Thread revival time!
Situation? I have a grow about finish.
Problem? I have some family due to turn up right at the end of / possibly still during flowering who aren't pro freedom.
I'm currently racing to get flowering done in time but I'll have to run it right up to the last days and won't have time to hang it up.
The possible solution is that I do have some giant foil lined zip lock food bags that can hold 5kg a piece. They'll only be here a couple of days but I'll have to bag it in the meantime. I've done quite a bit of chemistry so am familiar with the various drying agents. Boveda is rather expensive and more of a post drying humidity stabiliser rather than an actual drying agent. I do like their storage can idea though.
Weed is ~75% water when wet. So 1kg = 750g water. Silica gel (when fully baked dry) will absorb up to ~35% of it's own weight in water, so 350g of water per kilo of gel. If 1kg of wet weed contains about 750g of water, and it needs drying to about 10%, 650g of water needs removing. So that's... 650g in a kilo of weed / 350g absorbing power per kilo of gel = 1.85kg of gel needed per kilo of weed.
Gel is much cheaper if you buy bulk packs rather than sachets. Avoid the colour changing kind of it as it uses heavy metal (chromium?) compounds in at least some of it to achieve that effect, so you dont want the dust from that on things you're going to smoke or eat.
I think I'll just dry the gel, empty it into something like a clean pillow case, zip tie it shut and add it to the foil bag.
Something to keep in mind is this graph. The absorbing power of the different dessicants changes based on the RH. However I'd imagine if you were to fill a zip lock bag with freshly felled weed, a lack of humidity isn't going to be an issue.
Hopefully this works okay.
Edit: An alternative to this would be cement. Which happens to absorb pretty much precisely the same amount of water as silica gel. There are drawbacks to it. 1.) Because it's super finely powdered, the absorption rate is actually lower because it reduces the ease with which water vapour can move through it. 2.) It's not easily redried (it needs baking in a kiln to drive the water molecules back off). Advantages? It's 100% ready to go out the bag, no pre-drying guesswork necessary. It's fairly cheap and readily available. The moisture is also chemically bonded, so it's impossible for it to start releasing moisture back into the container if it's warmed up.