Harvesting

Cuttings2Colas

Active Member
I'd love to do this method once I've had a couple harvests. As for now, I'll probably shrink it down a little... 10 days dry, 1 week cure. I'm definitely down for the purist method once I've established a good routine, so I'll keep this method on file when harvesting Round 3. ;)

C2C :leaf:
 

APJ

Member
Is it a good idea to purge the glass jar with say nitrogen gas? I assume its oxygen that causes problems with the curing process?
 

jkmovies

Active Member
3 to 4 weeks drying BEFORE manicure. Are you kiddin' me? I don't know about you, but my plants are normally dry enough to go into jars after 4 to 5 days of hanging. If I let 3 to 4 weeks go by, my buds would turn to dust.

My drying section is dark, 40-50% humidity, 70-75 degrees, airflow not directly on buds, and I hang the branch, not the entire plant. Slight lower humidity and higher temperature than stated, but still, 3 to 4 weeks is WAY OVERDRIED.
 

HookdOnChronics

Well-Known Member
yea, all sounded excellent except for the 3-4 week dry..... that is just absurd! NO bud, no matter how fucking fat and dense it is will take a month to dry out IMO.....
 

bins

Member
Is it ok to trim all the leaves before hanging to dry? I see the above says to leave the leaves on for a bit, but know people who, cut it down trim all the leaves, then hang to dry, then cure, is this bad to do? Thanks
 
I have a question. Had a neighbor who grew 'organic'. He had six 7 to 8 foot tall plants. I don't know how many harvests he did a year but he put out a lot of bud, and gave it away. Which is probably why he lost his lease.Thing is, he never pulled up his plants. He trimmed them, I guess, and I'm pretty sure he didn't cure, just dried his bud out. I never heard of curing until I started visiting this site.The question is, do you have to kill the plant for every grow, like tobacco or head lettuce? Or can you trim the lady whose a good producer and expect to get the same production? Is pulling the plant up every time the best way for proper curing? If anyone is knowledgeable about this, techniques, or the pro's and con's, I sure would like to hear about it.
Thanks in advance.
 

rocpilefsj

Misguided Angel
Is it ok to trim all the leaves before hanging to dry? I see the above says to leave the leaves on for a bit, but know people who, cut it down trim all the leaves, then hang to dry, then cure, is this bad to do? Thanks
I find it easier to trim all the leaves off before drying, it becomes much more labour intensive after the fact
 

dannyboy602

Well-Known Member
There is no corner cutting in a dry/cure. One week to dry at the most and a month to cure at the least. It's all about keeping the buds in the cure zone (60-65rh) for as long as you can.
 

bass4rent

Member
yea, all sounded excellent except for the 3-4 week dry..... that is just absurd! NO bud, no matter how fucking fat and dense it is will take a month to dry out IMO.....
I'm guessing you have never been to Jamaica? In the right conditions it can take a very very long time.
I use my old 4x8 tents with a dehumidifier inside that has a decent digital humidistat. I use a recycling timer to turn on an off a 4" fan and carbon filter that comes on just to keep the smell down a bit and bring in some fresh air it's mostly on for 1min off for 20-30 min. It can take me 2 weeks to dry the buds enough to put into the jars and commercial pickling jars that can fit a hp!. I strip the large fan leaf off it saves you so much hassle. what I found from doing it both ways several times is that the end product is virtually the same. I really think the humidity is the key and air movement to avoid mold, moving air around will keep the temp and humidity more even throughout the room and buds helping evenly dry them. On another note please if you have had high temp and humidity during flowering check the large colas in the center if you find brown/beige mold maybe white or what looks like sick stems in the center or dead leaf and stems remove be for hanging this can be the worst experience coming home to your plants molding away.
Ifr handling and removing moldy buds keep separated from un contaminated plants and wash your hands be for continuing onto fresh ones actually just always wash your hands be for handling your lady's
ok hopefully someone can take what I posted and find it usefull
 

jamezsr

Well-Known Member
this is my answer to you from an older guy
1- flushing
i flush all my plants 5 days before harvesting to take away the taste from the nute
2- harvesting fresh plant easier and the left over from the sugar leaves will disappear inside the bud so the bud will look very nice all clean
3- harvesting dry plant
you cut the plant right from the bottom and you hang it upside down
then when its all dry you trim the dry leaves to clean it up
this way the sugar leaves will shrink inside the bud and you gain little weight
myself i prefer harvesting fresh plants
 

n!n.budz

Member
Commercial growers take the colas from the plant and manicure them before drying. They usually dry them on a line, upside-down, which is fine.

However, usually airflow is forced, and temps too high, humidity too low. As soon as the buds are considered dry (usually a few days), it is sold. The reason for this behavior is the fact they are, as I said, commercial growers and in a constant hurry to exchange their buds for cash. Every minute counts and they don't want to 'waste' the space or the time needed for drying and curing. This results in harsh, grassy tasting weed that lacks the full-bodied flavor and smooth stone of properly dried and cured bud. To do it right:

At harvest-time all you have to do is cut the plant as low as possible and hang the whole thing upside down to dry on a line. The room you use to dry should be the about the same size you grew in (if not the same room). The humidity should remain a constant 50-60%. Too high and buds will mold, too low and they dry too fast and taste bad. Temperature should be around 65-68 degrees, wherever possible. Make sure the room is dark, as light degrades THC.

All kinds of processes, like the transport of sugars inside the plant still take place, even when you cut it down. These processes will slowly come to an end while the drying progresses, but are the main factor for the end-taste of your smoke. That is the first reason why you don't want to quick-dry your weed. The second reason is the way that a plant dries. Plants are made up of cells and, as we all know, cells contain mainly water. Exposed to air, the (dying) plant's outer cells will dry out first but the above-mentioned processes will still transfer water from the inner cells to the dryer outer cells, thus causing the plant to dry equally all over. By removing the stalk and cutting off the individual colas, you prevent this natural process by taking away the extra moisture that would be drawn from the stem to the leaves and bud. Got it? Good! Moving on...

Make sure you hang the plants so that they do not touch each other (invites mold). With constant temp and humidity, the plants should be ready for manicuring in 3-4 weeks. At this time trim colas from the main stalk, and trim large and medium fan leaves (save them for making hash), leaving most of the smaller leaves sticking out of the bud in tact. Hang them up again and for a day or two, until 'popcorn' dry. The stems should snap when you bend them, and the bud should be dry, but not brittle. Now for the curing...

Trim all remaining leaf (save for hashmaking) tight to the buds, and trim smaller buds from larger stems. Store them airtight; air at this point degrades THC. Note- ziplock bags are not airtight! You could use buckets with an airtight lid like used for food and sauces and such, but the best containers are those glass jars with the rubber seal and latch. Just put as much bud in it as possible using light pressure. The point is to fill it as much as possible, so not too much air remains in the container. The less air, the better. To be safe, check them the next day to make sure it's still dry (did not 'sweat'). Any excess moisture at this point will invite mold. If it did sweat and is moist (soft) again, lay the bud out on something other than newspaper and put in a dry place to get the last water out.

Repack and place the container in a cool, dark place, like a refrigerator. Note- fridges have high humidity so they must be absolutely airtight.
The longer it sits (up to around a month, maybe longer in the fridge) the better it gets, both in taste and potency. At around the month mark, you can move it to the freezer to almost stop the aging and curing process. Once you've got some buds stored in the freezer, you have a private stash that will last a long time. If you've got the patience to wait, the smoke will be sweet and smooth. The high will be mellow, and longer lasting. If you grew enough to last you a while, then after a few harvests you will be able to have properly cured buds at your disposal, with no downtime waiting for the next batch to cure!
plain and simple thank you MY MAN .. i was wondering how long the cure will be .. sweet ;)
 
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