Bluefin Tuna AAAA- Strain Review: BC Tuna-Family Indica with a Blueberry Finish
By
If you have spent any real time inside the BC craft cannabis scene, you have run into the tuna family. It is one of those local lineages that almost did not need a marketing budget — the strains travelled by word of mouth through Vancouver Island grows, Lower Mainland legacy bag-runs, and eventually online dispensaries, all because of one trait. The smell. That unmistakable skunky, briny, low-tide funk that makes you double-check your jar lid and then sniff it again, because something this loud has to be good. Bluefin Tuna AAAA- is the newest fish on the dock at Elephant Garden, and after spending a couple of weeks with it on rotation, I wanted to put down a proper review.
Want to try Bluefin Tuna AAAA-? Shop our Bluefin Tuna AAAA- in stock right now — tuna-family funk with a sweet blueberry finish, indica-leaning body melt, $10 a gram. Canada-wide delivery, discreet packaging.
What Are the Tuna-Family Strains, and Why Are They a BC Institution?
Before we get into Bluefin specifically, it is worth explaining what people mean when they say “tuna strain.” The whole family traces back to Tuna Kush, a Hindu Kush phenotype that surfaced on Vancouver Island sometime in the early-to-mid 2000s. The story most growers tell is that the original cut produced a funk so aggressive — equal parts skunk, fermented fish, and pungent kush — that it earned its name from the literal first thought anyone had when they cracked the jar. Whether or not that origin is verbatim true, the name stuck because every credible offspring inherited the smell.
The tuna funk is not a gimmick. It is a specific terpene fingerprint — heavy on myrcene, with a sharp current of caryophyllene and a sulphur-leaning trace compound that pushes the aroma into “this cannot possibly be plant matter” territory. That same fingerprint reads as deeply indica in effect: relaxation, body weight, a slow mood settle. It became the backbone of an entire BC sub-genre. We now have Black Tuna, Rock Tuna, Tuna Rockstar, Death Tuna, Ahi Tuna Kush, and on and on. Each variant takes the base funk and pulls it in a different direction — sweeter, gassier, heavier, more cerebral.
Why is this lineage so specifically a BC institution? Two reasons. First, the Pacific Northwest growing climate — cool nights, long shoulder seasons, plenty of indoor and greenhouse capacity — rewards exactly the kind of resin-heavy, terpene-loud expression that Tuna Kush brings out. Second, BC’s craft scene has spent two decades selecting for funk over polish. While the legal market in other provinces was busy chasing high-THC numbers and bright candy terps, BC growers kept finishing tuna phenos because their customers kept asking for them. The result is a regional lineage you really cannot find in this same form anywhere else in Canada.
Bluefin Tuna is one of the sweeter, more approachable members of the family. The reported genetic is Tuna Kush x Blueberry — that classic DJ Short Blueberry cross that has been used to soften so many heavy indica lines over the years. It is not a brand-new combination. Variants of “Blue Tuna” or “Blueberry Tuna” have surfaced in BC for at least a decade, though the cuts and finishes vary widely. What you get from any particular harvest depends almost entirely on who finished it and how.
I want to be honest about what is not well-documented here. Unlike commercial cultivars with clean breeder records, the BC tuna family is largely undocumented in any formal sense. There is no peer-reviewed paper on Bluefin Tuna’s exact lineage, no master-grower interview I can point you to. What we have is the genetic listed on the jar, the lived experience of the people growing and consuming it, and the consistent flavour profile across batches. Treat the lineage as well-reported but unverifiable — the way most legacy BC genetics are.
The “AAAA-” grade on this batch is worth a quick explanation too. The Canadian grading scale is informal and dispensary-specific, not regulated. Roughly: AAAA+ is top-shelf show-bud, AAAA is premium, AAAA- is “premium with a small asterisk.” Maybe the trim is a touch coarser, or one density metric is off, or the cure ran a day shy. It is not a quality knock — it is a transparency knock. The reason you should care is that AAAA- usually means you are getting AAAA-tier funk, smoke, and effect at a noticeably better price point. That is the bargain Bluefin is offering here.
Appearance, Aroma, and Flavour Profile
I will start with what surprised me about this batch. I was expecting a darker, more purple-leaning expression based on past Blueberry crosses I have run. What I got instead was a bright, almost pistachio-green bud with deep amber pistils, generous trichome coverage, and a moderately dense structure. The nugs broke down without sticking to the grinder — properly cured, no chlorophyll bite, no chalky residue. Visually it presents like a legit AAAA. The “minus” must be earning itself somewhere else.
The smell test
Here is where the fish jokes write themselves and I will resist most of them. When you crack the jar, the first thing that hits is the classic tuna skunk — that briny, pungent, sulphurous note that announces itself two rooms away. Give it three or four seconds, though, and the second wave arrives: ripe blueberry, almost jammy, with a fruity sweetness that wraps around the funk instead of fighting it. There is also a low earthy pine note underneath, the kind that grounds the whole profile. The product page calls it “sweet gas” and that is exactly right — not a candy-sweet, but a sweet that tempers the gas without burying it.
If you have run other tuna strains, this is one of the more polite ones aromatically. Black Tuna and the original Tuna Kush hit you like a wall. Bluefin lets you have a conversation with the funk before it overwhelms the room. That makes it a better choice for shared spaces — not a stealth strain by any stretch, but not a “open every window in the house” strain either.
Smoke flavour follows the aroma closely — which is not always the case with funky strains. Often the loud-smelling buds combust into something a lot more generic. Bluefin actually delivers. On the inhale you get that sweet berry top note, almost like a wild Saskatoon, with a peppery caryophyllene kick on the back of the palate. On the exhale the skunky funk shows up properly — sulphurous, slightly savoury, with an earthy pine finish that lingers on the breath for maybe thirty seconds. It is a complete arc, not a one-note hit. Smoothness is good, vape pulls especially clean, joints burn even with a respectable white-ash finish.
Effects: Onset, Peak, Duration, and the Indica Body Pull
The product profile lists myrcene-dominant with body melt, calming heaviness, and mood lift. After multiple sessions across different times of day, that lines up with what I experienced. Here is the more detailed breakdown of how it actually rolled out for me.
Onset (0–10 minutes)
Bluefin comes on relatively fast for an indica-dominant hybrid. Within five to seven minutes of a small joint, I noticed the first signal — a slight pressure behind the eyes, a small lift in mood, a shoulder-drop. Nothing aggressive. If you have run other myrcene-heavy strains like Death Bubba or a heavy Kush phenotype, the onset feel is in the same neighbourhood but a touch lighter at the top end. The Blueberry contribution shows up here as a gentler ramp instead of a sledgehammer.
Peak (30–90 minutes)
The peak is where Bluefin earns its tuna lineage. About thirty minutes in, the body weight settles. Limbs feel heavier in that pleasant, sinking-into-the-couch way. There is a low background hum of euphoria — nothing giddy or laughing, more like a steady warm feeling sitting underneath everything you do. Mentally I was not floored. I could still hold a conversation, still follow a TV show plot, still text back coherently. It is not a strain that erases you. It just makes the world feel quieter.
The mind-body split here leans heavily body. I would call it roughly 25 per cent head, 75 per cent body. Compared to Coastal Pink, which is almost pure body sedation with very little head presence, Bluefin keeps a small mental window open. Compared to a hybrid like Black Biscotti, the body is significantly heavier and the head is significantly quieter. It sits in a useful middle slot.
Duration (2–4 hours)
Total effect duration ran roughly two and a half to three and a half hours per session, with the heaviest body sensation in the first ninety minutes and a long, soft tail of sleepiness after that. By hour three I was either reaching for water, snacks, or a pillow. None of my sessions ended with a sharp drop-off — it faded gracefully, which is consistent with the myrcene-dominant profile.
Time-of-day fit
This is firmly an evening strain. I tried a small daytime session as a controlled experiment and ended up rescheduling everything I had planned for that afternoon. Save it for after dinner. It is excellent for the last hour or two before bed, particularly if you are someone whose mind races at night — it does not shut your brain off so much as turn the volume down. Pair it with a low-stakes show, a book you have already read once, or a long shower. If you have struggled to wind down after a heavy week, this is a strain to keep on hand.
The Reviewer’s Take: Who Is Bluefin Tuna AAAA- For?
I want to be clear about who I think will genuinely enjoy this and who should probably look elsewhere. Cannabis is too personal a product to recommend universally.
You will probably love Bluefin Tuna AAAA- if: you are already a fan of myrcene-dominant indicas. You appreciate funky, terpene-loud strains but want one with a sweeter wrapper. You are looking for an evening or pre-bed strain that does the job without obliterating you. You like the idea of paying a slightly lower price for a near-AAAA experience and you understand what the “minus” represents. You are curious about the BC tuna lineage and want a friendly entry point rather than jumping straight into something heavier like Black Tuna.
You should probably skip it if: you are sensitive to skunky or sulphurous aromas — this is not a discreet strain. You need a daytime functional strain. You prefer cerebral, head-forward hybrids that keep you creative and engaged. You are highly THC-tolerant and tend to find indica hybrids too gentle — in which case the smalls or AAA+ alternatives in our indica selection might be the wrong direction entirely; you may want to look at top-shelf solo cuts instead.
For me personally? It earned a spot in the evening jar rotation. I would not call it a desert-island strain, but I would call it one of the more honest “value-meets-quality” picks in the current Elephant Garden lineup. At ten dollars a gram it is genuinely fair for what you are getting.
How Bluefin Tuna Compares to Other Indicas We Carry
If you are deciding between Bluefin and a couple of its shelf-mates, here is the short version. Bluefin Tuna AAAA- is the funkiest of the current AAAA-tier indicas — that tuna lineage is unmistakable. Death Star AAAA is gassier, more diesel-forward, and a touch more sedative. Supreme Death Bubba AAAA leans even heavier on the body and pushes you closer to immediate sleep. Coastal Pink AAAA is the sweeter, smoother, less aggressive option for people who do not actually want the tuna funk.
If terpene-driven shopping is new to you and you are trying to figure out what to gravitate toward, our piece on picking strains by terpene profile is a useful starting point. It explains why myrcene-dominant strains like this one tend to land where they do, regardless of what the seed-bank classification says.
Other Tuna-Family Reads
If Bluefin gets you curious about the broader lineage, we have published deeper looks at three other tuna-family strains. Each one approaches the funk from a slightly different angle:
Reading any of those three alongside this review gives you a useful map of the family. The common thread is funk and body weight. The differences are in the noses and the head-to-body ratio.
AAAA- sits one tier below top-shelf AAAA on the informal Canadian grading scale. It usually means premium-quality flower with a small caveat — maybe a slightly coarser trim, a marginally different density, or one cure-day shy — rather than a meaningful quality drop. The trade-off is a better price for an experience that is functionally close to AAAA.
What strain is Bluefin Tuna crossed with?
Bluefin Tuna is reported to be Tuna Kush crossed with classic Blueberry. The Tuna Kush parent brings the signature BC skunky-funk aroma and indica body weight; the Blueberry parent softens the profile with a sweet, jammy fruit note. It is an indica-dominant hybrid with a myrcene-leaning terpene profile.
Is Bluefin Tuna good for sleep?
Some users report that Bluefin Tuna helps with winding down before bed because of its myrcene-dominant terpene profile and heavy body-leaning effect. Cannabis affects everyone differently, so individual results vary — but the strain’s evening-leaning profile is consistent with what many indica users gravitate toward for night-time use.
How is Bluefin Tuna different from Black Tuna or Tuna Rockstar?
Bluefin Tuna is generally the sweeter, more approachable member of the tuna family thanks to the Blueberry parent. Black Tuna leans heavier and darker; Tuna Rockstar adds gas and cerebral floatation from the Rockstar cross. All three share the foundational tuna funk, but Bluefin is the friendliest aromatic entry point.
Why does Bluefin Tuna smell like fish?
The “fish funk” reputation comes from the Tuna Kush parent — a Hindu Kush phenotype that produces an unusually sulphurous, briny terpene fingerprint alongside the standard skunky note. It is not literal fish; it is a combination of myrcene, caryophyllene, and trace sulphur-leaning compounds that the brain reads as fish-adjacent. In Bluefin, the Blueberry side tempers that funk with a sweeter wrapper.
Ready to Try It?
If you have read this far, you already know whether Bluefin Tuna AAAA- is your kind of strain. If the words “skunky”, “berry”, “myrcene”, and “evening body melt” all sounded appealing in the same sentence, this one is built for you. At ten dollars a gram for a near-AAAA experience from a legacy BC lineage, it is one of the easier picks to justify on the current menu.
You can shop Bluefin Tuna AAAA- directly, or browse the rest of our indica collection if you want to compare it against the other heavy-bodied options we are running this month. The full cannabis catalogue is also worth a scroll if you are still deciding what kind of night you are planning.
We ship across Canada with discreet, fast packaging — the full delivery breakdown is on our cannabis delivery hub. Add to cart, check out at the cart, and we will get it to your door.
Bluefin Tuna AAAA- Strain Review: BC Tuna-Family Indica with a Blueberry Finish
If you have spent any real time inside the BC craft cannabis scene, you have run into the tuna family. It is one of those local lineages that almost did not need a marketing budget — the strains travelled by word of mouth through Vancouver Island grows, Lower Mainland legacy bag-runs, and eventually online dispensaries, all because of one trait. The smell. That unmistakable skunky, briny, low-tide funk that makes you double-check your jar lid and then sniff it again, because something this loud has to be good. Bluefin Tuna AAAA- is the newest fish on the dock at Elephant Garden, and after spending a couple of weeks with it on rotation, I wanted to put down a proper review.
Want to try Bluefin Tuna AAAA-? Shop our Bluefin Tuna AAAA- in stock right now — tuna-family funk with a sweet blueberry finish, indica-leaning body melt, $10 a gram. Canada-wide delivery, discreet packaging.
What Are the Tuna-Family Strains, and Why Are They a BC Institution?
Before we get into Bluefin specifically, it is worth explaining what people mean when they say “tuna strain.” The whole family traces back to Tuna Kush, a Hindu Kush phenotype that surfaced on Vancouver Island sometime in the early-to-mid 2000s. The story most growers tell is that the original cut produced a funk so aggressive — equal parts skunk, fermented fish, and pungent kush — that it earned its name from the literal first thought anyone had when they cracked the jar. Whether or not that origin is verbatim true, the name stuck because every credible offspring inherited the smell.
The tuna funk is not a gimmick. It is a specific terpene fingerprint — heavy on myrcene, with a sharp current of caryophyllene and a sulphur-leaning trace compound that pushes the aroma into “this cannot possibly be plant matter” territory. That same fingerprint reads as deeply indica in effect: relaxation, body weight, a slow mood settle. It became the backbone of an entire BC sub-genre. We now have Black Tuna, Rock Tuna, Tuna Rockstar, Death Tuna, Ahi Tuna Kush, and on and on. Each variant takes the base funk and pulls it in a different direction — sweeter, gassier, heavier, more cerebral.
Why is this lineage so specifically a BC institution? Two reasons. First, the Pacific Northwest growing climate — cool nights, long shoulder seasons, plenty of indoor and greenhouse capacity — rewards exactly the kind of resin-heavy, terpene-loud expression that Tuna Kush brings out. Second, BC’s craft scene has spent two decades selecting for funk over polish. While the legal market in other provinces was busy chasing high-THC numbers and bright candy terps, BC growers kept finishing tuna phenos because their customers kept asking for them. The result is a regional lineage you really cannot find in this same form anywhere else in Canada.
Where Does Bluefin Tuna Sit in the Tuna Lineage?
Bluefin Tuna is one of the sweeter, more approachable members of the family. The reported genetic is Tuna Kush x Blueberry — that classic DJ Short Blueberry cross that has been used to soften so many heavy indica lines over the years. It is not a brand-new combination. Variants of “Blue Tuna” or “Blueberry Tuna” have surfaced in BC for at least a decade, though the cuts and finishes vary widely. What you get from any particular harvest depends almost entirely on who finished it and how.
I want to be honest about what is not well-documented here. Unlike commercial cultivars with clean breeder records, the BC tuna family is largely undocumented in any formal sense. There is no peer-reviewed paper on Bluefin Tuna’s exact lineage, no master-grower interview I can point you to. What we have is the genetic listed on the jar, the lived experience of the people growing and consuming it, and the consistent flavour profile across batches. Treat the lineage as well-reported but unverifiable — the way most legacy BC genetics are.
The “AAAA-” grade on this batch is worth a quick explanation too. The Canadian grading scale is informal and dispensary-specific, not regulated. Roughly: AAAA+ is top-shelf show-bud, AAAA is premium, AAAA- is “premium with a small asterisk.” Maybe the trim is a touch coarser, or one density metric is off, or the cure ran a day shy. It is not a quality knock — it is a transparency knock. The reason you should care is that AAAA- usually means you are getting AAAA-tier funk, smoke, and effect at a noticeably better price point. That is the bargain Bluefin is offering here.
Appearance, Aroma, and Flavour Profile
I will start with what surprised me about this batch. I was expecting a darker, more purple-leaning expression based on past Blueberry crosses I have run. What I got instead was a bright, almost pistachio-green bud with deep amber pistils, generous trichome coverage, and a moderately dense structure. The nugs broke down without sticking to the grinder — properly cured, no chlorophyll bite, no chalky residue. Visually it presents like a legit AAAA. The “minus” must be earning itself somewhere else.
The smell test
Here is where the fish jokes write themselves and I will resist most of them. When you crack the jar, the first thing that hits is the classic tuna skunk — that briny, pungent, sulphurous note that announces itself two rooms away. Give it three or four seconds, though, and the second wave arrives: ripe blueberry, almost jammy, with a fruity sweetness that wraps around the funk instead of fighting it. There is also a low earthy pine note underneath, the kind that grounds the whole profile. The product page calls it “sweet gas” and that is exactly right — not a candy-sweet, but a sweet that tempers the gas without burying it.
If you have run other tuna strains, this is one of the more polite ones aromatically. Black Tuna and the original Tuna Kush hit you like a wall. Bluefin lets you have a conversation with the funk before it overwhelms the room. That makes it a better choice for shared spaces — not a stealth strain by any stretch, but not a “open every window in the house” strain either.
The taste on the inhale
Smoke flavour follows the aroma closely — which is not always the case with funky strains. Often the loud-smelling buds combust into something a lot more generic. Bluefin actually delivers. On the inhale you get that sweet berry top note, almost like a wild Saskatoon, with a peppery caryophyllene kick on the back of the palate. On the exhale the skunky funk shows up properly — sulphurous, slightly savoury, with an earthy pine finish that lingers on the breath for maybe thirty seconds. It is a complete arc, not a one-note hit. Smoothness is good, vape pulls especially clean, joints burn even with a respectable white-ash finish.
Effects: Onset, Peak, Duration, and the Indica Body Pull
The product profile lists myrcene-dominant with body melt, calming heaviness, and mood lift. After multiple sessions across different times of day, that lines up with what I experienced. Here is the more detailed breakdown of how it actually rolled out for me.
Onset (0–10 minutes)
Bluefin comes on relatively fast for an indica-dominant hybrid. Within five to seven minutes of a small joint, I noticed the first signal — a slight pressure behind the eyes, a small lift in mood, a shoulder-drop. Nothing aggressive. If you have run other myrcene-heavy strains like Death Bubba or a heavy Kush phenotype, the onset feel is in the same neighbourhood but a touch lighter at the top end. The Blueberry contribution shows up here as a gentler ramp instead of a sledgehammer.
Peak (30–90 minutes)
The peak is where Bluefin earns its tuna lineage. About thirty minutes in, the body weight settles. Limbs feel heavier in that pleasant, sinking-into-the-couch way. There is a low background hum of euphoria — nothing giddy or laughing, more like a steady warm feeling sitting underneath everything you do. Mentally I was not floored. I could still hold a conversation, still follow a TV show plot, still text back coherently. It is not a strain that erases you. It just makes the world feel quieter.
The mind-body split here leans heavily body. I would call it roughly 25 per cent head, 75 per cent body. Compared to Coastal Pink, which is almost pure body sedation with very little head presence, Bluefin keeps a small mental window open. Compared to a hybrid like Black Biscotti, the body is significantly heavier and the head is significantly quieter. It sits in a useful middle slot.
Duration (2–4 hours)
Total effect duration ran roughly two and a half to three and a half hours per session, with the heaviest body sensation in the first ninety minutes and a long, soft tail of sleepiness after that. By hour three I was either reaching for water, snacks, or a pillow. None of my sessions ended with a sharp drop-off — it faded gracefully, which is consistent with the myrcene-dominant profile.
Time-of-day fit
This is firmly an evening strain. I tried a small daytime session as a controlled experiment and ended up rescheduling everything I had planned for that afternoon. Save it for after dinner. It is excellent for the last hour or two before bed, particularly if you are someone whose mind races at night — it does not shut your brain off so much as turn the volume down. Pair it with a low-stakes show, a book you have already read once, or a long shower. If you have struggled to wind down after a heavy week, this is a strain to keep on hand.
The Reviewer’s Take: Who Is Bluefin Tuna AAAA- For?
I want to be clear about who I think will genuinely enjoy this and who should probably look elsewhere. Cannabis is too personal a product to recommend universally.
You will probably love Bluefin Tuna AAAA- if: you are already a fan of myrcene-dominant indicas. You appreciate funky, terpene-loud strains but want one with a sweeter wrapper. You are looking for an evening or pre-bed strain that does the job without obliterating you. You like the idea of paying a slightly lower price for a near-AAAA experience and you understand what the “minus” represents. You are curious about the BC tuna lineage and want a friendly entry point rather than jumping straight into something heavier like Black Tuna.
You should probably skip it if: you are sensitive to skunky or sulphurous aromas — this is not a discreet strain. You need a daytime functional strain. You prefer cerebral, head-forward hybrids that keep you creative and engaged. You are highly THC-tolerant and tend to find indica hybrids too gentle — in which case the smalls or AAA+ alternatives in our indica selection might be the wrong direction entirely; you may want to look at top-shelf solo cuts instead.
For me personally? It earned a spot in the evening jar rotation. I would not call it a desert-island strain, but I would call it one of the more honest “value-meets-quality” picks in the current Elephant Garden lineup. At ten dollars a gram it is genuinely fair for what you are getting.
How Bluefin Tuna Compares to Other Indicas We Carry
If you are deciding between Bluefin and a couple of its shelf-mates, here is the short version. Bluefin Tuna AAAA- is the funkiest of the current AAAA-tier indicas — that tuna lineage is unmistakable. Death Star AAAA is gassier, more diesel-forward, and a touch more sedative. Supreme Death Bubba AAAA leans even heavier on the body and pushes you closer to immediate sleep. Coastal Pink AAAA is the sweeter, smoother, less aggressive option for people who do not actually want the tuna funk.
If terpene-driven shopping is new to you and you are trying to figure out what to gravitate toward, our piece on picking strains by terpene profile is a useful starting point. It explains why myrcene-dominant strains like this one tend to land where they do, regardless of what the seed-bank classification says.
Other Tuna-Family Reads
If Bluefin gets you curious about the broader lineage, we have published deeper looks at three other tuna-family strains. Each one approaches the funk from a slightly different angle:
Reading any of those three alongside this review gives you a useful map of the family. The common thread is funk and body weight. The differences are in the noses and the head-to-body ratio.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the “AAAA-” grade mean on Bluefin Tuna?
AAAA- sits one tier below top-shelf AAAA on the informal Canadian grading scale. It usually means premium-quality flower with a small caveat — maybe a slightly coarser trim, a marginally different density, or one cure-day shy — rather than a meaningful quality drop. The trade-off is a better price for an experience that is functionally close to AAAA.
What strain is Bluefin Tuna crossed with?
Bluefin Tuna is reported to be Tuna Kush crossed with classic Blueberry. The Tuna Kush parent brings the signature BC skunky-funk aroma and indica body weight; the Blueberry parent softens the profile with a sweet, jammy fruit note. It is an indica-dominant hybrid with a myrcene-leaning terpene profile.
Is Bluefin Tuna good for sleep?
Some users report that Bluefin Tuna helps with winding down before bed because of its myrcene-dominant terpene profile and heavy body-leaning effect. Cannabis affects everyone differently, so individual results vary — but the strain’s evening-leaning profile is consistent with what many indica users gravitate toward for night-time use.
How is Bluefin Tuna different from Black Tuna or Tuna Rockstar?
Bluefin Tuna is generally the sweeter, more approachable member of the tuna family thanks to the Blueberry parent. Black Tuna leans heavier and darker; Tuna Rockstar adds gas and cerebral floatation from the Rockstar cross. All three share the foundational tuna funk, but Bluefin is the friendliest aromatic entry point.
Why does Bluefin Tuna smell like fish?
The “fish funk” reputation comes from the Tuna Kush parent — a Hindu Kush phenotype that produces an unusually sulphurous, briny terpene fingerprint alongside the standard skunky note. It is not literal fish; it is a combination of myrcene, caryophyllene, and trace sulphur-leaning compounds that the brain reads as fish-adjacent. In Bluefin, the Blueberry side tempers that funk with a sweeter wrapper.
Ready to Try It?
If you have read this far, you already know whether Bluefin Tuna AAAA- is your kind of strain. If the words “skunky”, “berry”, “myrcene”, and “evening body melt” all sounded appealing in the same sentence, this one is built for you. At ten dollars a gram for a near-AAAA experience from a legacy BC lineage, it is one of the easier picks to justify on the current menu.
You can shop Bluefin Tuna AAAA- directly, or browse the rest of our indica collection if you want to compare it against the other heavy-bodied options we are running this month. The full cannabis catalogue is also worth a scroll if you are still deciding what kind of night you are planning.
We ship across Canada with discreet, fast packaging — the full delivery breakdown is on our cannabis delivery hub. Add to cart, check out at the cart, and we will get it to your door.