About King Tut
You’ll more commonly hear the King Tut strain called casually by the pharaoh’s formal name, Tutankhamon, slightly misspelled. The name homages a royal child, a rare find in archaeology, a famous ruler. Does the strain live up to it? It is itself extremely rare, so that’s a good start! It’s so rare that we’re not certain what its parent strains were. But we suspect that AK-47 strains are in there – we know that it heavily favors Sativa (80/20) and was bred, with ironic appropriateness, by Pyramid Seeds.
This strain won’t put you in a sleeping mood – you’ll be ratcheted up, heady, full of zest. If you want a cannabis strain to get your creative juices flowing or chat up your not-so-royal court of buddies for hours on end, King Tut would be a good companion.
King Tut won’t overwhelm beginning breeders. It grows in a compact formation that favors heavy, dense branches. It takes around 60 days to flower, at which point you’ll have a high yield of buds frosted with crystals. If you let King Tut flourish outside, its thick branches will net you around a 1,500-gram yield per plant.
Those looking for a strain that retains CBD should know that King Tut doesn’t have well-documented numbers, though they hover around 2%. The high of the King Tut strain will suck you into your own mind, encouraging peppy energy and tons of talking. If you have a social gathering coming up or a long day of errands ahead of you, you can use King Tut to give yourself the edge. It’ll get you giggly and talking, as well as flourishing in creativity. So you can use King Tut to give yourself an artistic boost too.
As for medicinal purposes, King Tut’s terpene profile favors inflammation-reduction. You can treat pain, stress, and depression as well. As you smoke it, King Tut gives off an aroma of fruity, flowery goodness with an aftertaste that’s skunky and kind of sour. There’s a tone of citrus underneath as well.
The young pharaoh named King Tut is Egypt’s most well-known ancient ruler due to how rarely preserved his burial site was when we discovered it. The King Tut strain may not be as rare but it’s still shrouded in some mystery owing to its somewhat unknown lineage. Those who grow it love how forgiving its dense branch formation is. Those who use it do so to give themselves a spark of energy on a busy day, for a social occasion, or to get their creativity flowing. King Tut may be long dead, but he still makes a pretty great party companion.
Adam Knight –
Nice smelling and tasting in joints, nice light buzz for the time smoker that likes to be functional
Goodman –
Nice smelling and tasting in joints, nice light buzz for the day time smoker that likes to be functional
Marion Sykes –
Great pot for the price. Nice smooth smoke great taste and buzz. Good daytime pot.
Alia Lambert –
the smell is awesome, high is smooth.
Elsie Hamilton –
Nice bag appeal stinks nice, and a really nice smoke. I’d buy this again for sure.
Joyce O’Reilly –
Loves the taste and way it burns in a joint loves this site nothing I tried yet was bad and I tried a good many now !
Alexa Alvarez –
It has an uplifting high, smooth smoke, and a refreshing flavour. Perfect for daytime use. Highly recommend!
Harriett Turner –
mellow sativa. Energizing without being anxiety-inducing.
Nikolas Warren –
Wow, this is excellent stuff. I highly recommend buying it if you’re looking for a good buzz. Perfect for bong hits and joints.
Caprice Nichols –
Super energetic sativa, old skool taste, in my top favourites for sure! Highly functional, focused high.