Well we are high jacking this thread now. But there are a few ways to do it and it depends how you dry it. Some people like to leave the leaves on there to slow down the process to make it more even. That can be more difficult in the end to prune out nicely. Most people and the big professional warehouse operations do it fairly quickly and then control the drying environment.

I chop them down, wash them (read up on the stick on here about that) and hang them on the SCROG they came off of. Then over the course of the next week I find the time to trim them down and after about 2 weeks they are ready for curing. Then I don't have to deal with trimming up a mess of dried up stuff falling apart everywhere.

:slide:


LOL! Won't be the first topic to go off on its own, and surely won't be the last! ;-)
 
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