Help Save My Purple Widow From Imminent Dessication!
Cberdahl raised a really interesting question in a recent post (linked below) and I thought it might be worthwhile to dig a little deeper into the puzzle of controlled drying in a super dry environment. I am about two weeks away from a sweet harvest and I am facing this dilemma: The temps here are cool and very dry. Worse yet, the daily temps are trending up without an increase in humidity. My plant is completely healthy and thriving on those conditions. The sugar-coated buds are fattening up daily but an uncontrolled fast dry could wreck this otherwise successful harvest.
The problem is this, what is good for flowering is pretty challenging for drying & curing. The minute I chop, those branches will be faced with a humidity in the 25 - 35% RH range and temperatures in the 60's. Based on past experience, they'll dry to a clean bud-snap range in 24-36 hours unless I intervene somehow.
Most drying tutorials focus on problems with too much humidity rather than too little. I found a few suggestions of slowing down the drying process; wet trim, stacking the buds in a plastic bin & burping, humidifiers, wet towels under the buds etc. None of those seem efficacious once the branches are cut.
In any event, my intuition lead me to the very idea Cberdahl raised, basically, what if I just stop watering my plant and let everything dry "on the vine" so to speak? Drying my plant in the pot, uncut would naturally lengthen the drying time right into the range I'm shooting for, seven days to bud snap. Better yet, I could start the trim in stages as drying proceeded. Perfect.
Being a prudent grower I started looking around to see if anybody else had experience doing this but I came up empty handed. That's why I'm excited to read the replies to the @Cberdhal post! Turns out reputable GWE growers have first hand experience with this technique: SoOrbudgal has one drying "on the vine" right now, and quirk commonly uses this approach. I bet plenty of others have tried it as well.
Seek answers on GWE and ye shall find them! How cool is that?
How's about we flesh this subject out here with as much detail as we can muster. With a hat tip to Cberdahl, that's why I started this Thread with a little more instructive title.
Here are a few questions to get things started:
Ok, enough already from me! Thanks in advance to those with experience who are willing to take the time to share it with us.
-GOM
https://forum.growweedeasy.com/forum...rying-question
.
Cberdahl raised a really interesting question in a recent post (linked below) and I thought it might be worthwhile to dig a little deeper into the puzzle of controlled drying in a super dry environment. I am about two weeks away from a sweet harvest and I am facing this dilemma: The temps here are cool and very dry. Worse yet, the daily temps are trending up without an increase in humidity. My plant is completely healthy and thriving on those conditions. The sugar-coated buds are fattening up daily but an uncontrolled fast dry could wreck this otherwise successful harvest.
The problem is this, what is good for flowering is pretty challenging for drying & curing. The minute I chop, those branches will be faced with a humidity in the 25 - 35% RH range and temperatures in the 60's. Based on past experience, they'll dry to a clean bud-snap range in 24-36 hours unless I intervene somehow.
Most drying tutorials focus on problems with too much humidity rather than too little. I found a few suggestions of slowing down the drying process; wet trim, stacking the buds in a plastic bin & burping, humidifiers, wet towels under the buds etc. None of those seem efficacious once the branches are cut.
In any event, my intuition lead me to the very idea Cberdahl raised, basically, what if I just stop watering my plant and let everything dry "on the vine" so to speak? Drying my plant in the pot, uncut would naturally lengthen the drying time right into the range I'm shooting for, seven days to bud snap. Better yet, I could start the trim in stages as drying proceeded. Perfect.
Being a prudent grower I started looking around to see if anybody else had experience doing this but I came up empty handed. That's why I'm excited to read the replies to the @Cberdhal post! Turns out reputable GWE growers have first hand experience with this technique: SoOrbudgal has one drying "on the vine" right now, and quirk commonly uses this approach. I bet plenty of others have tried it as well.
Seek answers on GWE and ye shall find them! How cool is that?
How's about we flesh this subject out here with as much detail as we can muster. With a hat tip to Cberdahl, that's why I started this Thread with a little more instructive title.
Here are a few questions to get things started:
- How long do you think it would take for a plant drying in a nine gallon pot to dry out to the point where the small buds snap off cleanly.
- How far in advance of a normal (trichome-based) harvest day would you cut off watering?
- Do the buds dry sequentially from the top down, or is the entire plant "bud-snap" dry and ready to be jarred all at once.
- If there are other useful techniques for drying in really low RH, please share them here.
Ok, enough already from me! Thanks in advance to those with experience who are willing to take the time to share it with us.
-GOM
https://forum.growweedeasy.com/forum...rying-question
.
Comment