Just curious, what is the science/logic of initial drying in dark conditions? I understand temp/humidity/time, but I haven't seen any explanations as to why dark is an important factor. And yet it is part of the "norm" when looking at most references to drying/curing.
And no, I get where leaving the buds in strong direct sunlight could have an effect, but normal ambient indoor room lighting? At what point of curing/storage does it become less of an issue, if at all?
good question, ive always heard it degrades the thc when left in direct sunlight...although ive seen em hung up from in everything from open barns/outbuildings, to sunrooms, to storage containers, inside school buses, to strings going from tree to tree...thats all OD though.
Morracans do it because they have so much of it they need to speed up the drying process so they use sunlight, but when it comes to quality dark is the way to go because of what Chobble stated above. Ambient indoor lighting has the same effect as sunlight its just alot slower and not nearly as powerful.
That was one of my thoughts as well, but I wish I had more science on chlorophyll breakdown relative to light. And again I'm talking low level ambient indoor lighting versus a bright area.
That was one of my thoughts as well, but I wish I had more science on chlorophyll breakdown relative to light. And again I'm talking low level ambient indoor lighting versus a bright area.
I dry in boxes when drying my indoor, and some of the light gets through. I mean a little ambient light probably won't hurt to much. Dont try to speed up dry time with a light though.
Oh, I don't need any convincing relative to a good slow cure; I am getting close to the limit from a space standpoint that meets base requirements, as well as "dark".
:-)