I’m on my first grow and getting ready to harvest so I’m kinda worried about trying this vs the tried and true jar method. I’m especially worried about using plastic buckets and the bud tasting like plastic.Watching this thread as well. I have been thinking about doing something of this sort. Really interested in how the bud turned out in the buckets vs previous jarring methods. If you could give us a good comparison that'd be awesome
That works for me, my harvest should be end of april some time.sorry about the delay folks! next chop is on the 17th of March and will be chopping every month after. I'll be sure to keep you guys in the loop. Derek Gilman uses the system himself so I'm sure results will be normal to good if anything
Awesome man can’t wait to hear out it turns out. I’ve got a regular 2 outlet aquarium pump and hose so really all I need is the buckets and check valves to test this. Do you think a regular pump and the smaller hose would work ok vs the bigger equipment Derek and yourself are using? I should be able to fit my 2 plants in 2 5 gallon buckets easily. I’m just worried about using plastic vs glass or metal.sorry about the delay folks! next chop is on the 17th of March and will be chopping every month after. I'll be sure to keep you guys in the loop. Derek Gilman uses the system himself so I'm sure results will be normal to good if anything
he says its mainly for ease with really big harvests where it would take dozens and dozens of jars, he has 2 pounds per bucket.If I hang dry at 65-70 degrees and 65-70% humidity for 14 days and trim after that, my jars dont need burped. Humidity will stay around 65% in jars for the 2-3 week cure.
Can you tell me what size hose and check valves you’re using and if you purchased a separate manifold or did your pump come with one.
Or with an inkbird humidity controllerI saw this a while ago, but it is missing one thing, automation. You should be able to run the air pump at small intervals multiple multiple times a day depending on temp/humidity while monitoring both. Then pump the humidity down slowly to the desired level. Literally maybe dropping it 1% a day. This is all easily done with a raspberry pi and programming elbow grease (or cheat with myCodo [ https://github.com/kizniche/Mycodo ] ) and with a couple of solenoids and sensors to control everything. Example of the web interface shown.
Edit: Next level lazy shit, with automated perfection!
they got em at home depot or lowesHey all...I'm coming down to the wire on my out door harvest and cannot seem to find jars to cure my flower anyone know where to get those screw lid buckets. View attachment 4684638