Press ESC to close

Purple Maroc – an outdoor variety with striking purple coloration and stable genetics

Purple Maroc is a classic under open skies: a line selected for outdoor conditions, with a clear tendency to go purple and a stable, repeatable character. It’s a plant you can recognize from a distance in the garden: color, aroma, and a uniform look across individuals.

What it looks like — in short

  • Habit: medium height, flexible frame, buds compact and well-weighted.
  • Color: from olive green to deep purples; anthocyanins express more with cooler nights and shorter days.
  • Calyxes & trichomes: even, glassy frost; calyx > leaf.
  • Pistils: creamy → honey–rust; they contrast nicely with the purple once cured.

Note: purple doesn’t automatically mean “stronger.” It’s a visual trait and a phenotypic cue, not a measure of intensity.

Aroma & flavor — what you actually perceive

  • Front:berry, grape peel, sweet–tart tone (ocimene/myrcene, linalool).
  • Middle:floral–incense with a touch of resinous wood (pinene, humulene).
  • Background:hashy–earthy accent with a peppery shadow (β-caryophyllene).
    On the palate: fruity–dry, clean finish with a gentle grape-skin sweetness.

Impressions (sensory)

Most describe it as clear in the head (mood, light energy) with soft body relaxation and no heavy anchor. A daytime, walk-friendly profile. Sensory language—individual reactions vary.

Phenotypes — common lanes

  • Purple Berry: darkest coloration, berry/grape forward, clean finish.
  • Floral–Incense: more flower and incense, less dessert sweetness; elegant, “drier” nose.
  • Green Maroc: less purple, earth–wood–hash, a bit more austere.

Quick “terpene map”

Common leaders: ocimene/myrcene (fruit/tropic), linalool (floral), pinene (conifer “air”), β-caryophyllene (pepper balance), humulene (hoppy–woody shade). Together they explain berry–grape–floral–forest–hash.

Spotting a good batch 

  • Nose after grinding: fruit and flower jump out; no raw, green harshness.
  • Frost: dense and even—no dull islands.
  • Structure:calyx dominates leaf; bud compact but not rock-hard.
  • Color: purple deep yet natural (not “greyish”); green still visible in veins/undersides.

Small “botanical” note 

  • Stability: Purple Maroc shows even phenotypes—similar architecture and aroma within a lot.
  • Color: anthocyanins intensify with day/night temperature swings and a shortening photoperiod.
  • Outdoor character: valued for field toughness—aesthetics, aroma, and visual consistency under open sky.

Who is Purple Maroc for?

For those seeking a reliable outdoor cultivar with striking purple, stable genetics, and a clean, fruit–floral bouquet. For collectors who value repeatability and material that looks as good in macro as it smells.

Manolo MJF

Hey, I’m Manolo from MJF – your go-to grow buddy 🌿. I blog about everything cannabis cultivation: from sprouting your first seed to harvesting top-shelf buds. Whether you're growing in a closet or a custom-built growroom, I’m here to share tips, tricks, and tried-and-true methods to keep your plants (and you) thriving. Light it up with knowledge and let’s grow together! 💡🌱 #GrowWithManolo

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Email is optional. Required fields are marked *

Your experience on this site will be improved by allowing cookies. Read more