Kingrow1
Well-Known Member
Why would you want to dry more slowly - the bud is made up of cells and they release moisture at the correct rate in a large range of temps and humidities.Never said that those points don't exist. I think though that there's far more science into your way to go for drying then any other process I came up to.
What do you think of the paper bag method? If I'm not missing anything when the buds are inside the bag,they are still drying but they release their moisture more slowly. Is this process going to mess with the equalization process?
It is not the speed the bud dries at as bacteria and enzymes complete all processes exactly the same wether it takes five days or seven. Some perpetuate the idea that slower dried bud is superior but that falls foul of whats actually happening.
Still dry is merely that and a bit harsh to smoke, give it a week and it smooths out as theres a lot of processes that play out in the second week. Some say it overdries but were at equalization so that wont occur - shitly grown bud will have less than perfect cells and cell walls and is prone to overdrying and there is nothing you can do but grow better bud.
And back to the drying speed, to slow it simply move to somewhere slightly cooler, we all own or rent dwellings and its the 21st century so this isnt hard either and would be better advice than paper bags.
Bud will reach a variety of equalization points, mine is always a touch more pliable in the rainy weeks and way easier to grind in the summer months - no one can escape the small fluctations.
The science is to all ways not just the hang dry but you need to know this to get more technical