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Oregon Greens

Cultivation philosophy

Why we keep the rotation tight

A small indoor garden runs on math the rest of the market does not always see. Room footage, light hours, hand-trim throughput, and dry-back time are all finite. The wider the rotation, the thinner each cultivar gets stretched. We keep the lineup small because the math is honest, and the flower is better for it.

Focus

Cultivation philosophy

Takeaway

Tight rotation is not a marketing line. It is the operating discipline that makes every other promise on this site possible.

Next

Advisory, retail, or another note.

Wide view of a mature indoor cannabis flowering room at Oregon Greens with dense canopy and overhead grow lights

Point

The room sets the limit

Indoor cultivation is a closed system. Every cultivar in the canopy competes for the same square footage, the same light hours, and the same air handler. Push the count past what the room can hold and something gives — yield, terpene, or trim quality. Holding the rotation at five lets each cultivar finish on its own timeline instead of a forced one.

Point

Hand-trim is the bottleneck nobody talks about

Machine-trimmed flower runs faster but loses trichomes and cuts into terpene retention. Hand-trim keeps the bud structure intact and lets the crew judge each cola individually. There is a real ceiling on how much flower a small crew can hand-trim well. Five cultivars is what fits inside that ceiling without rushing the final touch.

Point

Consistency is a lineup decision, not a packaging one

The most expensive thing in cannabis is a jar that does not match the last one. Tight rotations make that mismatch rare. Each cultivar runs through the same room conditions, the same crew, the same panel cadence — drop after drop. That repeatability is what keeps budtenders confident reordering and shoppers confident asking for the strain by name.

Takeaway

Tight rotation is not a marketing line. It is the operating discipline that makes every other promise on this site possible.

Keep it close.

Wide view of a mature indoor cannabis flowering room at Oregon Greens with dense canopy and overhead grow lights