Fade Co. Education

A Guide
to Terpenes

Terpenes are the aromatic compounds behind every cannabis strain. They drive the smell, the taste, and most of the character you actually feel. Two strains can hit the same THC and feel completely different. The terps are why.

The Deep Cuts

The terpenes
nobody talks
about.

Six more terps worth knowing. You won't find these dominating most strain profiles, but when they show up they shape the experience as much as the headliners. Look for them on a COA. They're usually hiding in the bottom rows.

01

Terpinolene

AromaPiney · Floral · Slightly Apple
EffectSedating · Antioxidant
Also inNutmeg, Tea Tree, Apples, Cumin

Common in classic sativa-leaning strains like Jack Herer and Ghost Train Haze. Often associated with daytime cuts despite being mildly sedative, a paradox still being studied. Identifiable on a COA even in small amounts.

02

Ocimene

AromaSweet · Herbal · Woody
EffectUplifting · Anti-inflammatory
Also inBasil, Mint, Parsley, Orchids

A common defensive compound plants use against pests. In cannabis, ocimene-leading cuts tend to feel bright and slightly herbal, with a sativa-leaning push. Found in trace amounts almost everywhere but rarely the dominant terpene.

03

Bisabolol

AromaFloral · Chamomile · Sweet
EffectCalming · Skin-Soothing
Also inChamomile, Candeia Tree

The reason chamomile tea works. In cannabis it shows up most often in indica-leaning strains and contributes a soft, almost cosmetic-grade floral note. Long studied for anti-inflammatory and skin-care use.

04

Nerolidol

AromaFloral · Citrus · Apple-Wood
EffectSedating · Skin-Penetrating
Also inJasmine, Lemongrass, Tea Tree, Ginger

One of the most sedative terpenes when concentrated. Most often used in topicals and cosmetics because it helps other compounds absorb through the skin. The reason it shows up in transdermal cannabis patches.

05

Geraniol

AromaRose · Sweet · Floral
EffectNeuroprotective · Antioxidant
Also inGeraniums, Lemons, Tobacco, Roses

The terpene behind rose's scent. Trace amounts can completely change the bouquet of a cut. A little bit of geraniol turns a generic sweet nose into something genuinely floral. Less than 0.1% is enough to notice.

06

Eucalyptol

AromaEucalyptus · Mint · Cool
EffectCognitive Support · Decongestant
Also inEucalyptus, Bay Leaves, Tea Tree, Wormwood

Also called cineole. Brings that 'cool on the inhale' menthol-adjacent quality. Research has tied it to memory and attention support, which is why eucalyptus oil keeps showing up in studies on cognitive performance. Rare as a cannabis dominant; common as a supporting note.

These aren't typically dominant in the Fade Co. lineup, but you'll see them as supporting notes across the menu. Knowing them sharpens what you're reading on every COA.

The Six Big Ones

The terpenes
that actually
matter.

A few hundred terpenes show up in cannabis. Six of them do most of the lifting. Learn these and you can read a strain profile like a budtender.

Caryophyllene molecule
Terpene · 01

Caryophyllene

The body terp.
AromaPeppery, woody, clove-like
EffectCalming · Eases tension
Boiling Point266°F

The only known terpene that interacts with CB2 receptors directly. That's why it reads as body relief, not just flavor. High-caryophyllene strains run smooth and grounded instead of head-rushy.

Also found inBlack pepper · Cloves · Cinnamon · Rosemary
Limonene molecule
Terpene · 02

Limonene

The mood lifter.
AromaCitrus rind, lemon-bright, sweet
EffectUplifting · Mood-up · Anti-stress
Boiling Point349°F

Bright, fast-acting, the terp responsible for that 'I feel good about everything' lift. Citrus-forward strains run on limonene and tend to land easier on new smokers.

Also found inLemon zest · Orange peel · Juniper · Peppermint
Myrcene molecule
Terpene · 03

Myrcene

The couch unlocker.
AromaEarthy, musky, ripe-mango
EffectSedating · Body-heavy · Sleep-leaning
Boiling Point333°F

The most common terpene in cannabis. Strains with notable myrcene lean body-heavy and indica-leaning. The classic in-da-couch feel.

Also found inMango · Lemongrass · Hops · Thyme
Linalool molecule
Terpene · 04

Linalool

The unwind.
AromaFloral, lavender, slightly spicy
EffectCalming · Sleep-supporting · Soft
Boiling Point388°F

Same compound that sells lavender pillow sprays. Strains with linalool feel calming on contact. Soft on the inhale, soft on the exhale. The terp for unwinding without going under.

Also found inLavender · Mint · Cinnamon · Coriander
Humulene molecule
Terpene · 05

Humulene

The mellow.
AromaHoppy, earthy, slightly herbal
EffectMood-balancing · Anti-inflammatory
Boiling Point225°F

Cannabis and hops are cousins. Humulene is the family resemblance. Brings a quiet, even keel to the high. Rarely the dominant terp, often the one that ties everything together.

Also found inHops · Sage · Ginseng · Cloves
In Fade Co. flower
Pinene molecule
Terpene · 06

Pinene

The clear head.
AromaPine forest, alpine-fresh, crisp
EffectAlertness · Focus · Counter-grog
Boiling Point311°F

Strains with prominent pinene feel clearer and more focused. Daytime, creative work, casual social hours.

Also found inPine needles · Rosemary · Basil · Dill
By Flavor

Pick a flavor.
Find the strain.

Forget indica/sativa for a second. Most of the time you're shopping for a flavor profile. Gas, citrus, dessert. Here's how the Fade Co. lineup splits.

Diesel · Fuel · Funk

Gassy

Heavy diesel, OG fuel, funky kush. The terps: caryophyllene meets myrcene. The mood: end-of-night, heavy food, slow records.

🍋
Lemon · Lime · Grapefruit

Citrus

Bright, mood-up, citrus rind on the inhale. Limonene-led, pinene-edged. The day-starter category. Clean lift, no fog.

🍬
Sugar · Fruit · Sweet

Candy

Spun sugar, gummy bear, soda pop. The Runtz/Gelato/Zkittlez lineage. Easy to like, easy to repeat, hard to fault.

🌸
Lavender · Rose · Soap

Floral

Linalool-led, soft, calming on contact. The unwind category. Bath water, candle, robe. Smells like skincare, hits like a deep exhale.

🫐
Blueberry · Grape · Cherry

Berry

Dark fruit, jam-sweet, deep purple bag appeal. Myrcene-heavy. Sit-down sesh territory. Not a daytime hit.

🍰
Cream · Vanilla · Cake

Dessert

Wedding-Cake heritage. Vanilla, cookie dough, baked sugar. The category that finishes the meal. And the night.

By Feeling

Pick a feeling.
Find the strain.

Flavor first, feeling second. Once you know what you want it to do (keep you up, set you down, get you talking), the menu narrows fast.

🛋️
Indica-Lean · Calm · Body

Relaxed

Slow exhale, soft shoulders, somewhere between mellow and asleep. Myrcene-led. The strains you reach for when the day was a lot.

Sativa-Lean · Up · Bright

Energetic

Clean lift, no fog, daytime-friendly. Limonene plus pinene. The strains that don't slow you down. They get you moving.

🎨
Head-Up · Loose · Curious

Creative

Just enough lift to start a project, not so much you lose the thread. Pinene + limonene. The strain version of an unlocked door.

🗣️
Mood-Up · Talkative · Loose

Social

Warm head buzz, easy conversation, no edges. Limonene + a touch of caryophyllene. The strain to bring when other people are involved.

🎯
Clear-Head · Sharp · Productive

Focused

The pinene-forward profile. Counters the typical THC haze, holds attention longer. The strain for deep-work afternoons.

🌙
Night-End · Heavy · Sedating

Sleepy

The night-closer category. High myrcene + linalool. Saved for after dinner, after dishes, after everything.

The Entourage Effect

Terps + THC
> THC alone.

Why number-chasing on potency is a losing game. The reason a 28% strain with a rich terp profile can outclass a 34% strain with a flat one.

Cannabinoids (THC, CBD, CBG) dock directly to your endocannabinoid receptors. Most terpenes don't. They modulate. They shift how the cannabinoids feel, how long they last, and which receptors get prioritized.

One terpene breaks the rule. Caryophyllene actually binds to the CB2 receptor, the same receptor THC and CBD interact with. That's not folklore. That's published, peer-reviewed pharmacology. It's why high-caryophyllene strains hit body-first.

A 2010 clinical study found that CBD and THC combined outperformed THC alone on pain. Direct evidence that the whole plant beats any one isolated piece. That's the entourage effect in a single experiment.

This is why our grower selects pheno cuts on terpene expression first and THC % second. The terps are the experience. The number on the jar is the trailer.

150+
Terpenes in Cannabis
Over 150 distinct terpenes have been identified in the cannabis plant. More than almost any other species on earth. Six of them do most of the work you'll actually notice on a hit.
Terpene Primer

Six terps
at a glance.

Skip the deep dive. Everything you actually need to remember: aroma, effect, where it shows up in food, what temp to vape it at. The whole guide compressed into one table.

Terpene Primer

Fade Co. · Pocket Reference
TerpeneAromaEffectBoilAlso In
CaryophyllenePepperCalm266°FBlack pepper
LimoneneCitrusMood-up349°FLemon zest
MyrceneMangoSedate333°FMango
LinaloolLavenderUnwind388°FLavender
HumuleneHopsMellow225°FHops
PinenePineFocus311°FPine needles
Boiling points sourced from peer-reviewed terpene literature · For vape-temp reference only
Common Questions

Terpene
FAQ.

The stuff budtenders get asked about terps most. If we missed yours, slide into the DMs.

Do terpenes get you high?
Mostly no, with one exception. Most terpenes don't bind to CB1 (the receptor THC docks to), so they won't get you high on their own. But caryophyllene binds directly to CB2 receptors. That's published, peer-reviewed pharmacology. The rest of the terpenes shape the high without producing it themselves: heavier, brighter, sleepier, sharper.
Is high-THC always better?
No. A 34% strain with weak terps will feel duller and shorter-lived than a 28% strain with a richer terpene profile. That's the entourage effect. Once you've smoked enough variety, you start chasing terps first and potency second.
What's the most common cannabis terpene?
Myrcene by a wide margin. It's the terpene most associated with the classic in-da-couch indica feel. Earthy, heavy, mango-leaning. Found in mangoes, lemongrass, and hops as well.
Are terpenes the same as cannabinoids?
No. Cannabinoids (THC, CBD, CBG, CBN) are the compounds that dock to your endocannabinoid receptors. Terpenes are aromatic oils that travel with them. They shape flavor and modulate effect, but only one of them (caryophyllene) actually binds to a cannabinoid receptor.
How do I find strains by terpene?
Read the strain page. Every Fade Co. strain lists its dominant terpene loadout up front. We also break the lineup down by vibe (gassy, citrus, candy, floral, berry, dessert), so you can shop by feeling, not just by name.
Do edibles have terpenes?
Most don't. Distillate-based edibles strip the terpenes out during processing. Live-resin and full-spectrum edibles keep them. They feel noticeably different. If you've ever wondered why one gummy hits like a freight train and another like a soft hug, terpenes are usually part of the reason.
Is the science on terpenes settled?
Honestly? No. Most of what we know about specific terpene effects comes from cell studies, animal studies, and observational work on aroma-therapy compounds. Human clinical trials on cannabis terpenes specifically are still limited. Caryophyllene's CB2 binding is well-established. The rest of the per-terpene effect mapping is well-supported but not yet settled science. We share what's in the literature; we don't oversell it.
Sources & further reading

Human clinical research on isolated cannabis terpenes is still limited. Mechanism claims here (caryophyllene → CB2, etc.) are peer-reviewed; broader effect descriptions reflect cell, animal, and observational research.

Your Move

NOW YOU
KNOW THE TERPS.

Use what you just learned. Browse the menu by vibe, find the strain that matches the mood, and let the terpene loadout do its thing.

21+ only · Educational use only
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