Have any of you guys ever dried your herb while still in soil?

Sassafras¥

Well-Known Member
Sure do.. the boil works wonders also. Makes sense, cause that'd be the way it'd cure out in the wild towards the end of the harvest season.
User RM3 made me curious, he keeps his plants in soil for months to dry with lights on, until it turns brown. I decided to try with lights out, and after two weeks without watering, the buds are already dry. The color of the buds went from a rather dark green to a lighter shade, and the smell is sweet and loud! Very impressed.

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LegalizeNature420

Well-Known Member
that'd be the way it'd cure out in the wild towards the end of the harvest season.
My humble observation is that the trichomes don't degrade nearly as much using this method [and I've dried this same difficult pheno via many different methods: Hung upside down; drying baskets; wet and dry trimmed, etc..] . If you're having any issue with rot or oxidation post-harvest, I highly recommend you try this method. Seems to me that severing the plant makes her more vulnerable, as you provide entry wounds while simultaneously shocking and weakening her defenses.
 
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StoneyMcphatter

Well-Known Member
My humble observation is that the trichomes don't degrade nearly as much using this method [and I've dried this same difficult pheno via many different methods: Hung upside down; drying baskets; wet and dry trimmed, etc..] . If you're having any issue with rot or oxidation post-harvest, I highly recommend you try this method. Seems to me that severing the plant makes her more vulnerable, as you provide entry wounds while simultaneously shocking and weakening her defenses.
I'm interested in trying this with one of my plants this week. So all I have to do is leave the plant in the soil with 12/12 light cycle still running? I hang in the same room that I flower in so can I have a 12 hour light period? Hopefully that would be ok since I can't turn them off all day long.
 

Sassafras¥

Well-Known Member
Oh I've done it before. Boiled roots, then just left it sitting in complete darkness for around a week. Came out lighter shades of green, not to mention the trichomes seemed to POP like 3D out at ya. (: could tell a huge difference in taste also. Seemed to be allot more smoother imo.
My humble observation is that the trichomes don't degrade nearly as much using this method [and I've dried this same difficult pheno via many different methods: Hung upside down; drying baskets; wet and dry trimmed, etc..] . If you're having any issue with rot or oxidation post-harvest, I highly recommend you try this method. Seems to me that severing the plant makes her more vulnerable, as you provide entry wounds while simultaneously shocking and weakening her defenses.
 

growthspurt

Well-Known Member
Oh I've done it before. Boiled roots, then just left it sitting in complete darkness for around a week. Came out lighter shades of green, not to mention the trichomes seemed to POP like 3D out at ya. (: could tell a huge difference in taste also. Seemed to be allot more smoother imo.
Would boiling the roots be needed or could one leave in the soil and just stop watering it?
 

StoneyMcphatter

Well-Known Member
Personally, you could do it either way bro. I myself just get a kettle with water and bring it to a full rolling boil, pour it in the containers until it runs out of drains. Then simply stick um back in my flowering room for around a week in complete dark.
Thank you for the info mate. I'll be doing this on Tuesday.
 
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