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HybridTHC 16–22% · producer-reported

Hawaiian Fire

Hawaiian Fire is a hybrid cannabis strain. Its reported terpene profile leads with ocimene.

Hawaiian Fire leads with ocimene — Sweet, herbal and woody with a citrus lift. Caryophyllene brings cracked black pepper, clove and warm cinnamon.

Terpene profile

The aroma compounds Hawaiian Fire is reported to carry, strongest first. Illustrative — aggregated from public sources, not BudAbout lab results.

MyrceneEarthyLimoneneCitrus burstCaryophylleneSpicyLinaloolSoft floralPineneSharp freshTerpinoleneComplex pineyHumuleneEarthy hopsOcimeneSweet herbalNerolidolWoodyBisabololChamomileGeraniolSweet roseValenceneCitrus sweet3/12AROMAS
Aroma fingerprint

Hawaiian Fire's illustrative profile lights up 3 of the 12 aroma terpenes, led by ocimene. The lit wedges match the colored cards below — smell and flavor only, never effects.

Ocimene · DominantCaryophyllene · SecondaryMyrcene · Tertiary
Reported dominance
OcimeneDominant
CaryophylleneSecondary
MyrceneTertiary
OcimeneDominant
Woody · β-ocimene

Sweet, herbal and woody with a citrus lift.

Sweet herbCitrusWood

What research has explored: Less studied. Lab work notes antimicrobial and decongestant-type activity.

CaryophylleneSecondary
Spicy · β-caryophyllene

Cracked black pepper, clove and warm cinnamon.

Black pepperCloveCinnamon

What research has explored: Unusual among terpenes — it can bind the body's CB2 receptors, so researchers study it for inflammation. Most data is preclinical.

MyrceneTertiary
Earthy · β-myrcene

Ripe mango, warm soil and a whisper of clove — soft and round.

MangoEarthClove

What research has explored: Cannabis's most common terpene. Studied for sedative- and muscle-relaxant–like effects — but largely in animal studies, often at high doses. Human evidence at the amounts found in flower is limited.

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What stood out? (aroma, flavor, freshness)

Notes are about aroma, flavor, and the flower itself, and are rewritten into a compliant summary before publishing.

Ratings come from signed-in New Yorkers and describe aroma, flavor, and appearance — not effects, and not a BudAbout lab test.

More ocimene-forward strains

Other strains whose illustrative profile is led by ocimene.

Hawaiian Fire FAQ

Q. What does Hawaiian Fire smell and taste like?

Hawaiian Fire leads with ocimene — Sweet, herbal and woody with a citrus lift. Caryophyllene brings cracked black pepper, clove and warm cinnamon. These are illustrative aroma notes aggregated from public sources, not BudAbout lab results — and they describe smell and flavor only, never effects.

Q. What is the dominant terpene in Hawaiian Fire?

Hawaiian Fire's illustrative profile is led by Ocimene (β-ocimene), part of the "woody" aroma family, followed by Caryophyllene, Myrcene. Terpene levels here are illustrative, not measured by BudAbout.

Q. Is Hawaiian Fire a sativa, indica, or hybrid?

Hawaiian Fire is commonly classified as a hybrid strain. Classifications vary by source and grower and don't guarantee any particular experience — this is general information for adults 21+.

Q. Does BudAbout lab-test Hawaiian Fire?

No. BudAbout does not lab-test cannabis. The terpene profile shown here is illustrative and aggregated from public sources, and the THC range is producer-reported. We describe aroma and chemistry only.

THC ranges are producer-reported and terpene profiles are illustrative, aggregated from public sources — not BudAbout lab results. BudAbout describes aroma and chemistry only and makes no health or effect claims. This is general information, not medical advice. For adults 21+.