TheMontanaCannabis Club

Home Growing

Montana Harvest and Cure: Drying in a Low-Humidity Climate

Montana's low humidity speeds drying in ways that can ruin a harvest. A slow cure is the difference between decent flower and great flower.

·3 min read

The harvest and cure stage is where a Montana home grow succeeds or fails on flavor, potency, and smoothness. Montana's naturally low humidity — beneficial through most of the grow — becomes a problem at harvest, when flowers can dry too fast and lock in green-vegetal character instead of developing the slow-cure depth that separates good home flower from great home flower.

The Hang Dry

The traditional cannabis drying method is a hang dry in a dark, cool, moderate-humidity space. Target conditions: 60-65°F, 55-65% relative humidity, moving but not blasting air. Montana home environments often sit at 30-40% indoor humidity through winter and cooler shoulder seasons, which dries flowers in 3-4 days instead of the ideal 10-14. Flowers that dry too fast retain chlorophyll and taste harsh.

The solution: a drying tent or closed closet with a small humidifier running to hold 55-60% RH. An inexpensive humidifier and a hygrometer to monitor conditions transform a typical Montana indoor climate into an appropriate drying environment. A small fan for gentle air movement prevents mold without speeding drying.

The Cure

After 10-14 days of hang drying, when stems snap rather than bend and buds feel dry on the surface but slightly springy at the core, the flowers move into cure jars. Glass mason jars, 1-quart size, filled approximately 70% full, work as the standard. Jars store in a cool, dark space (a closet or cabinet away from light and heat).

The jar burping schedule: open each jar briefly once or twice daily for the first week, then once daily for the second week, then every 2-3 days through week 4. The burp releases accumulated moisture, prevents mold, and allows slow chemical changes (terpene development, chlorophyll breakdown, cannabinoid maturation) to proceed evenly. Two-ounce humidity packs (Boveda or similar) in each jar help stabilize internal humidity; 58% or 62% RH packs are the two common options.

When to Start the Cure

The transition from hang-dry to jar is judgment-based. Too soon (flowers too wet) and mold risks rise in the jar. Too late (flowers too dry) and the cure can't do its work. The stem-snap test is the standard: small stems should snap cleanly rather than bending. A hygrometer inside a test jar with sample flowers can also confirm internal moisture is around 60-65% before committing the whole harvest.

Finished-Flower Storage

After 3-4 weeks of cure, flower is ready for long-term storage. Keep the mason jars sealed with humidity packs, stored cool and dark. Properly cured Montana home flower can hold quality for 6-12 months. The 2-plant recreational harvest yield — typically 2-4 ounces per plant depending on strain and grower experience — is enough for a year of personal consumption for most adults 21+ without any need for commercial-scale storage solutions.

The Trim Question

Wet-trim vs. dry-trim is a style question. Wet-trim (immediately after harvest) is faster and produces a cleaner visual flower. Dry-trim (after 5-7 days of hang drying) is slower but some growers find it better preserves trichome integrity. In Montana's dry climate, wet-trim is often preferable because it removes fan leaves that would otherwise slow drying further.

Compliance, Quickly

  • 21+ only for all home-cultivation activity, including harvest and cure
  • Verify licensed status via the Montana Department of Revenue Cannabis Control Division at mtrevenue.gov/cannabis/
  • 2 mature + 2 seedlings (recreational); 4 + 4 (medical)
  • No sale of home-grown cannabis; gifting under social-sharing rules only
  • No consumption in public spaces regardless of where the flower was grown and cured

Where to Go Next

*This is editorial, not legal advice. Verify current Montana cannabis laws at mtrevenue.gov/cannabis/.*