light cycle sounds good...
here is what happens during the drying process..
first the chlorophyll starts to turn into sugars... the longer the plant can dry the more converted they become and the smoother the smoke...
once the bud is dried out the cannabinoids and teripins can start to develope.. the cannabinoids affect the high.. the teripins affect taste and smell.. the teripins need to age like wine to develope... so it takes a while to get the smell and taste...
now when you dry the outside of the buds will dry out first.. but there is still moisture in the bud and stem... so when you seal them up the moisture wicks outwards... then they feel moist again... so it becomes a game of lid on and lid off...
when i dry i do about 4 days on a rack... ones the outsides feel dry (similar to what you said) i throw them into paper bags or gallon jars.. this isnt to start curing.. its still part of the drying process... i allow the moisture to even out in the buds (usually a couple hours) then i open the storage up... i'll leave it open for 4 or 5 hours.. to allow air to exchange, moisture to move away from the buds, and let them dry out some.. then its lid on for a couple hours again.. and so on.. each time i make sure to turn the jar or move the buds around some to keep them from sticking and molding...
everyday they will feel dryer and dryer... so the lid will stay on longer and longer.. usually by the 7th or 8th day total (so 3 or 4 on rack, 3 or 4 jars) they are ready to actually cure.. then its just leave them in the jars sealed up well.. let them breath a couple times a day.. but it takes a week or so of curing before you really start tasting and smelling things... really 2 or 3 is better... but after a week they are smokeable and when you break them open you'll get the good smell...
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Thanks for again holdin my hand thru this goose.
Wanted to see if you could perhaps elude on teripins you spoke of. SOunds like those are the things i be searchin after for years, the flava essentially.
Here's the deal, my main nugs (they may be the only ones that have the slightest bag appeal).
Anyway, i chopped those last monday night. so it's been a full week.had on dryer for 3 days, then in jars for 1 day, then back on dryer (after ur mesg. above) until today. This afternoon they were super moist again (after feeling like they were WAY too dry yesterday, amazing how deceiving that shiz can be). So tonight I opened them up & poured most of the fatties into a reg. paper grocery bag, which I'll prb. do for a few hours, as you suggested.
Here's the thing, man it just really smells like extrememley pungent plant matter, are those teripins still get sorted out??? Or is this the nature of ruderalis that the technology is still young, and they are what they are.
If so, all good, I just wanna know how, to what degree & when ur girls start gettin stanky.
This is all speculation, but I really assumed for the place to be super stank w/ headie smellin fruits. However, @ nest it smells like hay or straight plant material when I get up close to them.
FYI, the photo girls looked to enjoy the 36 hours of dark, quite a bit of new, healthy lookin leaves. Just gettin used to my systems bein fully automated (dude i was handwatering photo seedlings x3 times a day for the past 6 weeks. The pump I got, wasn't strong enough to pump the nutes up the full 8' I needed, just underestimated there.
YOu are right on evthin my man, but especially that old "ya learn more from 1 grow than from thousands of pages of readin). Worked well, cause the pump that came with the v-drip was some weak ass little 66gph pump, so I threw the one I bought for drip tray & it worked great & didn't miss a step.
Thanks for evthing bro, just hopin to try & salvage something tasty from these autos.
Be candid though, if ya think their teripins are not gonna sort out, just lemme know.
thanks homey