~~~mygirls how i grow~~~

lennyo

Well-Known Member
i switched on feb 1st, this strain says 50 to 65 days flower time. im not knocking her down till april 4th. i started flushing on the 18th.:blsmoke:
Thanks for the quick reply mygirls,

By the way, your girls are awsome and your info on growin is sensational.

Keep up the great work CHAMP!!!!!!!!
 

LUDACRIS

New Member
nice thread but i agree with at least 4 weeks curing before smoking.
after i dried my last harvest(7-10 days) it smelled minty.
when i chopped the buds i put them in glass jars and cured them for 4-5 weeks opening the jars for 1-3hrs per day to burp any moisture still left and at 6 weeks in the jars the smoke/taste and smell had greatly improved.

21.4 Curing
Curing is a process employed to naturally enhance the bouquet, flavour, and texture of marijuana. Curing does not lower potency when done correctly, although poor curing methods often result in some less of THC.
Curing is not an essential procedure, and many growers prefer the "natural" flavour of uncured grass. Sweet sinsemilla buds usually are not cured.
Curing is most successful on plants which have "ripened" and are beginning to lose chlorophyll. It is less successful on growing tips and other vigorous parts which are immature. These parts may only lose some chlorophyll.
Curing proceeds while the leaf is still alive, for until it dries, many of the leaf's life processes continue. Since the leaf's ability to produce sugars is thwarted, it breaks down stored starch to simple sugars, which are used for food. This gives the grass a sweet or earthy aroma and taste. At the same time, many of the complex proteins and pigments, such as chlorophyll, are broken down in enzymatic processes. This changes the colour of the leaf from green to various shades of yellow, brown, tan, or red, depending primarily on the variety, but also on growing environment and cure technique. The destruction of chlorophyll eliminates the minty taste that is commonly associated with green homegrown.
There are several methods of curing, most of which were originally designed to cure large quantities of tobacco. Some of them can be modified by the home grower to use for small marijuana harvests as well as large harvests. The methods used to cure marijuana are the air, flue, sweat, sun, and water cures.
http://www.drugs-forum.com/growfaq/35.htm
http://www.drugs-forum.com/growfaq/714.htm
 
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