u/DaniBlimburn

Curing
▲ 5 r/Blimburncommunity_+3 crossposts

Curing

One thing I don’t think gets talked about enough is how important the cure really is.

You can grow beautiful plants, have great terps during harvest, and still lose a lot of quality if the dry and cure are rushed. I’ve learned the hard way that patience after harvest matters just as much as the grow itself.

A slow dry and proper cure can completely change the smell, smoothness, flavor, and overall experience.

A lot of newer growers focus so much on getting to harvest that they forget the final few weeks are where everything really comes together. Plus I hate buying any product that hasn’t been properly cured from shops.

How long do you usually cure before you feel like your flower is at its best?

blimburnseeds.com
u/DaniBlimburn — 2 days ago

I swear growers always end up becoming either soil people or hydro people 😂

I’ve always liked soil because it feels more forgiving when life gets busy. Hydro grows crazy fast, but mistakes show up FAST 😅

What’s everyone running right now and why?

reddit.com
u/DaniBlimburn — 7 days ago
▲ 2 r/macrogrowery+2 crossposts

✨What if your hardest moment was actually the thing that brought you back to yourself?

In this episode, Jerry Chu sits down with Shelley Rogers—also known as The Good Witch 🧙‍♀️—to talk about her journey through cancer and how it became a turning point, not just a struggle.

This one goes deep…
We get into:
• Healing beyond just the physical
• Intuition + reconnecting with yourself
• Using cannabis with intention as a tool for awareness

It’s not just about growing plants—it’s about growth in life too.

If you’re into mindset, spirituality, or just hearing real stories that shift perspective… you’ll want to tap into this one.

🎧 Watch now & drop your thoughts below 👇
Do you believe tough moments shape who we become?

💬 Want to connect more with the community?
Join the Discord: watch now

u/DaniBlimburn — 8 days ago

Just wrapped up a harvest and dialing in my dry/cure process again. Always feel like this stage makes or breaks the final quality.

Curious what everyone else is running 👇

🌡️ Dry room temp & humidity?

⏳ How long are you hanging before trim?

✂️ Wet trim or dry trim?

🫙 What are you curing in (jars, grove bags, etc.)?

🔄 How often are you burping?

I usually aim for a slow dry (around 60°F / 60% RH) and wait for stems to just start snapping before moving into cure—but I know everyone has their own tweaks.

Also—what’s one mistake you made early on that affected your final product?

Let’s hear it 👀🔥

reddit.com
u/DaniBlimburn — 27 days ago

Always cool seeing how different growers set up their spaces.

Drop a photo of your grow setup:

Closet grows

Tents

Full rooms

DIY cabinets

Curious what everyone is running.

Bonus question:

What’s the one upgrade that improved your grow the most?

reddit.com
u/DaniBlimburn — 2 months ago