AK48 harvest ruined. Waited too long to start curing.. buds were too dry.

WillyPhister

Well-Known Member
I hang mine until they're dry to the touch, then I put my personal stash into mason jars to start the 'sweating' process. After 24 hours, the buds become moist again and I'll air dry them again for a few hours, then put them back into the jar. I repeat this until they are totally dry and this process takes a few weeks I guess. In all honesty, curing probably makes your smoke smoother, but it doesn't make it more potent in my experience. Once the bud is 100% dry, it's as potent as it will ever be. All I've ever noticed with curing is added smoothness.
curing certainly does bring out the potency of your buds. as a personal rule I dont start sampling my harvests until after one month of curing and its pretty enjoyable, but after 2 of months of cure it usually turns into 1 hit quit for me.
 

homebrewer

Well-Known Member
curing certainly does bring out the potency of your buds. as a personal rule I dont start sampling my harvests until after one month of curing and its pretty enjoyable, but after 2 of months of cure it usually turns into 1 hit quit for me.
Have you considered the fact that if you're curing for 2 months, the moisture content will be greater at 1 month than 2, supporting my statement that 100% dry bud is as potent as your bud will ever be? I'm not saying I'm totally right here, this has just been my experience with young or old, moist or dry buds.
 

horribleherk

Well-Known Member
ive used orange peel & ive used fresh leaves & you can also put in jars & referigerate dont be afraid to experiment
 
Have you considered the fact that if you're curing for 2 months, the moisture content will be greater at 1 month than 2, supporting my statement that 100% dry bud is as potent as your bud will ever be? I'm not saying I'm totally right here, this has just been my experience with young or old, moist or dry buds.
I'm told that by curing the buds, you allow some chemical changes to take place that wouldn't happen otherwise. If the bud is slow-dried in a curing process, more non-psychoactive acids in the plant break down to release more THC and other cannabinoids versus what would happen in fast-dry methods. If you disagree, don't flame me, lol...like I said, this is what I was taught, and it makes sense from a chemical perspective, so I've decided to ALWAYS cure my buds! Just my 2 cents =)
 
I'm told that by curing the buds, you allow some chemical changes to take place that wouldn't happen otherwise. If the bud is slow-dried in a curing process, more non-psychoactive acids in the plant break down to release more THC and other cannabinoids versus what would happen in fast-dry methods. If you disagree, don't flame me, lol...like I said, this is what I was taught, and it makes sense from a chemical perspective, so I've decided to ALWAYS cure my buds! Just my 2 cents =)
Good point, bro. I am totally agreed with
 

homebrewer

Well-Known Member
I'm told that by curing the buds, you allow some chemical changes to take place that wouldn't happen otherwise. If the bud is slow-dried in a curing process, more non-psychoactive acids in the plant break down to release more THC and other cannabinoids versus what would happen in fast-dry methods.
This is also my understanding too, minus the part about fast drying. I googled the subject out of curiosity and found these tidbits about the process:

http://www.marijuana-seeds.net/Curing-the-Marijuana-Plant.html

http://www.a1b2c3.com/drugs/mj009.htm

http://www.amsterdamcannabisseeds.com/cannabis-harvesting-drying-curing.html


Basically they all say to slow dry over about 2 weeks until the stems in the middle of your larger buds snap, but none go into any amount of scientific detail. They also touch on the fact that THC is evolving even after the plant has been chopped. So is this purely a function of time or moisture content, or both? If it's just a function of time, the OP should be able to just throw is dried buds in a jar and the THC levels should continue to evolve regardless of the moisture level. If curing is dependent on some amount of moisture, then the OP is screwed :(. Really the only way to figure out if curing increases potency is to send off some samples to a testing facility. I'll send off some product if someone wants to offer up an address for the results to be sent to.
 

growone

Well-Known Member
this is quite the involved topic
it's probably safe to say that the total cannabinoids at harvest is near a maximum
but these cannabinoids do change during the cure
in particular, THCV becomes THC over time, this can also be done in the oven dry method
many seem to talk about a change in character of the high over cure time
 

SCOTTYBALLS

Well-Known Member
I think it also depends on what your growing heavy dense indica's are going to hold more water then a fluffy sativa... Either way I dont recomend letting you buds dry till the stems "snap" I find its best when the stems bend.. not a rubbery bend but a solid bend like say if you bent a coffee stirring straw..

I personally dont think the weed is getting any stronger then if it was not curred.. its defintly smoother wich means you can take a bigger hit wich would allow you to take in more THC then if it were not curred..

I actually like the taste of fresh dried bud over bud that has been curred for months.. many will disagree with me but there is somthing about the friuty taste of fresh bud that I just prefer over a long curred bud.. but ofcourse its not as smooth.

Either way it comes down to personal prefrence.. what taste great to me may taste like shit to somone else.
 

plaguedog

Active Member
best way ive found to cure is this.....kinda long,but in detail....Cut the product, trim it per your preference, but don't dry it until the stems snap. Take it down while the stems still have some flex, but the product feel dry on the outside. This is a perfect opportunity to drop the dry-feeling flowers onto a screen and collect prime-quality kief that would otherwise get lost in the jar.

Jar the product, along with a hygrometer. Then, watch the readings:

+70% RH - too wet, needs to sit outside the jar to dry for 12-24 hours, depending.

65-70% RH - the product is almost in the cure zone, if you will. It can be slowly brought to optimum RH by opening the lid for 2-4 hours.

60-65% RH - the stems snap, the product feels a bit sticky, and it is curing.

55-60% RH - at this point it can be stored for an extended period (3 months or more) without worrying about mold. The product will continue to cure.

Below 55% RH - the RH is too low for the curing process to take place. The product starts to feel brittle. Once you've hit this point, nothing will make it better. Adding moisture won't restart the curing process; it will just make the product wet. If you measure a RH below 55% don't panic. Read below:

Obviously, the product need time to sweat in the jar. As such, accurate readings won't be seen for ~24 hours, assuming the flowers are in the optimal cure zone. If you're curing the product for long-term storage, give the flowers 4-5 days for an accurate reading. If the product is sill very wet, a +70% RH reading will show within hours. If you see the RH rising ~1% per hour, keep a close eye on the product, as it's likely too moist.
ICMAG ftw. Nice copy and paste of Simons post.
 

Kayne

Member
This is the easy way....

- Cut
-Hang
-Cure
-Smoke

lol...You want to make the drying process take a little time... drying to fast is bad, and your smoke will taste like shit....The amount of days to hang your plants is going to vary from person to person, bud to bud.....just depends, its a touch thing....its not hard though.....i have never ruined or failed a curing process, even when i was a noob, 15 years ago....just take it slow.....You can do it Forrest..You can do it!
 
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