Girl Scout Cookies does not need much of an introduction, but it does deserve a proper grow breakdown.

Born from OG Kush and Durban Poison, this is a strain with serious weight behind the name. Frost, power, sweet funk, and that unmistakable Cookies character have kept it sitting near the top of the modern classic list for years.

For this grow, Wilstang ran Girl Scout Cookies Feminized by WeedSeedsExpress indoors under CMH lighting, starting from paper towel germination before working through a long, structured veg and a controlled flower phase.

This was not a rushed run. The plant was topped, defoliated, transplanted into a large final pot, and given time to build the kind of frame needed for a proper indoor Cookies harvest.

So, did all that patience pay off? Let’s get into it.

Grow Setup

ParameterDetails
StrainGirl Scout Cookies Feminized by WeedSeedsExpress
GrowerWilstang
Grow EnvironmentIndoor
Plant Count1 plant
Germination MethodPaper towel
Veg LightCMH 315W
Flower LightCMH 630W
Light Schedule18 hours in veg, 11 hours in flower
Starting Pot Size1.89 L
Humidity70%
pH5.9
Main Nutrient BrandsMicrobe Life Hydro, Mammoth Microbes, Impello Biosciences
Nutrients UsedMammoth P, Dechlorinator +, Organic Photosynthesis Plus, Continuum
Training TechniquesTopping, transplanting, defoliation

Grow Diary

Weeks 0-2 - Germination and Seedling Growth

Wilstang started Girl Scout Cookies using the paper towel method. Simple, clean, and hard to argue with when done properly.

The seed moved into early vegetation under an 18-hour light schedule, with the room sitting at 75.2 °F during the day and 69.8 °F at night. Humidity was held at 70%, pH stayed at 5.9, and the plant started in a 1.89 L pot.

The early feeding included Mammoth P, Dechlorinator +, Organic Photosynthesis Plus, and Continuum, giving the grow a microbe-heavy foundation from the start. No fireworks yet. Just a clean start.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 1Girl Scout Cookies Week 2

Weeks 3-4 - Early Veg and First Topping

By weeks 3 and 4, Girl Scout Cookies was still moving through early veg in the same stable setup. The plant stayed under 18 hours of light, with 75.2 °F days, 69.8 °F nights, 70% humidity, pH 5.9, and the 1.89 L starter pot.

Week 4 brought the first major training move: topping. Good call. Girl Scout Cookies can build a strong central top if left alone, but topping helps spread the structure and gives the grower more useful bud sites later on.

This was not a reckless cut made too early either. The plant had already been given time to establish herself, which is exactly how this kind of training should be handled.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 3Girl Scout Cookies Week 4

Weeks 5-6 - Building Roots and Structure

Weeks 5 and 6 were quiet, steady veg weeks. Same light schedule, same environment, same starter pot.

Not dramatic, but important.

The plant was building roots, stacking nodes, and preparing for the heavier structure work ahead. With Cookies genetics, that early framework is worth the wait. Rush it, and you get a plant that looks fine but never really uses the light properly.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 5Girl Scout Cookies Week 6

Weeks 7-8 - More Topping, Transplanting, and Defoliation

Weeks 7 and 8 were where the grow started to get more serious. Topping was logged again in week 7, then week 8 brought the transplant from the 1.89 L pot into a much larger 37.85 L final container.

That is a major upgrade. More root space, more buffer, and more room for the plant to push once flower begins.

Week 8 also included topping and defoliation, so this was a heavy management point in the run. The grower was clearly opening the plant up, controlling the canopy, and prepping it for bloom.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 7Girl Scout Cookies Week 8

Weeks 9-10 - Final Veg Work and Canopy Control

Weeks 9 and 10 kept the plant in vegetation, now settled into the larger final pot. Topping and defoliation were logged again in week 10, showing Wilstang was still actively managing shape.

That matters here. Girl Scout Cookies can produce dense, resin-heavy flower, but dense plants need airflow and light penetration.

Wilstang kept working the canopy before bloom, which is the right move with a long veg like this.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 9Girl Scout Cookies Week 10

Weeks 11-12 - Last Veg Push Before Flower

Weeks 11 and 12 were the final stretch of veg. More topping appeared in week 11, and defoliation continued through week 12.

By this point, the plant had been given a proper training run: multiple toppings, repeat defoliation, and a big final pot before flower.

This was not a quick flip. It was a patient one. By the end of week 12, Girl Scout Cookies was ready for the switch.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 11Girl Scout Cookies Week 12

Weeks 13-14 - Flower Begins

Week 13 marked the start of flower. The light schedule dropped from 18 hours to 11 hours, while the rest of the environment stayed steady.

Defoliation was logged again at the start of flower, which makes sense. This is usually the last chance to clean up the plant before the bud sites fully commit.

There was also a note from Wilstang: “15 Clones.” Small detail, but an interesting one. It suggests the plant had enough strong growth to make cuttings worth taking.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 13Girl Scout Cookies Week 14

Weeks 15-16 - Early Flower Development

Weeks 15 and 16 were steady flowering weeks. No big problems were logged, and no major changes were made.

This is where the plant moves from stretch into real bud formation. It is also where some growers start messing around too much.

Wilstang kept the run controlled. Once a plant is happy in flower, let it work.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 15Girl Scout Cookies Week 16

Weeks 17-18 - Bud Sites Building and Aroma Starting

By weeks 17 and 18, the smell was listed as normal. That tracks well for Girl Scout Cookies. She does not always scream early.

She builds slowly, then starts getting louder once the flowers stack and the resin comes in properly.

The diary does not give long written updates here, but the plant stayed in flower, the environment stayed stable, and no major issues were reported. At this stage, that is a good sign.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 17Girl Scout Cookies Week 18

Weeks 19-20 - Stronger Smell and Frost Coming In

Weeks 19 and 20 are where the plant started to show more personality. The smell moved from normal to strong, which is exactly what you want from a Cookies cultivar moving deeper into bloom.

This is where Girl Scout Cookies starts to earn the name. The aroma gets heavier, the flowers tighten, and the frost starts showing harder across the buds.

By now, all the earlier canopy work was starting to matter. This is the part where the patience starts paying rent.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 19Girl Scout Cookies Week 20

Weeks 21-22 - Final Flower Push

Weeks 21 and 22 brought the plant into the final stretch. The smell stayed strong, and by week 22 the plant was sitting at day 66 of flower.

Wilstang noted that the nugs were getting “real fat and frosty.” That is the line you want near the end of a Girl Scout Cookies grow.

The plant looked close, smelled close, and clearly had weight on it. Wilstang held on instead of chopping too early. Smart move.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 21Girl Scout Cookies Week 22

Week 23 - Harvest

Harvest came in week 23, on day 67 of flower. Girl Scout Cookies finished with 2.6 oz dry from one plant after 156 days total from germination to harvest.

The grower rated the strain 9/10 and marked the difficulty as easy.

The final flower was described as a frosty winter wonderland, with sweet grape aroma, smooth smoke, slow burn, and strong potency. Taste came through as berries, sweet, and diesel, while effects landed relaxed, happy, and sleepy.

Girl Scout Cookies Week 23Girl Scout Cookies Week 23

Detailed Observations & Grower’s Reflections

This grow was not about speed. It was about structure.

Wilstang gave Girl Scout Cookies a long veg, topped her multiple times, defoliated through late veg and early flower, and transplanted into a large final pot before bloom.

That approach suited the strain well. Girl Scout Cookies can reward patience indoors, especially when the grower gives her enough shape, root space, and time to build proper flower.

The biggest strength of this diary was consistency. No drama. No overcorrection. No panic. Just a grower keeping the plant comfortable and letting the genetics work.

Challenges & Solutions

The main challenge was managing a long veg without letting the plant become messy.

Wilstang handled that with topping and defoliation across several weeks, shaping the canopy and clearing unnecessary growth before bloom.

The second challenge was giving the plant enough root space for the full run. That was solved in week 8 with the transplant into a 37.85 L final pot.

The final challenge was patience. By the last few weeks, the flowers were already fat, frosty, and smelling strong. Wilstang waited until day 67 of flower, which gave the plant time to finish properly.

Final Result and Strain Review

Girl Scout Cookies Feminized by WeedSeedsExpress came through as an easy indoor grow with strong final quality.

The plant handled training well, took repeated topping and defoliation without falling apart, and finished with 2.6 oz dry from one plant.

The final buds were frosty, sweet, smooth, and slow-burning. Aroma leaned sweet grape, while the flavour came through as berries, sweet, and diesel.

Effects were relaxed, happy, and sleepy, with a clear lifted edge before the heavier relaxation settled in.

This was not the biggest harvest ever pulled from an indoor plant, but that is not the only way to judge a grow. The quality was there. The frost was there. The smoke report was there.

And for a single Girl Scout Cookies plant run with patience and control, that makes this diary a strong win.

MetricResult
Dry Yield2.6 oz dry bud weight per plant
Total Grow Time156 days
Flowering Time Before Harvest67 days
Plant Count1 plant
Final Pot Size37.85 L
DifficultyEasy
Final Rating9/10
Positive EffectsRelaxed, happy, sleepy
TasteBerries, sweet, diesel
AromaSweet grapes
SmokeSmooth, slow burn

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