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Cookies hybrid — sweet cherry-lemon, balanced body.
Lemon Cherry Gelato isn't on the shelf at this store today — it's available at our sister store.
Live stock updates every few minutes. Call ahead if you want a budtender to set one aside.
Lemon Cherry Gelato — usually shortened to LCG on the floor — came out of the Backpack Boyz crew in the late 2010s and rode the dessert-hybrid wave straight into the top tier of modern shelf names. The lineage on file is Sunset Sherbet × Girl Scout Cookies × Lemonnade, though some breeder interviews credit a Cherry Pie phenotype in the mix instead of straight Cherry — a debated detail that explains why some LCG drops land more cherry-forward than others. Whatever the exact cross, the cherry note is unmistakable: most Cookies-family strains lean vanilla-pepper or gas; LCG is the one that smells like a bowl of warm dark cherries with a lemon zest on top. On a Washington shelf it tends to clock toward the upper end of THC ranges, and the indica-leaning body landing after the head-up open makes it the strain regulars rotate in when they want something loud on the nose without committing to a pure-evening pick. Loud on the nose is the operative phrase — this one walks across a room.
Live inventory
1 Lemon Cherry Gelato-related product available at Green Life Cannabis right now.
Genetics
Lemon Cherry Gelato's parents, descendants, and sister strains in the catalog.
Aromatic chemistry
Three things at once. The aroma is loud and specific — most strains smell vaguely sweet or vaguely gas; LCG smells like cherries and lemon zest in a way customers remember after one jar. The THC numbers are honest-high without being knockout-heavy. And the Backpack Boyz brand spent the late 2010s building social-media presence around it, so a chunk of LCG demand is name-recognition. The strain delivers on the hype enough that the recognition didn't backfire.
Both — and it gets confusing. Backpack Boyz bred it (Bay Area crew, distinct from the Berner Cookies operation), but the lineage runs through Cookies genetics on both sides — Sunset Sherbet is a Cookies cross, Girl Scout Cookies is the obvious one. The Cookies family resemblance shows up in the pepper-warm base; the Backpack Boyz fingerprint is the cherry-lemon top that no other Cookies-family strain hits the same way.
Dark cherries first — warm, almost cherry-pie filling, not the artificial cherry-cough-syrup register. Lemon zest sits right on top, sharp and clean. Underneath is a sweet vanilla-cream layer and a peppery damp-earth base. The cherry-lemon combo on the open is what regulars walk in asking for; the base layer is what tells you it's a Cookies-family strain underneath the dessert front.
Cleaner on the smoke than the nose suggests. On the inhale, cherry comes through first — softer than the jar promised, with the lemon falling back a touch. On the exhale, sweet cream and a peppery warmth land, and the lemon returns as a brightness on the back of the tongue. Burns oily and slow, which is normal for a high-THC modern hybrid; the ash runs darker than a clean landrace would.
Hybrid — and slightly indica-leaning by the time the body lands. The lineage is balanced (Sunset Sherbet × Girl Scout Cookies × Lemonnade), and the head-up open lasts the first 15-30 minutes before the body-loose comes through. Different phenotypes lean different ways — some batches read closer to sativa-side, others land heavier on the indica side. The dispensary you buy it from probably knows which pheno their current drop is.
Numbers come in at 22-28% THC, and most modern batches sit in the upper portion of that range — among the harder-clocking strains on a Washington shelf. Customers without much tolerance built up should treat a smaller pull as a full session and give the strain a full thirty minutes before going back for another. The body-side landing builds slowly but arrives harder than the initial head-up open suggests it will. Built-tolerance smokers find LCG dependably predictable.
Late afternoon through evening, ideally. The head-up open works socially — dinner, a low-pressure hangout, a creative session that doesn't need clear focus. The body landing 30 minutes in pulls it out of morning-strain territory. Customers who pick LCG for daytime usually regret it by the second half of their work shift.
Two reasons. Phenotype variation in the seedline is wide — some grows lean more lemon-forward, others lean cherry-pie, others come out closer to a straight Cookies cross. And LCG has been popular enough that almost every Washington grower runs their own version, which means terpene profiles vary batch-to-batch based on cure and grow style. If you find a drop you love, ask the budtender which grower; chances are you'll want to track them next time.
Verified May 15, 2026 against 2 sources.
21+. Cannabis affects people differently — your experience may vary. Not medical advice. Effects described are common customer reports, not promises. Green Life Cannabis, Wenatchee, WA.