Do i dry and cure my harvest with the sugar leaves on the flowers

Oh I think I made a comment about how big they were going to be. But I wanted to ask about his light first.

So OP about your light?
You got some good answers about trimming. I just want to make sure you also realized you aren’t even close to done flowering yet. Minimum 5-6 more weeks.

Before even thinking about harvesting take a look at this and see if your plant is actually showing you all these signs.


The signs of ripeness are pretty standard.

First a few of the pistils begin turning color and start receding. Your plant is just starting to ripen. Depending on the strain you could still have two months to go. We're just starting this journey.

Two to four weeks later you'll notice that most of the pistils(>80%) have now changed color and curled back into the bud. It's frosty, way bigger than it was a few weeks ago, and smells dank! It's time, right? Not a chance killer. Patience is a virtue

Over the next 2-3 weeks it doesn't look much different, maybe a little more swelling in the calyxes, and the rest of the pistils change over, but the stems ars starting to bend under the weight of the buds. These ladies are putting on weight and now the buds are doing their final ripening.

Now you begin looking at trichomes, on the calyx not leaves, and harvest according to your preference. When looking at trichomes it’s essential to look at them from the side. The bulbous heads can magnify the opaque stalk under it. Looking from the side allows you to more accurately see the condition of the resin in the trichome head.

There is still no rush to harvest, the window just opened, and you have several weeks before you MIGHT start having to think about it possibly beginning to get too ripe. It takes WEEKS for plants to mature not days.

It is very easy to harvest a plant to early. It is very hard to harvest a plant to late. I’ve never seen someone accidentally wait too long.
 
Ok cool I wasn't sure you answered a lot of my questions on that one im glad I asked or I would've harvested too early this is really the first time I ever grew indoors and seen a plant in the budding I had plants outdoors before but most of the time the stupid kids in the hood would steal them before they was ready it happened last year but ok cool thank you for the information
 

PJ Diaz

Well-Known Member
I always dry trim. Sometimes I don't even trim at all, until right before I'm gonna roll a joint, then I trim what I need.
 

Ningen

Active Member
I wet trimmed for 20 years and my back couldn't take it anymore so I switched to dry, never going back. So much nice and quicker if you dry them right.
I wet dry before I throw them into the freeze drier to cut my times down. I prefer sub 8 hour dries in my pharmaceutical.
 

PJ Diaz

Well-Known Member
I always dry trim. Sometimes I don't even trim at all, until right before I'm gonna roll a joint, then I trim what I need.
I cleaned up my rolling tray today, and collected a couple of grams of really nice dry sift.
 

NoTillPhil

Well-Known Member
Hey peeps, So is this wazzup's Anesthesia? My unicorn? I'm on the edge of my seat seeing he's in the thread!! :)
 
Top