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Old 12-04-2014, 04:14 PM #1
Baron Greenback
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Drying with a dehumidifier.

I dry with a dehumidifier, there, I said it. The girls are cropped into small flowers as soon as they are cut down, placed on drying racks above one or two dehumidifiers.
There's no hanging upside down, no cure, just the dehumidifier (the sort used to dry buildings, not food) and it seems to work well. Everything is ready within a week, there is no heat and no risk of rot due to humidity.
I realise I may be pilloried for this method but there is sound reasoning behind it - I think!
So, I use this method because of the volatile nature of the aromatic hydrocarbons that we all want to keep. I think that they need to be "crystallised" as soon as possible to prevent degrading. The quicker everything can be "locked in", the better. In my opinion, this ensures maximum potency and flavour, which is what we all want. Plus, I can't see the point of drying stick that has no use to me.
If anyone can tell me why this is a terrible idea I would be interested but it even seems to even negate the need for a cure as the water has all been driven off.
Try it, it might be genius.
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Old 01-09-2015, 05:21 AM #2
HenriettaRogers
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Great idea man! I haven't thought of it with my dehumidifier. Thanks for sharing. Hope to hear more from you.
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Old 01-09-2015, 08:10 AM #3
shredGnar
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I think I may try this.. I've always been back and forth with the results of my drying/curing. I think it is my biggest weakness at the moment.

You always hear the slower the dry the better, but I have found on mistake a few times the stuff I have that falls on the floor and dries much quicker usually smells great and avoids the hay smell.

Any others have thoughts on this??
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Old 01-09-2015, 08:23 AM #4
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I think its strain dependant, as some strains will retain smell and flavour with a quick dry and others are the opposite.
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Old 01-09-2015, 11:51 AM #5
Baron Greenback
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There's a lot to be said for experimentation with drying. We all know heat is bad, humidity is bad, but there seem to be a large amount of quite arbitrary numbers tossed about for levels of things (this might be quite a long post).
We crop the plants at the point at which we think they are ready, why then do we smoke the plant at least 3 weeks after the point at which we decided it was ready? The majority of the terpenes are lost in the first week, at which point, mine is dry and such a loss has potentially been avoided.
Smaller flowers dry quicker, some of the smaller stuff will be completely dry within 3 days. There is no point drying large pieces of stick, they are not what we are after, crop everything to its final manicure as soon as it comes off the plant, put on drying racks (the only issue with this is some flattening of the flowers but if they are cropped small enough it is only noticeable to the hypercritical eye).
I think this completely negates the need for a cure, after all, a "cure" is simply the driving off of all moisture, which is what a dehumidifier is designed to do (I'm talking of the ones to dry out rooms, not ones to dehydrate food). It's the aromatic hydrocarbons that we want to capture, I believe my method dries and "cures" within a week.
I started this way because I got fed up with waiting, fed up with losing flowers as the humidity wasn't right or I hadn't followed the ley lines or sacrificed a turnip to Baal or whatever is that is supposed to help dry.
It sounds stupid, but I thought about this from a chemistry point of view (running ideas past my research chemist boss (leader in his field, liked a smoke), we spent a long time talking about this and came to the conclusion that it was important to stop the degredation, things have a half-life, we wanted to stop decay and capture what we could as close to the point that we thought it was ready as possible.
The initial expense of the dehumidifier is quite high but the time it saves definitely makes it worth it.
Maybe it's worth people trying a small amount of harvest and renting a dehumidifier for a week or 10 days to see how it works for them.
I'll never change my method, I'll never dry massive sticks, I'll always dry it in a fully cropped and manicured state, I might be completely wrong but it seems to work well.
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Old 01-10-2015, 09:52 AM #6
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Thanks mac and baron..

Anybody else??
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Old 01-11-2015, 08:30 AM #7
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I just dried with a dehumidifier for the first time a few days ago. I chopped and hung all of my plants for a dry trim later. Expected it to take seven+ days. With a dehumidifier drying was sped up by about two times. I'd say my buds were ready for the jars within four or five days. So far it seems like a real good thing to use one during drying.
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Old 01-11-2015, 05:15 PM #8
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i think this is a great idea if you give the crop a good flushing and get a nice fade on them or it seams like it would trap a lot of chlorophyll and make it harsh with the slow dry it gives time to break down the chloro and such
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Old 01-11-2015, 05:22 PM #9
NEGT1
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It's not more ready than slower drying....it's just dried quicker, the plant material still needs time to break down for the prime smoke but yeah if you want to dry it quicker then there's no issue here. The problem is that most people who have low humidity have high heat which is what causes the issue, not the low humidity.

I like drying at rh of 40, opposed to 60-65. It's ready for the cure within a week usually but mostly it allows me to dry the product in a manner that alleviates the need to "burp" the cure jars. Once they go into jars there's no need to open for several weeks.


The absolute key to drying is air movement followed by temp / humidity.
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Old 01-11-2015, 09:24 PM #10
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Originally Posted by NEGT1 View Post
It's not more ready than slower drying....it's just dried quicker, the plant material still needs time to break down for the prime smoke but yeah if you want to dry it quicker then there's no issue here. The problem is that most people who have low humidity have high heat which is what causes the issue, not the low humidity.

I like drying at rh of 40, opposed to 60-65. It's ready for the cure within a week usually but mostly it allows me to dry the product in a manner that alleviates the need to "burp" the cure jars. Once they go into jars there's no need to open for several weeks.


The absolute key to drying is air movement followed by temp / humidity.
What temp?

Thanks for the replies everyone
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