i had a question. im nearing my first real harvest soon maybe 1-3 more weeks going to chop and hang in my bathroom since thats the darkest place i got but it's fairly humid in the states/bathroom in general since i had to cover up the window to make it really dark. should i cut off the big fan leaves before drying or just leave um on? im going to dry trim them. also do you guys dry in the dark or naw?
i can dry in the garage but it really isn't dark there.
I thought the longleaf pine there looked similar to the Jelecote pine here, but it's just the needles. The trunks don't grow that similar. I hope all that work goes easy enough for you. It looks like you'll be busy for awhile.That is not a bad price, and for the time savings, it would be worth it. But I'm going to do what I can, and see what happens. We need to get a spot cleared for sheds and a pole barn. Not having any storage makes it hard to clean up. No where to put anything.
That is Longleaf pine. We took about 30 acres in total out of rowcrops and got it on a Longleaf conservation program 19 years ago. That behind the house is 20 acres. I started yesterday with the chainsaw, cutting the trees that are broke. Worked a couple of hours yesterday, maybe a little less today. When I get some space I'll drag and make a burn pile. Sister has a new tractor with a grapple, but I don't like to borrow machinery. So for now I'll use my old tractor with the hay forks and logging chain.
I wouldn't want to be drying anything in direct sunlight and darker is better in general, but I'd pick good humidity and temps over darkness if I had too; still no direct sunlight though. Drying is pretty tricky depending on your environment. You're probably going to have to experiment a bit and you might lose some flowers in the process. I lost a good amount in the process of learning due to poor drying and/or storage. It's pretty warm/hot and humid most of the time where I'm at so it makes for a good environment for mold to grow. Nowadays I have a room I use with an A/C, dehumidifier, humidifier and fan(s) which makes it easy. If it stays fairly cool where you are you can probably just use a dehumidifier and a fan or two. My buddy who lives up higher elevation just uses those and his stuff always comes out nice. I keep my room between 61 and 69 degrees F and 50%-62% RH and have good results. Everything is dry and ready to trim in 10-14 days depending if I have the room in the lower or up 60's.i had a question. im nearing my first real harvest soon maybe 1-3 more weeks going to chop and hang in my bathroom since thats the darkest place i got but it's fairly humid in the states/bathroom in general since i had to cover up the window to make it really dark. should i cut off the big fan leaves before drying or just leave um on? im going to dry trim them. also do you guys dry in the dark or naw?
i can dry in the garage but it really isn't dark there.
I wouldn't want to be drying anything in direct sunlight and darker is better in general, but I'd pick good humidity and temps over darkness if I had too; still no direct sunlight though. Drying is pretty tricky depending on your environment. You're probably going to have to experiment a bit and you might lose some flowers in the process. I lost a good amount in the process of learning due to poor drying and/or storage. It's pretty warm/hot and humid most of the time where I'm at so it makes for a good environment for mold to grow. Nowadays I have a room I use with an A/C, dehumidifier, humidifier and fan(s) which makes it easy. If it stays fairly cool where you are you can probably just use a dehumidifier and a fan or two. My buddy who lives up higher elevation just uses those and his stuff always comes out nice. I keep my room between 61 and 69 degrees F and 50%-62% RH and have good results. Everything is dry and ready to trim in 10-14 days depending if I have the room in the lower or up 60's.
And I always dry trim, but if I had to dry in a humid room I'd probably do some wet trimming just to help it dry out a little faster. It's kind of a tricky process because like ChefT said, you don't want it to dry out too fast so just keep on eye on your stuff and keep good mental or written notes of how it all goes so you can change your process appropriately for next time if needed.
You dont want to point your fan directly at your buds, it will dry them unevenly. You need air movement in your room as humid air sinks.
Dry trimming retains the smell the best IME.
Back in 1975 the growers I lived with would use a sheet hanging up in the goat milking area. The milking area roof got hot and it only had two walls so there was plenty of wind flow.
Nope, more ghetto than that, ha ha! It was just the biggest one at Costco I think (I bought it awhile ago). I tried running it in the greenhouse last night and I think it put a dent in the humidity but it didn't take it down very much I don't think. The only hygrometer I had in there was the one that's built into the dehumidifier and I doubt it's very accurate. I'll take a good hygrometer in there tonight. Usually I don't even think about humidity, but we had a few really wet and damp days that got me wanting to give the dehumidifier a try. I'll give it a try for a bit and see if it makes a difference.Did you get a big quest dehum?
I don't use one and everything grows good. Maybe you're over watering?any of you guys run a dehumidifier during veg? my humidity seems okay during veg in my closet but when i prune the inner growth is all soggy meaning it basically trapped all the moisture and basically wilts to death kinda like a soggy lettuce leaf.
I don't use one and everything grows good. Maybe you're over watering?
How's the drying going?