BakingcoOkiez
Active Member
I've notice alot of people still doing wet trim even though dry trim is recommended for best flavor and smell. Is there something special about wet trimming that I'm missing?
I do a rough trim when it's wet cause when your trimming pounds at a time it makes life easier ...then I dry and do a final trim .....I've done it both ways over the years and there's no difference IMO between the two techniques except it's way harder to trim with all the leaves dry around the buds ......my taste and smell comes from growing it correctly drying it correctly and especially curing it correctly ......just try it for yourself you'll see ...don't take nobodies word for it ..just do it ...I've notice alot of people still doing wet trim even though dry trim is recommended for best flavor and smell. Is there something special about wet trimming that I'm missing?
No definately still doing lots of removal during my final trim for sure .....I take all my fans off and quickly remove the large stuff on the buds while it's sticking straight out for me ....definately not doing a final trim wet by no means ....I don't try to cut close into the bud on my wet/rough chop@Indacouch Are you hacking her to pieces before drying? If so, there is a huuuuuuuuge difference in your final product.
Trimming weight isn't very difficult when you have a hard time deciding what to trim and what to leave and, when there is little of that to contemplate. My easiest trim is the "Mystery". It is so dense in frost that even though it does have a few short leaves that should go, they fold up nicely (dry), and are so purple that it all comes together to just add "character" to the buds. Trimming it's beautiful sugars, in a way, detracts from her. That is per plant, she doesn't yield, so per lb goes to either my "Mint", or "M4" (yes, even easier/icier than GG4).
Honestly, it's all pretty quick, just have to get your leaf to calayx ratio squared away.
Can you explain why you think wet trimmed buds have to be laid on screens so they have a flat side? And dry hung? Seems like you could do either regardless of whether you wet or dry trim.When the buds are wet trimmed they have to be layed on screens so they have a flat side, dry trimmed they are hung on wire on the stems so no flat spot. Dry......
You can. The post you responded to is nonsense.Can you explain why you think wet trimmed buds have to be laid on screens so they have a flat side? And dry hung? Seems like you could do either regardless of whether you wet or dry trim.
Interesting...although I personally would have a hard time getting boiling water to my grow. Similarly, in one of the pinned posts here they speak of drowning the roots for a similar affect.Technically speaking, if you cut the leaves, drying evaporation will occur through the buds instead of the absent leaves. One idea would be, on the day you originally planned to harvest, boil a large pot of water, dump it in while the pot is outside or in a tub, and let it sit under 12/12 for 5-7 more days. Dry to snappiness and cure for maybe a week or two, but it may come off the branch tasting ten days cured. This method comes from @RM3 experimenting with it for years.
1. It closes the stomata immediately, firstly not allowing the plant to consume anymore nutrients from the now-dead roots and forces it to draw energy from the leaves, and it causes water to evaporate more slowly, which is what you want for good flavor.
2. It deprives the plant of the ability to exchange CO2 for O2, thus suffocating it and kickstarting the fermentation process, which gives it that taste you love, occuring normally during the cure.
3. Sterilizes medium for immediate reuse.
Yeah, only potential issue with drowning is the potential to create mold and draw pests. You should get, like.. Some kind of solar powered hotplate or some Inspector Gadget bullshit like that if you ever care to try it.Interesting...although I personally would have a hard time getting boiling water to my grow. Similarly, in one of the pinned posts here they speak of drowning the roots for a similar affect.
I don't think mold and pests are issues as, if I remember correctly, you literally are submerging your dirt for a number of days. Mold is not gonna grow under water and pests will have to hold their breath. You probably do need to have your dehumidifier at the ready with all that water in the room.Yeah, only potential issue with drowning is the potential to create mold and draw pests. You should get, like.. Some kind of solar powered hotplate or some Inspector Gadget bullshit like that if you ever care to try it.
Pests like fungus gnats that love the wet, you mean? That aside, if it's humid, you'll get bud rot from condensed low evaporation around the colas.I don't think mold and pests are issues as, if I remember correctly, you literally are submerging your dirt for a number of days. Mold is not gonna grow under water and pests will have to hold their breath. You probably do need to have your dehumidifier at the ready with all that water in the room.
I mean, everything I just stated was established by your good friend and mine, @RM3. I personally like the method and find it effective. It's not the wound that causes terps to come out, it's fermentation caused by suffocation, since the roots exchange gasses.This boarders more on opinion then any fact!
You can do one or the other and believe there is a difference.
You can do side by sides and find a difference, or not!
Personally, I can not stand behind any reasoning that believes that terps are released from the "wounds" of cutting/trimming wet plants. The idea that they flow through the plant like nutrients, goes against things I have learned in botany. It sounds like something that would be easy to prove buy analyzing the contents of phloem sap in a gas chrome.....
Some one has to write the parameters for the testing and do it!
Thing is, it's another one of those things your not going to have much luck finding papers on! The wording of the search is the key!
This is the first thing that pops up when I apply a search.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2577278/
And as known. It lines out that terpenes are made in the trichomes of cannabis related plants!
So then (as I expected) The idea that you loose terps from wounds created by trimming is "Not a scientific conclusion, and is false"!
The idea that some may evaporate more by increased air flow over the more exposed trichomes may have some merit.
That would be something to be studied and reported on. yet I feel the amount of change would be a rather small percentage!
I trim wet for ease and time!
I cure mine and get my "stink" back!
Sells faster then I can grow it! I'm good!
Not talking about the boiling water thing ODG! I'm relating to what ODIN points to. This is something found on many grow sites!I mean, everything I just stated was established by your good friend and mine, @RM3. I personally like the method and find it effective. It's not the wound that causes terps to come out, it's fermentation caused by suffocation, since the roots exchange gasses.
Or were you replying to someone else? Sorry, sleep deprived.