Register ICMag Forum Menu Features
You are viewing our:
in:
Forums > Marijuana Growing > Cannabis Harvesting & Processing > WET VS DRY Trimming

Thread Title Search
Click to visit Alchimia Grow Shop
Post Reply
WET VS DRY Trimming Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 04-06-2013, 03:16 AM #51
stihgnobevoli
Banned

stihgnobevoli's Avatar

Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 5,734
stihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud of
i am not a large commercial grower and i am a scientist but self proclaimed.

my observations.

when you harm plants they emit a strong "green" cut grass smell. i hear its a warning to all the other plants that danger is near and to prepare.

i have tried trimming both wet and dry. wet is far easier as far as mess is concerned, and i seem to be losing a lot of trichomes when i poke at my dry buds with scissors.

smells and flavors are lost if you don't dry your weed right.

fast dry = lost smells and flavors and your weed smells like grass/hay. even with a long cure it still smells like hay.

slow dry = the smells and flavors POP!!

curing + slow dry = smells gonna get you popped if you don't have that weed in a jar.

those are my observations on the matter, take it or leave it.
stihgnobevoli is offline Quote


4 members found this post helpful.
Old 04-06-2013, 04:01 AM #52
greekgardner
Member

greekgardner's Avatar

Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: N.Cali
Posts: 220
greekgardner has a spectacular aura aboutgreekgardner has a spectacular aura aboutgreekgardner has a spectacular aura aboutgreekgardner has a spectacular aura aboutgreekgardner has a spectacular aura about
good stuff...........
greekgardner is offline Quote


Old 04-06-2013, 04:21 AM #53
SmokeyTheBear
Pot Farmer

SmokeyTheBear's Avatar

Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Dutch Harbor
Posts: 2,713
SmokeyTheBear is just really niceSmokeyTheBear is just really niceSmokeyTheBear is just really niceSmokeyTheBear is just really niceSmokeyTheBear is just really niceSmokeyTheBear is just really niceSmokeyTheBear is just really niceSmokeyTheBear is just really niceSmokeyTheBear is just really niceSmokeyTheBear is just really nice
It is true. Drying the bud with sugar leaves on it will get you a more pungent smelling product. I've done it both ways many times. I still wet trim the colas and hang the remaining plant though.
__________________

Only you can prevent forest fires.
I do not grow drugs. I grow medicine.

A Brother is a Friend given to you by Nature
SmokeyTheBear is offline Quote


Old 04-07-2013, 03:58 AM #54
RonSmooth
Member

RonSmooth's Avatar

Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: Not California
Posts: 808
RonSmooth is just really niceRonSmooth is just really niceRonSmooth is just really niceRonSmooth is just really niceRonSmooth is just really niceRonSmooth is just really niceRonSmooth is just really niceRonSmooth is just really niceRonSmooth is just really nice
Plants contain chlorophyl. When you cut them, the chlorophyl escapes. I dont think this is a defense mechanism any more than bleeding is a warning/defense mechanism in humans.

Why would plants want to "warn" other plants? If they were even capable of it, how would this benefit them?

Im asking, not just trying to be argumentative.
RonSmooth is offline Quote


2 members found this post helpful.
Old 04-07-2013, 02:56 PM #55
stihgnobevoli
Banned

stihgnobevoli's Avatar

Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 5,734
stihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud ofstihgnobevoli has much to be proud of
this isn't just something i'm making up, this is science that has been proven.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-16916474
stihgnobevoli is offline Quote


Old 04-10-2013, 07:31 AM #56
festerous
Member

festerous's Avatar

Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Lost in Miller's Cave
Posts: 564
festerous is just really nicefesterous is just really nicefesterous is just really nicefesterous is just really nicefesterous is just really nicefesterous is just really nicefesterous is just really nicefesterous is just really nicefesterous is just really nice
Quote:
Originally Posted by RonSmooth View Post
Plants contain chlorophyl. When you cut them, the chlorophyl escapes. I dont think this is a defense mechanism any more than bleeding is a warning/defense mechanism in humans.

Why would plants want to "warn" other plants? If they were even capable of it, how would this benefit them?

Im asking, not just trying to be argumentative.
It is not a call to warn other plants but "a bit of honey" to attract the beneficial's.
festerous is offline Quote


Old 04-10-2013, 08:39 AM #57
mean mr.mustard
I Pass Satellites

mean mr.mustard's Avatar

Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Overturning Pebbles and Upending All the Animals Alight
Posts: 6,418
mean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond reputemean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond reputemean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond reputemean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond reputemean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond reputemean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond reputemean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond reputemean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond reputemean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond reputemean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond reputemean mr.mustard has a reputation beyond repute
Dry.

And trim over a screen
__________________
Life's most persistent and urgent question is, "What are you doing for others?"
- Martin Luther King Jr.

People seldom do what they believe in. They do what is convenient, then repent.
- Bob Dylan

Be good and you will be lonely.
- Mark Twain

How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.
- Anne Frank
mean mr.mustard is offline Quote


1 members found this post helpful.
Old 04-10-2013, 08:53 AM #58
Moppel
Grower for Life

Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 2,916
Moppel is a splendid one to beholdMoppel is a splendid one to beholdMoppel is a splendid one to beholdMoppel is a splendid one to beholdMoppel is a splendid one to beholdMoppel is a splendid one to beholdMoppel is a splendid one to beholdMoppel is a splendid one to beholdMoppel is a splendid one to beholdMoppel is a splendid one to beholdMoppel is a splendid one to behold
There is no question about it, i have tried it with many strains , the buds have more smell and taste when dried on the stem with leafs.
__________________
It's good to be good.....it's nice to be nice....

Moppel is offline Quote


2 members found this post helpful.
Old 04-10-2013, 08:58 AM #59
Hammerhead
Tired Farmer


Hammerhead's Avatar

Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 33,984
Hammerhead is a survivorHammerhead is a survivorHammerhead is a survivorHammerhead is a survivorHammerhead is a survivorHammerhead is a survivorHammerhead is a survivorHammerhead is a survivorHammerhead is a survivorHammerhead is a survivorHammerhead is a survivor
Hammerhead has completed 5 grow reports. Click to see my Grow Reports
I trim dry myself

When I started to follow this my end results where notably much better in all aspects plus the smoke was much smoother. My 2 penny's

If you harvest your plants when there in full senescence the plants wont smell like hay when wet. Most Cannabis strains are suppose to die off ea year leave seeds to regrow the next year. There are some long flowering strains like Thai these still have a lifespan IMO must be harvested the same way.

https://www.cliffsnotes.com/study_gui...eId-23719.html
Senescence is the orderly, age-induced breakdown of cells and their components, leading to the decline and ultimate death of a plant or plant part. The timing of senescence is species-specific and varies among the organs of individual plants. Some species of plants produce short-lived flowers whose petals last for only a few hours before shriveling and dropping off, while the leaves of deciduous plants last through long growing seasons before senescing.



Senescence is a metabolic process; therefore, it requires energy. It is not simply the ending of growth. Leaves, for example, move the products of photosynthesis—and their own structural substances—out of leaf tissue into stem and root tissue during senescence and before their vascular connections are severed at abscission. One of the first materials to degrade is the energy-converting pigment chlorophyll. As the bright green color of chlorophyll fades, the yellow-orange colors of the carotenoids become prominent and combine with the red-blue anthocyanins to produce the vivid colors of autumn in the trees and shrubs of the northern deciduous forest.(This is when I harvest my plants)

The role of hormones in senescence is not clear. Not only the kinds, but the proportions of each are important. Ethylene promotes abscission of leaves, flowers, and fruits, while IAA retards senescence and abscission. When days shorten in autumn, IAA production decreases, and ethylene production increases, hastening changes in the cells of the abscission zone. When the degradation of the cell wall materials is complete, nothing remains to hold the leaf to the stem, and with any slight disturbance the leaf falls. Some evidence indicates that a senescence factor, presumably an unknown hormone, exists in some plants (like soybeans), but it has yet to be isolated or synthesized.
__________________


#hammerheadgenetics

Last edited by Hammerhead; 04-10-2013 at 09:50 AM..
Hammerhead is offline Quote


3 members found this post helpful.
Old 04-10-2013, 09:19 AM #60
Biosynthesis
Member

Biosynthesis's Avatar

Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Horticultural showoff from OREGON
Posts: 833
Biosynthesis is a glorious beacon of lightBiosynthesis is a glorious beacon of lightBiosynthesis is a glorious beacon of lightBiosynthesis is a glorious beacon of lightBiosynthesis is a glorious beacon of lightBiosynthesis is a glorious beacon of lightBiosynthesis is a glorious beacon of lightBiosynthesis is a glorious beacon of lightBiosynthesis is a glorious beacon of lightBiosynthesis is a glorious beacon of lightBiosynthesis is a glorious beacon of light
Dry trim, heres why. The leaves on the plant protect the buds when they are hung upside down and make the buds dry more slowly. Chlorophyl leaves a plant slowly. The slower the cure the smoother the smoke. Also wet trimming smears the trichomes because they havent hardened. I prefer a twenty day drying process with low temps and plenty of fresh air. I only do this on indoor. Outdoor doesnt get this treatment because quite frankly its not worth it. We have TONS of outdoor pot around here. I dont think some of these hillbillys know what chronic is. Went to the closest dispensary several times and thats all there is is outdoor schwagg.
Biosynthesis is offline Quote


Post Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


All times are GMT +2. The time now is 08:55 AM.


Click to Visit Venus Vaporizers


This site is for educational and entertainment purposes only.
You must be of legal age to view ICmag and participate here.
All postings are the responsibility of their authors.
Powered by: vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2018, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.