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@Triplefastaction, if you bought a "six pack" of sensors, their accuracy is questionable.
A bought a three pack of Govee wireless sensors (temp and RH) and they've maintained their accuracy since I bought them in March. They're $40 for three of them and the reason for a three pack is that RH is different in different places. Ambient RH isn't all that useful because the RH for the plant is going to be significantly higher than the RH in one location that's a couple of feet from the plant.
How to get some accuracy in your sensors? Calibrate them.
Check YouTube for the "salt method" for calibrating an RH sensor. A small amount of water in a soda bottle cap full of table salt in a closed baggie will get RH to 75% after at least 12 hours in a room with a constant, moderate temperature. Once the RH settles at 75%, write down the adjustment value (+4 or -3, as the case may be) on a small piece of paper and put that on the hygrometer with sticky tape.
The inexpensive hygrometers will wander with a month or two but you can always calibrate one sensor and then use that calibrated sensor to "soft calibrate" the other sensors.
RH is really hard to nail down. I've used AC Infinity, Inkbird, Pulse, AcuRite, and Govee as well as the cheap ones and the name brand sensors worked well.