Harvest Tricks!

Ian Singerdale

Well-Known Member
So coming to the end of my first grow (three down, two to go) I've learned a lot about what I was surprised to see was one of the more difficult and wonderful parts of growing: harvest! Here's some stuff I picked up, please share your own experiences too. I obviously have a lot more to learn as well.

1. Listen to your senses. No any one indicator will truly tell you when it's ready. Going by trichomes alone I thought one plant had over a week, but looking at it, almost every pistil had retracted and they were 100% brown. It SMELLED ready, almost overripe, with a hint of alcohol. The calyx's were so swollen it looked like bunches of grapes. I chopped I think at the perfect time.

2. Trichs can change color after harvest! I had no idea. Almost 100% of the trichs were clear / cloudy right before I picked the aforementioned plant; looking at them again 7 days later there was almost 30-40% amber trichs. This could also do with the part of the plant I had scoped earlier - different bud sites mature differently, even at the same height on the plant.

3. YOU decide when it's ready. It's great to take some early and some later, especially if you have a single-strain grow. Think of your flowers as fruit. Do you like a really sweet, ripe and pungent fruit, or do you enjoy the tang and taste of an early picked mango? There are gradations on when you pick that help decide so many factors like the stone, the smell, the taste and the look. I had to chop one that went hermie about a week too early. And while it is the most far-along in the curing process right now, it smells absolutely amazing: like lavender, cherry blossoms and cotton candy, and has the clearest, headiest high I have ever felt. I have the same strain going now that's about to chop, almost in week ten, and it is the heaviest, most physical stone. Nearly like opiates. The taste and smell are like a candy apple, ripe pears and sticky cognac. It is amazing the difference two weeks can make.

4. Save the best for last. That ONE plant you LOVE? that is your baby, that you would cut off your pinky for if that would save its life? Let her go and fully express her genetics. Let the soil begin drying out a little longer. Overwater when you do. flush for two or even three weeks before chop. Which leads me to my last point

5. Bad soil = best flavor. I wish I knew the science, but while the plants I fertilized closer to the end yielded more, the ones I accidentally began flushing for almost three weeks before harvest were by far the stickiest and stinkiest. Smells that infect your brain and haunt your dreams. The 48 hrs of darkness beforehand seems to really bring out the essential oils, and if I'm not imagining things, seemed to increase trich production further out on the leaves.

6. When you're ready to chop, MAKE SURE YOU ARE READY! Have an idea in place of where you will be able to lay down buds on a clean surface, or even better have a drying rack or box ready to hang the instant they are trimmed. Get gloves. Get good spring-loaded clippers. Scissors will cramp your hands in no time. Have a box for sugar leaves and a box for fans and stems (sugars for hash, fans and stems for iso hash oil or butter if you want).

7. most important: razor blade. This is for taking that amazing gooey hash off your trimming shears. My god I was in outer space

Now most of this stuff is just repeated from way smarter grow masters than myself, but I thought maybe having it collected here could be useful to somebody. I'd love to hear other people's tricks too, or if anything here was complete BS. :mrgreen:
 

homebrewer

Well-Known Member
Personally, I'd wait about 5 years before you start 'making observations' and giving advice. You've done one grow and while I'm sure you're excited about your success, your observations are limited to 3 months of work and 5 plants.
 

doctor.j

Well-Known Member
you learn the most of what youre going to learn from your first couple of grows, a year ago i knew nothing about growing anything now i have a vegitable garden out front and a beautiful lemon haze plant in the house, not saying you should start giving advice as soon as you have a successful grow, but don't bust his balls, we all get excited after success
 

homebrewer

Well-Known Member
you learn the most of what youre going to learn from your first couple of grows, a year ago i knew nothing about growing anything now i have a vegitable garden out front and a beautiful lemon haze plant in the house, not saying you should start giving advice as soon as you have a successful grow, but don't bust his balls, we all get excited after success
I'm not intending to bust balls. But I think you know what I mean when someone starts generalizing 'Harvest Tricks' based on one stain and one grow. I genuinely do think people continue to learn year after year after year. It's not like 3 harvests makes you an expert, nor does 100. The best growers continue to learn and tweak and improve their process no matter how long they've been at it.
 

doctor.j

Well-Known Member
ok inseting foot in mouth now lol, i guess its really at the discretion of the reader if they want to listen to someone relatively new or more experianced, but you never know, a newb could have stumbled onto something great on accident
 

homebrewer

Well-Known Member
ok inseting foot in mouth now lol,
No way man. Keep up the observations and look for commonalities between your different grows and your different strains. There are absolutely some basics that can be applied to every one of your future grows. It looks like you have a good attention to detail and I'd say you have a bright future in the hobby.
 

purplehazin

Well-Known Member
I dont think OP was saying "This is how it must be done"; he was merely pointing out his experiences. It's up to the reader to take his advice, which is great, might I add.
A bit harsh there homebrewer ;). Smoke one and give the man some props for writing this up.
 

Ian Singerdale

Well-Known Member
I dont think OP was saying "This is how it must be done"; he was merely pointing out his experiences. It's up to the reader to take his advice, which is great, might I add.
A bit harsh there homebrewer ;). Smoke one and give the man some props for writing this up.
thanks dude. As for Homebrewer's original comment, I never claimed to be a master, but I didn't know you needed a 5-year degree to make observations on an MJ forum. :mrgreen:

It may be my first grow but I've been doing research for over a year. My plants turned out pretty nice. and for the record I had three strains at once. Not sure I'd do it again, but it taught me a lot.



Not too bad for a first time? :blsmoke:

-Ian
 

BVtrifWeed

Member
cool thead, I liked to have the advices of a noob like me, you describe it in a way that I understand better. The problem with guys with too much experience is often that they know their stuff so well that they don't tell what is obvious for them even if it is really important.

great buds
 

ObiJwon

Well-Known Member
Nice buds my friend. What soil and nutes were you using? Strains? I just got done with my first grow of five plants myself. All were of the same strain (Grape Ape) though. I am curecntly curing them now. I would be interested in your final dry weight as a comparison to my own. How are you planning to cure?
 

Ian Singerdale

Well-Known Member
What camera are you using? Great clarity.
Nikon D5000 with the 18-200 mm VR lens

That plant was beautiful! Did it hurt cutting that beautiful girl!?
Yes. But it was a sweet, sweet sadness ;)

and what as been your yield in gramm per watt? how many watt?
Not sure if I can calculate my grams per watt, but based on what I have drying looks like I got about 10-12 Onions off five plants. Super happy about that for a first grow! I only topped three of them, they were in soil, and I didn't do any LST. May scrog my next grow

Nice buds my friend. What soil and nutes were you using? Strains? I just got done with my first grow of five plants myself. All were of the same strain (Grape Ape) though. I am curecntly curing them now. I would be interested in your final dry weight as a comparison to my own. How are you planning to cure?
Soil = mix of FF ocean forest and my local hydro shop's blend with earthworm casings. Earthworms casings are the shit. literally. Nutes for veg was simply general hydroponics maxigrow, flowering nuters were maxibloom + FF soluble trio (Open sesame, beastie blooms, and cha-ching) Strains were Barney's LSD, Skunk #1 and LA Woman. The only plant I measured weight before and after was the skunk - she was 219 g wet and about 48 grams dry. I'll give a final tally when my last two dry.

I am currently curing in mason jars, measuring the RH after 12 hrs in the jar, burping or drying for an hr as necessary
 

KlosetKing

Well-Known Member
looking very nice, it sure seems like topping can be a very integral part of a grow. i didnt play with any topping, and didnt LST until i had penetration issues, and now iam very much regretting not trying them. seems my yield is not going to be quite what i was hopin for my first grow =/

very nice buds though well done, get us some pics of some cured nugz when they're done!
 
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