pawpaw
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I just received Marijuana Botany by R.C. Clarke. I was hoping it would detail the chemistry of drying and curing. From the book:
Neither decarboxilation nor isomerzaion requires oxygen. Yet the author goes on to say that the opening and closing of curing jars provides fresh air needed for curing.
One way to make sense of this is to guess that chlorophyl undergoes oxidation in the curing process. If this were the case, however, one would expect a significant lose of THC as well, unless chlorophyl was much more prone to oxidation than THC. Chlorophyl A does have a long chain extending from its main body which suggests possible greater fragility but that is hardly conclusive. A useful experiment would be to jar cure some floral clusters and place a fresh oxygen absorber packet in the jar each time it is opened during curing, and then comparatively smoke test it. Unfortunately I have no immediate prospects of being able to run such an experiment. Can anyone here per persuaded to give it a go?
Another way to make sense is to assume that anaerobic bacteria are a substantially greater problem than aerobic ones.
In either case, if you are using impermeable packaging techniques for storage, oxygen absorbers would seem worth trying if your goal is to always smoke the very best.
Decarboxylation : hxxp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decarboxylation
Isomerization : hxxp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isomerization
oxygen absorber source : hxxp://www.amazon.com/50-Absorbers-Dehydrated-Emergency-Storage/dp/B003F960Z2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1310840703&sr=8-1
A floral cluster is not dead after harvest anymore than an apple is. Certain
metabolic activities continue for some time. … During this time cannabinoid
acids decarboxilate into the psychoactive cannabinoids and terpenes isomerize to
create new polyterpenes with tastes and aromas different from fresh floral
clusters.
Neither decarboxilation nor isomerzaion requires oxygen. Yet the author goes on to say that the opening and closing of curing jars provides fresh air needed for curing.
One way to make sense of this is to guess that chlorophyl undergoes oxidation in the curing process. If this were the case, however, one would expect a significant lose of THC as well, unless chlorophyl was much more prone to oxidation than THC. Chlorophyl A does have a long chain extending from its main body which suggests possible greater fragility but that is hardly conclusive. A useful experiment would be to jar cure some floral clusters and place a fresh oxygen absorber packet in the jar each time it is opened during curing, and then comparatively smoke test it. Unfortunately I have no immediate prospects of being able to run such an experiment. Can anyone here per persuaded to give it a go?
Another way to make sense is to assume that anaerobic bacteria are a substantially greater problem than aerobic ones.
In either case, if you are using impermeable packaging techniques for storage, oxygen absorbers would seem worth trying if your goal is to always smoke the very best.
Decarboxylation : hxxp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decarboxylation
Isomerization : hxxp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isomerization
oxygen absorber source : hxxp://www.amazon.com/50-Absorbers-Dehydrated-Emergency-Storage/dp/B003F960Z2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1310840703&sr=8-1