U can always use my 60/60 term I coined heheheLow and slow is the way to go
So cut and hang the plant whole and don't trim until it's ready to cure? Or will the entire plant be over killDon't trim anything off till u are ready to cure. U want slow as possible, also that wet towel sounds like it could be worth a try
Hang it wholeSo cut and hang the plant whole and don't trim until it's ready to cure? Or will the entire plant be over kill
Thanks interesting, will check this out as well as a humidifier. I'll have to Google inkbird. But as far as your setup , I'm imagining a big shallow pan of water, somehow a rack suspended in it with a towel draped over it, with the tip of the towel in the water. How do you suspend the towel?I faced the same challenge with low humidity and just set a large tray of water in the room and a large object in the middle, draped a towel over that to let it wick and aimed fan at it. Combine that with something like an Inkbird humidity controller and you can get a large water reservoir. I have humidifiers as well but if you don't want to mess with topping off or need a large bump in humidity then a larger volume of water is helpful.
Last time I actually combined a tent with hanging cloth rack within, and a 6" AC Infinity fan with its temp/humidity control and a filter to keep air moving and to regulate the humidity. The humidifiers in the room were to bring up the ambient so that when the fan was drawing air in, it wasn't dry but around that 50% point. After a day or so of that I moved things into paper bags (small lunch bags, not too heavily loaded to avoid mold) to further slow down/control the drying.
Worked pretty well, will be tweaking further but I found a single dehumidifier was enough for me for lowering things (in a house, already climate controlled) but to raise them it took a bit more. That's why I rigged up the tub/towel/fan deal - this time I just need that Inkbird for it.
Man i just scoured google and cant find a definitive guide, or much less any sort of help at all at paper bag drying. Most people use it as a step after the dry as a cure of sorts.Paper bags work for me. We use a dehumidifier from about March to November, December for health reasons (it has an onboard hygrometer so it shuts itself off when humidity gets low enough) so we max out around 30 to 40%. I tried hanging the whole plant before. It was dry in 3 days.
In paper bags the buds dried in 10 days.
You open and close it daily like a slow cure to moist leave it open drying too fast close itMan i just scoured google and cant find a definitive guide, or much less any sort of help at all at paper bag drying. Most people use it as a step after the dry as a cure of sorts.
I faced the same challenge with low humidity and just set a large tray of water in the room and a large object in the middle, draped a towel over that to let it wick and aimed fan at it. Combine that with something like an Inkbird humidity controller and you can get a large water reservoir. I have humidifiers as well but if you don't want to mess with topping off or need a large bump in humidity then a larger volume of water is helpful.
Last time I actually combined a tent with hanging cloth rack within, and a 6" AC Infinity fan with its temp/humidity control and a filter to keep air moving and to regulate the humidity. The humidifiers in the room were to bring up the ambient so that when the fan was drawing air in, it wasn't dry but around that 50% point. After a day or so of that I moved things into paper bags (small lunch bags, not too heavily loaded to avoid mold) to further slow down/control the drying.
Worked pretty well, will be tweaking further but I found a single dehumidifier was enough for me for lowering things (in a house, already climate controlled) but to raise them it took a bit more. That's why I rigged up the tub/towel/fan deal - this time I just need that Inkbird for it.