dryin question, please help

griff95

Member
hi, so i started drying my plant yesterday in my tent i wet trimmed and then hung in tent i have a fan above my herb and a fan below it neither pointed directly at the bud and both on lowest setting my rh ranges from 40% to just over 45% the temps on the night are 22c to 23c but in the daytime they go as high as 26c are these good drying conditions and if not what can i do to avoid a quick dry??
thanks in advance
p.s i dont have a humidifier
 

calvin.m16

Well-Known Member
A perfect number for me is 60 °F / 60% RH with passive airflow from carbon scrubber filters.

Generally speaking I'd say a good curing environment should be dark, cool, humid but not damp and you should have light passive airflow in the room/tent/closet w/e you choose.

A good general rule is 60-70 °F 50-65% RH.

If you want slow curing then definitely you want to shoot for 60% Humidity and 60 °F if possible..
 

twentyeight.threefive

Well-Known Member
hi, so i started drying my plant yesterday in my tent i wet trimmed and then hung in tent i have a fan above my herb and a fan below it neither pointed directly at the bud and both on lowest setting my rh ranges from 40% to just over 45% the temps on the night are 22c to 23c but in the daytime they go as high as 26c are these good drying conditions and if not what can i do to avoid a quick dry??
thanks in advance
p.s i dont have a humidifier
Best things to avoid a quick dry with those RH ranges would be to not wet trim and turn those fans off. Run your exhaust fan/filter on low if you want indirect air movement. Multiple fans running even on low are a sure fire way to quick dry your harvest.
 

MAGpie81

Well-Known Member
Man, I got super lazy with this last round I did, which were small plants I grew for seed; I hung them by branch segments on clothes hangers, in paper bags that were sealed at the top and simply put them in dark spaces on my heating vents which I only run at 65F(~18C).
The house smells great and it worked, but just going to make oil out of the plant matter after I collect the seeds.

Sorry, not actually helpful for the best quality. But then again, maybe I should cure it and try it
 

VincenzioVonHook

Well-Known Member
Tbh keep the exhaust fan running, but tape wet towels over the intakes and Monitor the humidity. Spray the towels as the dry to keep a steady humidity level.

As twenty8 stated, best bet is not to wet trim either, and always keep as much stem and branch on your plant intact. My first plant I wet trimmed and cut the branches of the plant.

The next time I hung the whole plant without wet trimming and it took nearly a week longer to dry in the same conditions.

It was 35% ambient last dry, but the moist towels kept the humidity around 55%.
 

griff95

Member
Tbh keep the exhaust fan running, but tape wet towels over the intakes and Monitor the humidity. Spray the towels as the dry to keep a steady humidity level.

As twenty8 stated, best bet is not to wet trim either, and always keep as much stem and branch on your plant intact. My first plant I wet trimmed and cut the branches of the plant.

The next time I hung the whole plant without wet trimming and it took nearly a week longer to dry in the same conditions.

It was 35% ambient last dry, but the moist towels kept the humidity around 55%.
thanks for the advice really helpfull
 

griff95

Member
Best things to avoid a quick dry with those RH ranges would be to not wet trim and turn those fans off. Run your exhaust fan/filter on low if you want indirect air movement. Multiple fans running even on low are a sure fire way to quick dry your harvest.
cheers for the advice a[reciate it pal
 
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