Well, I have a friend getting ready for his first harvest. Estimating around 200 lbs of bud. He's been thinking of a good way to cure and store his bud. Being old school he wanted to use paper bags after hang drying for a week. Basically cut them off the stems, trim off the big leaves and fill the paper bags part full with not fully manicured buds. Problem is, that's a lot of bud. Lots of bags. So I considered maybe using fiber drums. They're cardboard barrels from 3 gallon all the way up to 55 gallon. The thought here is after hang drying you could trim up buds and fill the barrels with a batch. Say 10lbs per 55 gallon drum. Lay the barrels of their sides on a rack to create more surface area for the buds to lay out evenly. They have locking lids to keep them sealed tight. With a remote hygrometer inside the barrels you could monitor temps and humidity. This would all be inside a conditioned room. The idea is to use the cardboard barrels as a moisture buffer to slow the drying process. Every day you could gently roll and/or open the barrels to keep moisture evenly working its way through the barrel. After reaching close to desired moisture content you could then wrap the barrel in a plastic bag, possibly vacuum sealing it to hold that moisture level to end the cure with. The cardboard would help the buds sweat and cure up real nice I think. He's a firm believer in the paper bag method and I thought it could possibly be applied to larger scales if done right. Any thoughts?