Brown Paper Bag for Dry Climates

5BY5LEC

Well-Known Member
So, in need of a storage container and out of anything, I threw my freshly trimmed larf/smaller buds into brown paper bags. I kept them elevated off the ground. What I found is that they dried much more slowly than hanging. This is important if you live in a DRY climate. My RH is normally 35% or so. They were ready to jar at the same time as the big fat hanging buds.
Just something I found out by accident, for the first-time harvesters out there who live in a dry climate!
+1 to paper bags.
 

Moldy

Well-Known Member
So, in need of a storage container and out of anything, I threw my freshly trimmed larf/smaller buds into brown paper bags. I kept them elevated off the ground. What I found is that they dried much more slowly than hanging. This is important if you live in a DRY climate. My RH is normally 35% or so. They were ready to jar at the same time as the big fat hanging buds.
Just something I found out by accident, for the first-time harvesters out there who live in a dry climate!
+1 to paper bags.
I don't hang either. I put my manicured bud in a cardboard box resting on dental floss with a hygrometer in it there. It usually stays around 50-60% RH until the drying is almost complete before stems snap then I move to a paper sac if it's still too wet to jar. I've got 20% average RH where I live and lower, it's a desert.
 
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