Hello Nugz! If you venture around my profile and see my other posts around the site, you may become more familiar with my experience and types of approaches.
I have had much good experience with super lemon haze outdoor in the ground, and find it to be one of the few plants that I will go through the trouble to produce myself. It is an unbelieveable yeilder (1/2+ pound easy) and the quality causes it to dissappear much faster than most other strains of the same calibur. I had ordered 5 S.L.H seeds early 2010 and the batch turned out to be quite a winner. I would highly suggest that you look into ordering more of the plants/seeds you see being successful as soon as you can, because strains are known to change over time and alot of the early S.L.H are the real deal. Plus, if you will, I would recommend that you plant just one seed of the strains that you have two of, becasue the success rate and stability of most ordered seeds are highly proven and documented. With this approach, take cuttings and create clones early in the season to save the other seeds but have more than just one plant by the time mid summer rolls around. This is something that I stick by, and feel as if I can hang on to the seeds until next season, the financial situation becomes amazing. The clones of S.L.H do very well, and are very stable if given the proper attention early. Last year, with this strain I have let mother nature take its course and left the plant fighting for all it needed except water. I could have not been happier, and it proved to all who caught a lungful that it can provide for itself if provided with decent soil. I have grown in FoxFarm Ocean soil filled containers and have planted right into the ground in about one spaded shovels worth of 'tilled' or 'turned up' soil. The roots broke into un-tilled soil and the plant did its magic.
I think you will pat yourself on the back when it comes to choosing the S.L.H. It can stand 35+ mph winds and 1 & a half inch and hour rains, 95 degrees for weeks at a time, no added nutes, and turn out ready for harvest like a champ! As for the other strains, I cannot give you personal grow stats and notes, but the Acapulco Gold has been known to take root around a common stranger of mine's watch a few seasons back, and it happened to live up to the world renowed hype. I gurantee he used nutes to provide a much richer soil like those found in Hawai'i, but like me, he didn't do much else other than the very basic planting method. It stormed like hell on his plants too (including the gold) and they survived-
Study Study, each strain and what they like, and get a few good shovel fulls of soil around the determined plot and examine the composition of it. A little help goes along way if its to get the plants off to a good start.
Nice to have had the chance to lend my two cents! Peace!!