JG420JG Posted August 24, 2020 Report Share Posted August 24, 2020 Hey guys. Day 3 of drying. Hung up in my tent in the garage with all vents closed extraction fan on heater set to 21deg and a little clip fan for some circulation at the base but my RH is 30-34 %. I’m a little worried. What can I do to bring it up to the 50%? Cheers Posted from the OZ Stoners mobile app Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Serrated edge Posted August 24, 2020 Report Share Posted August 24, 2020 (edited) Your better off having not having the heater,, they dry slower ,,better aroma and flavours.your better off not having the fan on them ,,,,,they dry slower ,,,read above. your vents are closed ? That’ll push the humidity up as they lose moisture,,,but got to let it escape at some stage. Edited August 24, 2020 by Serrated edge 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
merl1n Posted August 24, 2020 Report Share Posted August 24, 2020 Vents closed???? WTF??? No, no, no you want to get rid of all of that moisture. You want fresh air in, stale moist air out. The moisture will build up the buds will sweat and you have a nice big harvest of mould. You NEED airflow.+1... +2 …….hell, + 100 to SerratedDO NOT have a fan blowing them. The fan will dry the outside. The outside will dry crispy but the insides will be wet.As Serrated states slowly, slowly better tasting end product doing it slowly. You can 'try' and force dry BUT you decrease the quality if ya do. Another piece of advice.You'll find if you look at them in the morning they'll probably feel moist, but then if you test them in the arvo they'll feel drier, then the following morning they'll seem moist again.What happens is that during the night they draw moisture into the buds from the stems, the warmth of the day draws the moisture from the outside of the bud and then they rehydrate from the stem moisture again overnight.What I do is reduce the amount of timber, cut the stems back. I hang strings up across my shed, then make hooks with the stem to hang upside down on the strings. It allows airflow around the budsA bit like this. Now this pic (sort of shows) how I hang it. That's all fresh cut and still has lots of stem/leaf/crap. So that's the step before I start cleaning, but it gives ya the idea.https://cannabis.community.forums.ozstoners.com/topic/12055-all-join-in-just-a-pic-dump/page-363?do=findComment&comment=406564Once the stems snap cleanly, she's done I then remove 90% of the stems and placed into newspaper lined, corrugated cardboard boxes. The corrugated cardboard draws out the remaining moistureThen it's manicured and put in airtight coffee tins, 'burping' them every other day.https://cannabis.community.forums.ozstoners.com/gallery/image/17473-bit-of-the-collection/ So that's what I do, but for quality it's a slowly, slowly process, don't rush it or you'll be kicking yourself. Merl1n Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JG420JG Posted August 24, 2020 Author Report Share Posted August 24, 2020 Vents closed???? WTF??? No, no, no you want to get rid of all of that moisture. You want fresh air in, stale moist air out. The moisture will build up the buds will sweat and you have a nice big harvest of mould. You NEED airflow.+1... +2 …….hell, + 100 to SerratedDO NOT have a fan blowing them. The fan will dry the outside. The outside will dry crispy but the insides will be wet.As Serrated states slowly, slowly better tasting end product doing it slowly. You can 'try' and force dry BUT you decrease the quality if ya do. Another piece of advice.You'll find if you look at them in the morning they'll probably feel moist, but then if you test them in the arvo they'll feel drier, then the following morning they'll seem moist again.What happens is that during the night they draw moisture into the buds from the stems, the warmth of the day draws the moisture from the outside of the bud and then they rehydrate from the stem moisture again overnight.What I do is reduce the amount of timber, cut the stems back. I hang strings up across my shed, then make hooks with the stem to hang upside down on the strings. It allows airflow around the budsA bit like this. Now this pic (sort of shows) how I hang it. That's all fresh cut and still has lots of stem/leaf/crap. So that's the step before I start cleaning, but it gives ya the idea.https://cannabis.community.forums.ozstoners.com/topic/12055-all-join-in-just-a-pic-dump/page-363?do=findComment&comment=406564Once the stems snap cleanly, she's done I then remove 90% of the stems and placed into newspaper lined, corrugated cardboard boxes. The corrugated cardboard draws out the remaining moisture100_1529.JPGThen it's manicured and put in airtight coffee tins, 'burping' them every other day.https://cannabis.community.forums.ozstoners.com/gallery/image/17473-bit-of-the-collection/ So that's what I do, but for quality it's a slowly, slowly process, don't rush it or you'll be kicking yourself. Merl1n The fan isn’t blowing on them directly it’s not aimed at them. Even when I had the vents open the RH was the same. I totally understand the process and that they need to be slowly dried, hence why I am concerned that the air is too dry and they are going to dry out too quick. The problem isnt too much moisture build up it’s the fact that the air is too dry.... Cheers Posted from the OZ Stoners mobile app Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
itchybromusic Posted August 24, 2020 Report Share Posted August 24, 2020 when you mix low humidity & high temps in your dry space that could be cause for concern but low humidity with lower temps is not as concerning ( im assuming your temps being it's winter ) in a perfect world you would have a climate controlled room & be able to set parameters anywhere you like , without total control we roll with what we got heat is a def negative , heat will cause humidity to go down , higher the heat lower the humidityso it's doing the opposite of what your trying to achieve lots of air movement can tend to dry the outside of the bud but not the inside , once that bud is jarred the moisture will even out across the whole bud & jarring wet buds ain't good air movement is best done using the back of a fan , meaning the back of a fan will suck air in to blow out front , if you hang a box fan at the door of the tent blowing away it will gently but consistently suck stale air away & out of the tent there would be many ways to gently suck air out of a tent like that creating gentle air movement insidethe tent along the way i reckon temps are the most important if you wanna keep monoterpenes mostly intact , i find humidity much more an issue in summer wen ambient temps are allot high but hey if you can get total control , go for it , more power to ya , imho i reckon you get the best dry at lower temps (20c & below) with humidity a little below 50% , drying time is increased but a better product the up side again imho growing & drying in my part of Vic aka corona central Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JG420JG Posted August 24, 2020 Author Report Share Posted August 24, 2020 when you mix low humidity & high temps in your dry space that could be cause for concern but low humidity with lower temps is not as concerning ( im assuming your temps being it's winter ) in a perfect world you would have a climate controlled room & be able to set parameters anywhere you like , without total control we roll with what we got heat is a def negative , heat will cause humidity to go down , higher the heat lower the humidityso it's doing the opposite of what your trying to achieve lots of air movement can tend to dry the outside of the bud but not the inside , once that bud is jarred the moisture will even out across the whole bud & jarring wet buds ain't good air movement is best done using the back of a fan , meaning the back of a fan will suck air in to blow out front , if you hang a box fan at the door of the tent blowing away it will gently but consistently suck stale air away & out of the tent there would be many ways to gently suck air out of a tent like that creating gentle air movement insidethe tent along the way i reckon temps are the most important if you wanna keep monoterpenes mostly intact , i find humidity much more an issue in summer wen ambient temps are allot high but hey if you can get total control , go for it , more power to ya , imho i reckon you get the best dry at lower temps (20c & below) with humidity a little below 50% , drying time is increased but a better product the up side again imho growing & drying in my part of Vic aka corona central Temps are between 20-22 deg. The humidity is 25-35%. This is my issue. How do I increase the humidity.?? Posted from the OZ Stoners mobile app Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
itchybromusic Posted August 25, 2020 Report Share Posted August 25, 2020 increasing humidity could be fraught with danger cos there is no easy way to increase the water holding capacity of the air around your buds prob the easiest way is to decrease temps , as temps decrease humidity will increase but the flow on effect of lower tempsis longer drying times , some might even say mold promotion , pros & cons with all choices we make you seem to be of the impression that if humidity isn't at 50% something is going to be wrong or degraded with your harvest in some way the diff between bud dried at 21c & 30% humidity vs 21c & 50% humidity would not be noticed by the consumer , you / me would there be a diff on a lab test , yeah possibly but again it would be a diff on paper & a very small if any diff when consuming weight things up , adding moisture to the air which has some risks to it vs a result that you prob won't notice if you have to have higher humidity you can buy a small humidifier , you could add buckets of water to the bottom of the tent hang wet towels in buckets of water so they wick the water while blowing a fan at the towel , all these things will increase humidityto a more or lesser extent but they are also not controllable , the risk of wanting 50% & getting 80% in a mostly sealed space is real 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thorshammer Posted August 25, 2020 Report Share Posted August 25, 2020 Whats the ambient temp without the heater? I'm in Melbourne so it's fucking cold and humidity is about 80-90% so I have dehumidifiers cranking 24/7. I purchased a couple of these humidifiers from Kmart about 4 months ago and have been very happy with them. They have built in humidistat https://www.kmart.com.au/product/ultrasonic-humidifier/2998803You would have to keep the fan going for even humidity. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JG420JG Posted August 25, 2020 Author Report Share Posted August 25, 2020 Thanks for the advice guys. After everyone’s input both here and offline I sorted it out to a much better number. Dropped the heater settings. Adjusted the airflow and the air extraction. 19. Deg and 40-50 % humidity. Best I’ll be able to get during This cold. Sent from my iPhone using OZ Stoners Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
louise Posted August 25, 2020 Report Share Posted August 25, 2020 Hi JG, I was curious to know why you thought you needed a particular temperature and rh to dry your buds. Particularly as in the last 39 years, I haven't worried about manipulating the temperature and/or rh during drying, apart for ensuring adequate ventilation via a filtered extraction fan. So, I let Aunty Google find me what the cool kids are doing these days. Well colour me surprised, these do seem to be the recommendations on several of the highest ranked results. I honestly don't think the amount you tent varies from the 'optimal' conditions is going to make a noticeable difference to your end product. Especially not if you cure the product after drying. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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