Since I just finished 'mowing' 4 plants of my own, it dawned on me to start a discussion on harvesting, what we do with our flowers after we grow them.
PLEASE, keep it light and informitive. To quote an old saying, "there's more than one way to skin a cat".
And since there are many ways to mow and manicure the flowers we grow, we'll each have a personal favorite way of finishing and curing. I must admit that I still get a giggle out of reading a noobs post about how there recently harvested and hung flowers now smell like a fresh cut lawn.
How do ya think it got the slang name "grass"?
Now you know!!!

My manicuring depends on what the end product will be. If I'm planning on helping others with gifted flowers, then it gets hand/sissor and/or machine trimmed. I do like the way my spin trimmer does the job for a lot of trimming. I could do it all in the machine, but I still do the top colas by hand. (old habbits are hard to break) I also trim while fresh cut. I've tried dry manicuring and it just wasn't for me. Probably because I'm left handed.
Perhaps someone here has a dry mowing technic to share? I'm all ears... 

If I'm mowing my flowers for oil and the tube, it is just a hand trimming of everything that I can see a petiole on the leaf. If it is an extreemly trichome laden leaf, I'll just trim the tips off, without the trichomes, and dry it.
How long do you cure your flowers? I love the differant smells of the harvest as it dries and cures. It goes from that smell of sweet live flowers to the smell of fresh cut grass. Then the grass smell dissapates and it's original live flower aromas return as it cures in your jar, bag or.....
Open for discussion and your ideas and prefferances!
For anyone looking at one of these spin trimmers to mow their buds with, I highly recomend it. And if you like making hash, you'll LOVE what comes out of the clippings.
Here are my top colas hanging after hand trimming and the buds I'll be machine mowing.







...and the machines finished, dried flowers.


PLEASE, keep it light and informitive. To quote an old saying, "there's more than one way to skin a cat".
And since there are many ways to mow and manicure the flowers we grow, we'll each have a personal favorite way of finishing and curing. I must admit that I still get a giggle out of reading a noobs post about how there recently harvested and hung flowers now smell like a fresh cut lawn.

Now you know!!!

My manicuring depends on what the end product will be. If I'm planning on helping others with gifted flowers, then it gets hand/sissor and/or machine trimmed. I do like the way my spin trimmer does the job for a lot of trimming. I could do it all in the machine, but I still do the top colas by hand. (old habbits are hard to break) I also trim while fresh cut. I've tried dry manicuring and it just wasn't for me. Probably because I'm left handed.



If I'm mowing my flowers for oil and the tube, it is just a hand trimming of everything that I can see a petiole on the leaf. If it is an extreemly trichome laden leaf, I'll just trim the tips off, without the trichomes, and dry it.
How long do you cure your flowers? I love the differant smells of the harvest as it dries and cures. It goes from that smell of sweet live flowers to the smell of fresh cut grass. Then the grass smell dissapates and it's original live flower aromas return as it cures in your jar, bag or.....
Open for discussion and your ideas and prefferances!
For anyone looking at one of these spin trimmers to mow their buds with, I highly recomend it. And if you like making hash, you'll LOVE what comes out of the clippings.
Here are my top colas hanging after hand trimming and the buds I'll be machine mowing.






...and the machines finished, dried flowers.

