Even so. If you have water hash made from the same material in the same environment I think the water hash will always oxidize faster than the dry sift. In your first post you stated that dry sift will oxidize 10 degrees f lower than water hash. There is no reason a dry sift should oxidize faster than a water hash under the same conditions. I can't understand how dry sift oxidizes faster when it's already DRY and never came in contact with water, yet the bubble is obviously wet and surrounded in water at one point. Remember, water is part of the oxidation equation.
Dry sift is always dry.
Water hash is soaking wet.
We all already know that water and humidity and heat are the enemy. We all already know cold and dry is best you keep stating obvious points that are kind of irrelevant to the question.
This also makes no sense at all. If it's too dry when froze it wont' grate into beach sand well so you let it dry some before you freeze/grate.
HUH?