TL;DR
- Lean: Balanced hybrid leaning indica, 26 to 32 percent THC
- Flavor: Sharp mint and sour citrus rind over peppery garlic gas
- Effect: Fast euphoric opening, dominant body buzz, deep couch close
- Best for: End-of-day sessions, movies, low-movement evenings
- Bottom line: Cap Junky by any other name, the loudest collab cut on the menu
Buy Miracle Mints Clones ($99)
HLVd-screened. Free 2-day shipping to all 50 states.
Verified Capulator x Seed Junky Genetics cut
Rooted and ready to plant the day it arrives
Shop Miracle Mints clones at GSRH →
Strain Overview
Miracle Mints is the strain you might know better as Cap Junky. Same plant, two names. She is the collaboration project between Capulator and Seed Junky Genetics that crossed Capulator’s Alien Cookies with Seed Junky’s Kush Mints #11, and the result was one of the loudest, most potent hybrids of the modern menu. THC reports routinely land in the high twenties to low thirties, and the smell knocks the lid off any room you cure her in.
She is a clone-only cut, which is part of why she has stayed exclusive. Most home growers only know her by reputation. The GSRH cut is the verified one, rooted, HLVd-screened, and shipped free anywhere in the country. If you have been chasing the hype, this is the way you actually get her on your bench.
Quick Facts For Smokers
| Price | $99 (free 2-day shipping) |
| THC | 26 to 32% |
| Dominant terpenes | Limonene, caryophyllene, linalool, myrcene |
| Lineage | Alien Cookies x Kush Mints #11 |
| Breeder | Capulator x Seed Junky Genetics |
Quick Facts For Growers
| Flowering time | 8 to 10 weeks indoor |
| Difficulty | Moderate to advanced |
| Climate | Indoor preferred, light dep workable |
Lineage & History: When Two Breeders Stop Trying To One-Up Each Other
Capulator already had a reputation built on Mac and Alien Cookies. Seed Junky was running the table with everything in the Mints family. When the two of them put their best in-house cuts together, the cross was always going to be loud. What surprised people was how clean she came out. Most super-hybrids built from two heavyweight parents end up muddy and inconsistent across phenos. Miracle Mints stabilized fast and the keeper pheno hit numbers that broke most lab tests.
The Alien Cookies side brings dense, frosty structure and the cookie family’s famous bag appeal. Kush Mints #11 brings the mint and gas funk that put the Mints line on the map, plus the heavy body buzz that comes from the Bubba Kush in its background. Stacked together, you get a plant that smells like sour citrus rind and garlic with a mint candy chaser, and a high that puts you somewhere between mildly dazed and fully unbothered.
The strain is sometimes still listed under Cap Junky on dispensary menus and Leafly. Miracle Mints is the cleaner consumer-facing name a lot of cultivators have gravitated toward. Same genetics, same cut, same effects.
Flavor & Aroma
She smells exactly like she sounds. Sharp mint up front, sour fruit rind right behind it, then a deep gas note that anchors the whole bouquet. There is a peppery garlic funk in the background that gives away the Cookies parent. The total effect is somewhere between a mojito, a fuel pump, and a fresh roll of breath mints, which sounds awful on paper and works in person.
On the burn she leans citrus and mint. The limonene drives the front of the inhale with a punchy lemon-lime brightness, and the linalool softens the middle into a floral roundness. The exhale is where the gas and pepper come back, with a savory finish that keeps the smoke from going one-dimensional. She also tastes loud at low doses, which is unusual for a strain this heavy. You do not need to clear a bowl to know what is happening.
Hash makers love this cut. The trichome density is among the highest you will see outside of a true Mac descendant, and the rosin holds onto the mint and citrus through extraction in a way that most heavy hybrids cannot.
Effects & What to Expect
Miracle Mints is a heavy hitter. The onset is fast, the head buzz arrives immediately, and within ten minutes you are reassessing whatever plans you had for the rest of the day. She has a euphoric, almost giggly opening that catches a lot of new smokers off guard before the body comes in and parks. Twenty minutes in and the body buzz is the dominant note. Forty minutes in and the couch has won.
This is not a microdose strain. Even seasoned smokers report that one or two hits is plenty for a normal session. Run a full bowl and you are committing to a long evening of low movement and decent appetite. The high is long, often two to three hours of meaningful effect, with a softer landing than most strains in this potency range.
Recreational fit is end-of-day sessions, the kind of evening where you want to disappear into a movie or a video game, and any time you want a single strain that solves the question of “what should I smoke right now.” She is also a popular sleep-aide-by-accident for tolerant smokers, but this page is not making that claim. We are just saying she is heavy.
Growing Miracle Mints
She is a moderate to advanced grow. Not because she is fragile, but because she is loud about everything. Overfeed her and she will tip burn within two days. Underfeed her and she will pale out. Hit the sweet spot and she rewards you with a dense, frost-coated canopy that needs a real trellis to hold up the weight of late-flower buds.
Indoor is her preferred environment. She likes 65 to 75 degrees, RH around 50% in flower, and steady airflow. Top her at four nodes, run a SCROG, and start defoliating at the beginning of week three of flower. She tends to grow a heavy fan-leaf canopy that will choke the lower bud sites if you let it. Aggressive defoliation is non-negotiable on this cut.
Feed her medium to medium-heavy with a strong cal-mag base. The Mints family has a known calcium hunger and Miracle Mints inherits that. Yellowing on new growth is usually a cal-mag issue, not a nitrogen one. Run pH consistent at 6.0 in soil or 5.8 in hydro and watch for the foxtailing that this cut occasionally throws if she runs too hot under HID.
Flowering is 8 to 10 weeks. The keeper pheno typically finishes at week 9. Pull her at week 8 and you will get a brighter, more racy head high with less body weight. Take her to 10 and you get the full knockout. Cool nights in the last two weeks bring out subtle purples on certain phenos. Yields are medium indoor and lean heavy under high-intensity lighting in proper conditions.
Buy Miracle Mints Clones ($99, Cap Junky By Any Other Name)
Order Miracle Mints clones today. Free 2-day shipping to all 50 states.
Verified Capulator x Seed Junky Genetics cut
Rooted, screened for HLVd, ready to plant the day they arrive
Shop Miracle Mints clones at GSRH →
If You Like Miracle Mints, Try
- Amore De Uva: another Cookies-family stablemate, denser bag appeal with a similar finish.
- Gary Payton x Jealousy: stays in the dessert lane, slightly heavier on the body with a different front.
- Taffy Twist: a sister dessert cut, swap the host’s expression for a different cream-and-cake tilt.
FAQ
Is Miracle Mints the same as Cap Junky? Yes. Same genetics, same cut, two names. Some growers and dispensaries use Miracle Mints, others still use Cap Junky. The plant is identical.
Who bred Miracle Mints? Capulator and Seed Junky Genetics, in collaboration. Alien Cookies (Capulator) crossed with Kush Mints #11 (Seed Junky).
What does Miracle Mints taste like? Sharp mint and sour citrus rind on the front, peppery garlic and gas in the middle, and a savory exhale that lingers. It tastes like a breath mint chewed in a fuel station.
How potent is Miracle Mints? Reported THC is 26 to 32% on lab-tested batches. She is a top-shelf potency cultivar, and even small doses hit hard.
How long does Miracle Mints take to flower? 8 to 10 weeks indoor. The keeper pheno typically finishes at week 9 for the cleanest balance of head and body.
Is Miracle Mints hard to grow? She is a moder
For more mint-forward cuts, our sister store ClonesUp carries MJ Mints and Gush Mintz.
