slowest way to dry?

burlingo

Well-Known Member
hi,

i'm trying to plan my grow right, it has a few weeks left yet but i have a potential problem.

i'm leaving them for a while (5 days, maybe more).

i was hoping i could chop 'em just before i go and let them slowly dry out so by the time i get back they haven't over dried.

what would be the best method or conditions?

is there more chances of running into problems? mold etc...?

thanks
 

burlingo

Well-Known Member
cool, thanks.

i might leave the heating off when i'm gone. will a cooler temp slow it down slightly.
 

HippieMan

Well-Known Member
As temperature lowers, humidity raises.
As temperature raises, humidity lowers.

Remember this rule of thumb.

To achieve the slowest of ways to dry, place all newly chopped buds into a paper bag. This will take two weeks to be cure-ready dry. Altohough I'm not sure if you need to change the bags out, as they absorb the water from the buds and become saturated with humidity.
It takes like 7-10 days to air dry buds to cure-ready status and doesn't require any maintenance, so this may be your best bet. As long as its nice and dark, has a fan blowing off in one direction (not on your buds), and has a relative humidity of 40-60% you should be fine.
 

ddriver

Well-Known Member
actually hippieman you are wrong, high humidity requires high temperatures

its one of the main principles of an air conditioner, AC take the water from the air, and thats one of the main things that drops temp down, besides the pump/freon thingie

you cannot have high humidity in low temperatures, humid climate is always warm, cuz it's temperature that evaporates water and puts it into the air
 

Woomeister

Well-Known Member
actually hippieman you are wrong, high humidity requires high temperatures

its one of the main principles of an air conditioner, AC take the water from the air, and thats one of the main things that drops temp down, besides the pump/freon thingie

you cannot have high humidity in low temperatures, humid climate is always warm, cuz it's temperature that evaporates water and puts it into the air
The temp here in the uk is only 12 c with relative humidity of 60%, go figure!
 

Landragon

Well-Known Member
But that same volume of water would be considerably lower "relative" humidity in warmer air. It's all relative. Higher temperature air has the ability to hold more water. Sort of like a big sponge. Lower temperatures shrink the air Nd squeeze that sponge. Condensation forms, and water precipitates out until the smaller "pores" of the "sponge" are only just saturated. IMO, 50-60% rh at 68•F with a fan moving airfrom the bottom up but not blowing on he buds works great. Ideally you would have a humistat controlled dry box to allow for slow drying. Let humidity climb to 65% then vent until at 55%. Heat is not a good thing no matter how fast or slow it takes, though in long dries, warm air will degrade more thc and increase possibility of molds and fungi colonizing the buds.
 
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