How long can you let your plants hang

bob111

New Member
I am a small commercial grower. I flower 72-96 plants (20k lights/450sqft canopy). I run this by myself with only occasional help. When I harvest, I chop and hang the entire plant in my drying room. The drying room is 30x15, has a 15k btu a/c and a 70 pint dehumidifer and fans blowing at the floor/walls/ceiling. The room is insulated, but it is not what I would call "air tight". I keep it between 64-70f and the RH fluctuates between 45-65% (stays mostly in the 50-55 range).

After harvest, I have to clean the flower room, prep it for the next crop, re-pot the plants from the veg room into 7 gallon bags with coco/perlite and move them to the flower room. Before I flip this crop I like to take my cuttings for my clones, although to be honest most often I take the cuttings in the first week to week and half of flower. By the time I have the next crop under way in the flower room the plants have been hanging for 2-3 weeks before I ever begin processing them. Then it takes me another month or so to process the plants and trim the bud. I take the plants down as I process them, so some of the plants might hang for 2 months.

So my question is, is this normal for other small growers? I did have some minor mold problems with some flower from the last harvest, but I'm pretty sure that I caused that in flower and not in the drying room. Today we had a power outage, and the power was off during a rain storm for an hour before I could get the generator up and running. My RH spiked to 85%, but once power was restored, it was back down below 65 in short order. I'm wondering if an hour with high humidity would cause a mold problem (I had probably 50 plants hanging in there).

I've considered contract trimming crews, but to be honest, I don't want people knowing where I am or what I am doing. I also suspect that most of these crews might not be particularly honest...but I haven't used them so I don't really know for sure. Anyone want to share how they deal with this? Thanks.
 
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I am a small commercial grower. I flower 72-96 plants (20k lights/450sqft canopy). I run this by myself with only occasional help. When I harvest, I chop and hang the entire plant in my drying room. The drying room is 30x15, has a 15k btu a/c and a 70 pint dehumidifer and fans blowing at the floor/walls/ceiling. The room is insulated, but it is not what I would call "air tight". I keep it between 64-70f and the RH fluctuates between 45-65% (stays mostly in the 50-55 range).

After harvest, I have to clean the flower room, prep it for the next crop, re-pot the plants from the veg room into 7 gallon bags with coco/perlite and move them to the flower room. Before I flip this crop I like to take my cuttings for my clones, although to be honest most often I take the cuttings in the first week to week and half of flower. By the time I have the next crop under way in the flower room the plants have been hanging for 2-3 weeks before I ever begin processing them. Then it takes me another month or so to process the plants and trim the bud. I take the plants down as I process them, so some of the plants might hang for 2 months.

So my question is, is this normal for other small growers? I did have some minor mold problems with some flower from the last harvest, but I'm pretty sure that I caused that in flower and not in the drying room. Today we had a power outage, and the power was off during a rain storm for an hour before I could get the generator up and running. My RH spiked to 85%, but once power was restored, it was back down below 65 in short order. I'm wondering if an hour with high humidity would cause a mold problem (I had probably 50 plants hanging in there).

I've considered contract trimming crews, but to be honest, I don't want people knowing where I am or what I am doing. I also suspect that most of these crews might not be particularly honest...but I haven't used them so I don't really know for sure. Anyone want to share how they deal with this? Thanks.
Rough trim your bud and store it in 5 gallon buckets or even bigger plastic totes with 2 way humidity packs.

These rough trimmers are awesome and when you can fine trim as you have the time to do so.

Your bud will be fully cured by the time you have it trimmed so i call it a win win.
 
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