But once flower gets "too dry", even if you rehydrate it, it cannot continue the curing process. It's stuck at whatever stage it was when the moisture level went too low. It may smoke slightly smoother (less harsh) by rehydrating it, and it helps to keep it from crumbling to dust, but curing is stopped.I was under the impression that a certain amount of moisture in the buds was necessary for the curing and break down of chlorophyl etc. 50-55% RH in the jars which is not bone dry.
Too dry is not great for Terp preservation or other elements relating to potency when you smoke it.
You maybe live somewhere hot and dry? and this plays into what i was saying about it depending on your local environment. Where i live if you left bud out of the jar it would more often than not get wetter rather than drier.... but sometimes it could get bone dry. i won't spend money on controlling the environment in a room when i can simply finish the process in a jar to get it that bit drier or to moisten it a bit. if you're commercial then i guess you can't do that so much but i doubt most big commercial growers worry about curing! - not round my way anyway...
I agree with what you say about genetics. i have a few nice clones myself. You cant make sh1t weed into good weed with curing etc but you can still get the best out of the genetics you have by not f*cking up the dry/cure...
VG
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HI, i don't really understand why that would be ? which reactions involving moisture would stop permanently and not resume once the moisture was there again ?But once flower gets "too dry", even if you rehydrate it, it cannot continue the curing process. It's stuck at whatever stage it was when the moisture level went too low. It may smoke slightly smoother (less harsh) by rehydrating it, and it helps to keep it from crumbling to dust, but curing is stopped.
I'm not educated enough to say anything particularly intelligent about "why". But it's something I have played around with, and sometimes not intentionally. My slightly educated guess is that once the tissue dries fully, chlorophyll and starches become locked in the tissue in their current form...Half dry weed getting placed in musical jars for months. Not drying enough is about the only way good weed ends up smelling like hay.
100% with Brunch on this one... I dry for about a 6-7 days until the buds feel crispy on the outside then clip directly into 2L/ half gal jars with a hygrometer and just monitor... I burp jar until around 60% rh and then store them in the dark without opening any more until i want to get to the weed.I just hang dry in a tent with a filter until it feels dry enough then clip the buds into jars.
Burp every day… quicker in summer obviously..
I don’t have a large grow space so it doesn’t get much curing, but I prefer fresh buds
From what I’ve seen a lot of people going for the “perfect cure”, like it’s going to turn weak smelling weed into “loud”, don’t dry the flowers all the way. They end up with mold issues or weed that smells like hay in a barn.I'm not educated enough to say anything particularly intelligent about "why". But it's something I have played around with, and sometimes not intentionally. My slightly educated guess is that once the tissue dries fully, chlorophyll and starches become locked in the tissue in their current form...