Lost Sailor
Top flavors
Terpenes
Lost Sailor effects are mostly calming.
Lost Sailor
Top flavors
Terpenes
Lost Sailor effects are mostly calming.
Lost Sailor is a modern hybrid-indica cultivar derived from the Hell Breath lineage. This strain has established a reputation for its reliable development, requiring a moderate level of expertise from cultivators who opt to grow it in either indoor or outdoor environments. It maintains a consistent flowering period of 78 days, rewarding the patient grower with a high overall yield.
The chemical profile of Lost Sailor is defined by a complex array of terpenes, beginning with a dominant presence of myrcene, followed by caryophyllene, ocimene, and pinene. The sensory nuance continues through a sequence of nerolidol, limonene, humulene, linalool, beta-pinene, and bisabolol, with trace contributions from guaiol, camphene, eucalyptol, p-cymene, caryophyllene-oxide, and terpinolene. This THC-dominant variety offers a balanced chemical profile that influences its specific aromatic and flavour characteristics.
The effects of Lost Sailor are consistently reported as relaxing, calm, and focused, making it a functional choice for those managing pain, stress, or sleep challenges. Beyond its immediate utility for the consumer, the strain has proven to be a noteworthy genetic contributor. It functions as a parent to several distinct varieties, most notably Bear Claws, Raspberry Punch, and The Honeymooners.
Terpene Profile
Synergies (+) and conflicts (−) are relative to each other within this profile.
| Terpene | Share | Character | Likely role |
|---|---|---|---|
| myrcene | ~60% | earthy | relaxing · solo |
| caryophyllene | ~28% | spicy | relaxing · social |
| ocimene | ~12% | sweet | energetic · social |
Research notes below describe isolated terpene mechanisms and early findings. They do not guarantee effects from this strain and are not medical advice.
Russo 2011: naloxone-sensitive analgesia, potentiates barbiturate sleep; dominant sedating terpenoid; blocks hepatic carcinogenesis by aflatoxin.
~28%
spicy
●●○○
Russo 2011: only terpene that is a selective full CB2 agonist (100 nM); Gertsch et al. 2008: acts as dietary cannabinoid; unique anti-inflammatory and gastric cytoprotective properties.
Antifungal, antiviral, decongestant; activates CB1/CB2 at 10–60% THC efficacy per Israeli receptor study (NORML 2025); highly volatile (bp 50–66°C); limited clinical data.
Effects
Reported effects — derived from terpene chemistry and cannabinoid profile.
Genetic Profile
Indica-dominant
Primarily indica with sativa influence. Relaxing body with some cerebral lift.
THC-Dominant
High THC, trace CBD. Psychoactive. Full CB1 agonism — euphoria, appetite, analgesia.
Genealogy
Parentage, ancestry, and genetic relatives of Lost Sailor.
Ancestry
Siblings
Share parent hell breath
Offspring — 1 strains bred from Lost Sailor
Composite Traits
Dispensary Locator
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What would Lost Sailor × ? produce?
Predict the terpene profile, effects, and growing traits of a cross. Our gene weaver engine votes on dominant traits from both parents.
Build a cross with Lost Sailor →Similar strains
Same primary terpene with overlapping effects.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Lost Sailor indica or sativa?
Lost Sailor is modeled here as a indica-dominant (primarily indica with sativa influence).
What terpene is dominant in Lost Sailor?
Myrcene is shown as the dominant terpene at approximately ~60%. Caryophyllene follows as the secondary terpene.
Is Lost Sailor good for daytime use?
Lost Sailor is versatile and works across different times of day depending on dose and individual response.
How accurate is this data?
See the "Data confidence" card in the sidebar. Terpene profiles and effects are chemistry-informed estimates — individual responses depend on phenotype, source, and personal chemistry.