My friend never drys in dry nets any more, they are a headache, you constantly have to turn the flowers to prevent them flat on one side. Whole plant hanging is the way to go in my opinion.
That and because there is more plant material it drys more slowly, which is a good thing, helping preserve all those terpenes you worked so hard to grow.
@@Habitt5253 the problem with dry nets is when the bud is cut from the stems it drys to quick, I have seen some peoples bud after it’s been on the net for like 5 days and it feels dry but it doesn’t smells right, it’s got that green smell to it which is nasty.
@@DeBaccoUniversity id love to see an explanation video on why can someone grow indoors and transfer outdoors anytime throughout the grow,but not the other way arround from outdoors to indoors?
I look to your videos as a scientific base from which I understand the cannabis plant life-cycle. Your work has been extremely helpful t me. Thank you so much.
These are excellent videos. I joined a few groups on FB but was quickly disappointed. Everyone doing the same thing but no one knows or cares why. No more groups for me. This channel and a few books and I have a more than a good start. Thank you.
The easiest dry I have ever done, in decades of experience, has to be since I moved indoors. With multiple tents , I can use a 2 x 2 ft. tent and exhaust fan cycling in a progressively reduced exchanged rate. I can easily maintain a consistent 60* / 60% environment. With limited space and budget, I have been able to extend the time and slow cure with little effort. It takes about 2 weeks to get to a stable RH, and it's done! I don't see why the home grower would do it otherwise!
I can't get the humidity down from 69% in my 2x2 tent for drying hanged cannabis. I have a fan and duct with air being sucked out. Put a air purifier in there to.
That’s legit stringing industrial baking racks that’s perfect to have enough room for airflow while also 100% stacking a 2x2x6 area while still being instantly and easily moveable
That’s the second time I’ve heard this done my friend used to swear by cropping and then placing the main stem into a container with rum and because it’s freshly cropped the plant drinks some of the rum. Personally, I couldn’t really notice, but as he always did this, I couldn’t compare it to his bud that hadn’t drunk rum.
For me and my size grow... no light, slow and gradual being careful not to swing the temp or dryness too fast. Also being mindful not to take too long so it doesn't mildew.
I would love to do an apprenticeship there if there was any possibility to do so. Unfortunately here in the Uk it’s still very much illegal, but I would happily move to another country to have the chance of learning this great growing science of such an amazing plant. Hey if anyone from any country that allows growing needs an eager to learn pair of hands, let me know.
Hello from Arizona. My big problem is Humidity. It is typically 34% Humidity in my grow room (5X5). I am looking into a humidifier but haven't obtained one yet. Getting the humidity to go up to 60% is a real challenge.
I too am in AZ with 5 years exp. I use two 1.5Gal humidifiers (4x4X8 tent) during grow cycles (it's hard as I am still only able to keep humidity at 40%) and use 1 during drying keeping the humidity at around 40% with no lights in a tent if at all possible. May be tough, but it works (10 days on dry) then a 10-20 day jar cure and you will be fabulous. It's never failed. The thing about AZ is that we have a lack of humidity and the other thing is we have a lack of humidity...so this is how I do it.
I use a humidifier and exhaust fan connected to an Inkbird humidistat. This is used on a 2x2x6' tent dedicated to drying and works great for me in AZ. Humidity in veg can be accomplished the same way, but stay away from humidifiers in flower, even in the desert.
I'm also curious on how the finished product looks like fully manicured.. Cause I hear all the advice you're giving but without showing the finished product..
I was so intune upto 3:00, the ol' "'Take sup' more space" Disadvantage let-down in comparrison methodology versin'. Now I'm waiting to get back on track to finish watching, I will be sure and like, Love your stuff btw, p.s. wish I would've found you last year, b4 I finally got 5 seedings to veg state, still waiting for next event, maybe next year? lol?
I dry in a cupboard with 1×6in fan to vent air out? When i do this i can see the branches swaying very gently. Is this to much air movement? Definitely no direct air on branches. RH50-60 and temp 25c.
Very precious content over here. What about the humidity? I have dried them slowly from 90 to 62% in 15 days. But I have read some tips to keep it around 52% in drying and 62% in curing. What is best, take it nice and slow or straight to 52% and then set it to 62%?
Would ground up hemp stalks serve as a good source of wood for say mycelium to grab onto? Can you use shredded weed stalks to grow mushrooms with? That should work right
You guys have it easy over there.circulated dry air,in the dark 7 to 10 days depending on density,trim & smoke... this stuff we've been up to for decades... could you do a vid on autos,pro,s & cons..please,thanks for putting a professional video together.🇦🇺🦘🙃
great video, thnx. I saw all that product hanging n thought "trim jail, bigtime!" hehehe. Im near the beach in Socal so 90% RH ambient is common...A/C n dehumidifier are a must. Last run we hit 14 days at 60-65%RH n 65* n they went into the jars at 61%. 😎
Hei, great videos! 👍 But, what do you do with the rest of the branches? Do you take fiber out of them? Aren't they useful for something? How many possible uses can it has?
@@raukurawaihaha depending on how much you have, how often your havesting and how much time/energry you have. its not very economical to anything besides compost for many.
i have a question if my buds are super dry already but the twigs still bend instead of snapping should i still wait until they snip or just start trimming
General trim material that would otherwise be waste so why not extract it to get something rather than just discarding it. (However, there is a fine line between extracting and turning a profit vs loss.) Dry or wet trim as it can depend in part on the volume of material and the available labor at the time.
@@DeBaccoUniversity yeah 100%, there's all sorts of goodness to found through the whole plant, shame to take a flower and throw the rest. What types of extractions do you do on your farm and do you have a preference?
Hello sir my jar rh hygrometers says it’s 56 to 58 but the buds feel slight moist to touch but it’s says 56 to 58 rh according to hygrometer am I safe ?? Feels weird
Wrap the buds in newspaper, place the newspaper in paper bags, then put it on the dashboard of your car in the hot sun. It will dry perfectly in 2 days.
@@DeBaccoUniversity It is an investment, but, there is no "can" about it. Fool proof. Most commenter's here think temp and humidity is the biggest thing to control when actually it is temp and dew point. The science is there.
@@DeBaccoUniversity hemp consumers are not fighting the things they want, rope advertising it as hemp rope like Washington's hemp farm products will have a good market....
There are no cannabinois in the roots, but some are experimenting with other uses for them. Also, components are fixed in the plant and no drainage would occur.
Natural bench space lol , it’s great that he’s trying to teach us something but this is all so basic , give us the research on dew point , humidity, temp , water activity, scale of thca and terpene degradation from light / heat .