Irish063
- 466
- 93
I live in CO at 7200 ft. For those of you familiar with the area it is super dry up here. With recent weather we've had a little more moisture in the air but it is still fairly dry. The average temperature in my room (drying area) is 55-60ish.
I took my plants down 4 days ago and have the whole plant drying (rhymes are fairly small). I have not been able to trim them as fast as I was hoping. I wanted to see if putting them in a paper bag,with the leaves on, would "sort of" start the curing process until I can get them cleaned up and in glass jars. Do you think this would work? @Seamaiden, I know you like curing in a paper bag. I have read several threads on here about drying/curing.
I know the general rule people follow is 5-7 days and even up to 10 for slow drying but it's dryyyy here. A plant that was done before the rest was crispy dry in 4 days with all the leaves left on.
I don't know my exact RH. The weather station we have in the kitchen says the RH is 75%. I know there are a lot things I should have for this process but I don't.
Thanks everyone
I took my plants down 4 days ago and have the whole plant drying (rhymes are fairly small). I have not been able to trim them as fast as I was hoping. I wanted to see if putting them in a paper bag,with the leaves on, would "sort of" start the curing process until I can get them cleaned up and in glass jars. Do you think this would work? @Seamaiden, I know you like curing in a paper bag. I have read several threads on here about drying/curing.
I know the general rule people follow is 5-7 days and even up to 10 for slow drying but it's dryyyy here. A plant that was done before the rest was crispy dry in 4 days with all the leaves left on.
I don't know my exact RH. The weather station we have in the kitchen says the RH is 75%. I know there are a lot things I should have for this process but I don't.
Thanks everyone