The temperature will be about 60 degrees and humidity is only 30%
I live in a dry climate, often 22%. I hang in a closet for a couple days. I open the door to the closet a 2-3 times a day to "burp" it. I'll gently cup a bud or two in my hand and squeeze to see if it feels wet, if it's getting crispy. It usually takes a couple days. In higher humidity 4 days. (Also depends on the size or number of plants in the dry space.). I'm looking for the bud to feel not wet, but not crispy either. If the fan leaves are dry and the bud isn't, that's perfect. But, be careful not to overshoot it too far.
At that point, I cut the buds off into a Sterlite plastic bin (like a shoebox size for a small plant, larger 1x2x1' tall for a larger plant). If I feel like I overshot the drying in the closet, I'll leave the larger stems on to help rehumidify.
If it's on the wet side, I'll trim the buds off close to the stems, leaving the only thing remaining to do is the manicure.
Being better at judging the closet "doneness" I'm usually somewhere in between those two extremes. I don't trim the buds off the stems, but I don't leave a lot of stem either (especially not the heavier stem. I've got it down to the thin stems leaving buds attached to them.).
I use a Caliber IV hygrometer in the plastic bin. It should be about 78-82% now. I'll pour the buds out on a cookie sheet if they're still too wet, let them air for 30 minutes. If it's 78-82, I'll leave the lid on loosely, cracked. I'll remove the lid and fan the buds. I'll hand turn the buds. I want to see it go down to 65% in 5-10 days.
At 65% the drying's done and I put them in a jar for curing and burbing down to 62%.
In low humidity climate, what you're struggling with is even drying. It's *way* too easy to get the outer bud material crispy while the core is wet. It takes more effort to control it. That's why I go to the Sterlite bin. The smaller space is easier to control the humidity. You can't get to 62% in a closet (large air space). The inner material would get down to 40% and the inside would still be 70%. So, it takes staging like this. Initial drying, then slow dry, then cure.
I also use a Boveda 65 pack in the Sterlite bin. I felt like it would add some "gravity" to the space. A "mass" to help from overshooting 65%, make it more temperate. But, leaving some large stems in the container would have a similar effect.
I dried a plant a few weeks ago in a 18x18x16 Home Depot moving box with coat hanger rods pushed through it. I put it in the box immediately, no closet time. That worked really well in my dry climate. The plant dried pretty evenly and at a slow rate compared to the closet. It was maintenance free. The cardboard is permeable enough to exhange moisture better than the closet. In my dry climate the exchange was perfect. It got where it needed to be in a good way. I've only done it once. But, I'm going to do it again.
That's everything I know. Just be careful that it doesn't dry too quickly in the outer layer. That's the problem with a dry climate.