze: another haze anchor, similar daytime fit with a different terp front.
- Super Lemon Haze: stays in the daytime lane, racy head with its own back end.
- Super Silver Sour Diesel Haze: a sativa cousin, swap the haze expression for a different cerebral lift.
FAQ
Why does she actually smell like a Band-Aid?
The combination of high terpinolene, a Cuban hashplant terp set, and the A5 Haze floral compounds creates a medicinal floral that genuinely reads like adhesive bandage to most noses. It is unique to this phenotype and it is the reason the name stuck.
Is the #7 the only good phenotype from the cross?
There are other phenotypes in the original Bodhi cross that growers ran, but #7 is the keeper. Doc D pulled her for a reason, Bodhi co-signed the name, and she is the only cut that consistently produces the Band-Aid expression at full volume.
How long does she actually flower?
Eleven to twelve weeks. Plan accordingly. She is not a candidate for fast turnaround grows or tight flowering rooms. If you cannot give her the time, run

