CHRONICLING LEGAL CANNABIS IN MINNESOTA
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CHRONICLING LEGAL
CANNABIS IN MINNESOTA
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In this week’s Nuggets: We discuss humidity control for storing cannabis with Boveda; tips for drying and curing homegrown cannabis; another grow operation seeks public funding on the Iron Range; and Ohio votes to legalize.
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THIS MINNESOTA COMPANY WANTS TO CHANGE HOW THE WORLD STORES WEED |
Many Minnesotans may be surprised to learn that a major, if ancillary, player in the national cannabis industry is headquartered in a brown building tucked away among a maze of one-way streets with color-coded names in a Minnetonka office park. Boveda got its start in the late 1990s manufacturing two-way humidity control packs — made of food-grade salts, purified water and food-safe craft paper, they either absorb or release moisture to maintain a specified humidity level — that create ideal conditions for storing cigars in humidors. The company later expanded to sell its products to the musical instrument industry.
Since 2007, however, Boveda CEO Sean Knutsen said the company has enjoyed steady growth helping businesses and consumers store cannabis flower as more states legalized marijuana for medical and recreational use.
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Boveda humidity-control packs come in a range of sizes and two humidity levels for storing cannabis, 62% for stickier flowers and 58% for those who prefer their bud more dry and crumbly. - Matt DeLong, Star Tribune
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Boveda products keep the flower at an ideal humidity level in its container, Knutsen said, creating what he calls a “monolayer,” a microscopic layer of water that surrounds the flower and protects it from degradation by air. The company maintains that the more muted smell a consumer may notice when they open a jar of cannabis flower stored with Boveda packs is actually a good thing — if you can smell terpenes (the volatile compounds that produce the flower’s unique aroma), the argument goes, that means they are evaporating and are no longer stored in the flower to be enjoyed later when it is ground and consumed. Humidity control also helps cannabis cultivators and retail stores prevent the evaporation of water weight — as well as revenue — from their flower.
Nuggets visited Boveda’s offices last week. We also caught a presentation by the company’s head of research and development, Brian Rice, on how homegrowers should dry and cure their crop on Monday. More on that in a minute.
Did you miss last week’s Nuggets? Read it here.
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Second company seeks state money to grow cannabis on Iron Range (MinnPost) - Read more.
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Olmsted County bans smoking and vaping marijuana in public places (Bring Me The News) - Read more.
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Smoking cannabis raises risk of heart attack, heart failure and stroke, studies say (CNN) - Read more.
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Ohio votes to legalize marijuana for recreational use (Associated Press) - Read more.
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Talk to us! Send feedback on this newsletter, events, questions, story tips or new feature ideas to nuggets@startribune.com.
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Dec. 3: Concentrating on Concentrates - "Learn everything you need to know to turn your homegrown flower into professional-grade concentrates, all legally and at home!" Presented by Solventless Minnesota and Minnesota Cannabis College. 4 p.m. The Wilderness, 1010 W. Lake St., Minneapolis. More info and registration.
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Dustin from Le Sueur shared this shot of frosty flowers from his home grow.
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Homegrowers, show off your plants! Share your best photo with us by clicking the button below or tag us on Instagram with #stribnuggets and we'll publish one each week in Nuggets. By submitting a photo you affirm that you own the rights to it and you are granting permission to the Star Tribune to publish it on its platforms.
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| TIPS FOR DRYING AND CURING HOMEGROWN CANNABIS |
It’s been more than three months since Minnesota legalized recreational marijuana, allowing those 21 or older to cultivate up to eight plants (with no more than four being mature and flowering at once) at their homes. That means many homegrowers who celebrated their newfound freedom by planting seeds or clones on or around Aug. 1 are beginning to harvest their plants.
Minnesota Cannabis College offered a class Monday evening at the Wilderness coworking space in Minneapolis to teach new growers about an often-overlooked part of the cultivation process: drying and curing. Drying aims to reduce moisture levels within the flower to prevent mold and allow chlorophyll to break down with minimal degradation of the plant’s cannabinoids, terpenes and flavonoids. Curing is necessary to preserve the ideal amount of moisture along with the flower’s flavor, aroma and potency. Many cultivators regard drying and curing as one of the most important parts of the growing process that can make or break your final product.
Leading the discussion were Rice, from Boveda, and Matt Robidou, a self-described “trichome farmer,” University of Minnesota agroecology student and founder of Raiden Labs.
Here are some tips from their talk. You can watch the whole thing here.
Decide how you want to hang your plants
Once your plants have been cut down, you’ll want to hang them upside down, ideally in a controlled environment. You have several options for how to hang plants. The one you choose will depend on your personal setup and needs.
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Whole plant: This will allow the plant to dry very slowly, which is good for preserving the flower’s flavor, aroma and potency, but it could create pockets with inadequate air flow and risk the formation of mold if the drying process takes too long.
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“V” branches: Break down the plant into several smaller pieces so that joints where branches meet form a “V” shape from which they can hang from a coat hanger. This will allow for slightly faster drying and less mold risk.
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Individual branches: Just like it sounds, this involves cutting and hanging each branch individually. This will allow the flower to dry faster than the other methods, but risks over-drying and losing more of the compounds responsible for the plant’s taste and aroma.
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Bucking: The least preferable method of drying, bucking means removing all of the flowers from the branches and laying them in a single layer on a grate. It is the fastest way to dry, but risks degrading the quality of the flower by over-drying.
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Dial in your environment
Whether you’re drying in your grow tent, a basement or a room or closet in your home, you’ll need to maintain a consistent environment for best results. Some targets to aim for include:
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The drying process should take a total of seven to 14 days. If you detect a grassy smell after a few days of drying, don’t panic. That’s the chlorophyll breaking down and off-gassing.
- The ideal temperature range for drying is 60 to 70 degrees.
- Plants should hang in darkness to prevent the breakdown of cannabinoids.
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There should be indirect airflow in your drying space to prevent mold. Point a fan away from the plants to keep the air moving gently without blowing directly on them.
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Recognize when the flowers are dry enough
The stems holding the flowers (i.e., not the thickest branches) should make an audible snapping sound when you bend them. Buds should be slightly spongy but not crispy to the touch, and leaves should be crunchy. The aroma of the flower may be diminished, but it should return after it is placed in containers.
Choose the right container for curing your dried flower
Containers should be airtight and watertight, like canning jars or 5-gallon buckets for large harvests. Store your container away from direct light and warm temperatures. You can add an inexpensive hygrometer (a small device that measures humidity) to keep an eye on conditions inside your container.
You may need to “burp” your container
“Burping” simply means opening and closing the container to allow for air exchange inside the container. An essential step to properly cure cannabis, burping lets any remaining chlorophyll, excess moisture or other undesirable compounds escape. Rice suggested rotating your container to avoid compression of the buds and burping daily until any grassy smells dissipate and the terpenes again dominate the aroma. However, if you dried your cannabis too quickly and allowed terpenes to evaporate, the grassy smell may not go away. You should also burp if humidity levels in the container are too high, to prevent mold.
The curing process may take a couple of weeks or a couple of months. It’s really up to your personal preference to decide when your cannabis is ready. You should sample your flower along the way to learn how it changes over time, Rice said. The same container used for curing can also be used for long-term storage. If you choose to use a humidity control pack, which Rice said is critical for maintaining the quality of your cured cannabis in long-term storage, add it to the container after the burping process is complete.
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How did Boveda get its start?
There are six original founders of Boveda, all from Minneapolis-St. Paul. With the invention of our product, we knew right away that it transcended multiple industries. But the first one was the premium cigar industry. If you remember the cigar boom back in the mid- to late-90s, there was a cabinet maker in Minnesota that made humidors but couldn’t hold the humidity. A friend of his, Dr. Albert Saari, who had just retired from General Mills, had this idea of controlling humidity in a disposable packet form that this individual could use in their humidors. We could control humidity anywhere from 11% to 95% relative humidity. Cigars are in a narrow range in the mid- to upper-60s up to even 70-72%. But we had the ability to control moisture through the whole spectrum.
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It was my love for cigars, and a guy I went to college with, Tim Swail, his love for cigars that really brought us together. The cabinet maker was on the Joe Soucheray radio show. We had him make us a humidor. When he was done I invited him over to my house for cigars and dinner with some friends. That’s when he showed us this technology that was just a prototype that Dr. Saari and Bob Esse had put together for him for his humidors. Shortly thereafter, we ended up forming a corporation in July 1997.
How did the idea to expand into cannabis come about?
In the late 1990s, California went legal for medical marijuana. An individual approached us back in late 2006 from California who wanted to distribute our product. He formed a corporation and became a distributor for herbal medicine for that market. That was our first entry to the legalized protection of cannabis. But this individual had been in the illegal distribution side back in the ‘70s and ‘80s. He approached us because they would take in cannabis, repackage it for distribution and they would lose hundreds of thousands of dollars because by the time it goes out to market, the weight was always evaporating. So he saw an opportunity.
How many employees does Boveda have now?
We have 70 employees, roughly half in Minnesota and half outside.
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One of two customized "Marijuandack" chairs in Boveda's office in Minnetonka. The chairs were featured at the company's booth at the Legacy Cup cannabis festival in Minneapolis in September. - Matt DeLong, Star Tribune
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Why is humidity so important for storing cannabis?
The number one thing is microbial growth — it can’t be too high. You’re familiar with trichomes, those bulbous little things that glisten on the plant? That’s where a majority of the cannabinoids reside. They get weak when it’s dry — they get brittle, they fall off. As moisture evaporates, you are changing the composition of the flower in terms of those cannabinoids, like the terpene profile and the THC profile.
There are a lot of people who like your product, but there’s also a contingent of detractors who say Boveda packs “steal the terps” from their cannabis. What do you say to them?
There’s actually something else going on. We really sought to understand this. We come from a food science background. Ready-to-eat cereals, coffee, any of those things, if they’re stored in intermediate moisture, they stay fresher longer over time than when they’re dried down. When they’re dried down, they’re susceptible to the air. When the trichomes are exposed to air, the THC will convert to CBN. The same thing with flavonoids and terpenes. As that moisture evaporates, the terpenes evaporate too. So when cannabis is stored drier, you can smell more on the outset. In cannabis stored in an intermediate moisture [a relative humidity between 55% and 65%], you don’t smell it as much because those [terpenes] are being preserved inside the flower. You don’t smell it as much right away — until you grind it.
All Boveda does is one thing, and that’s control relative humidity with purified water vapor. We actually save the terpenes through that process — it’s holding it in the plant, which is where you want it until the time you’re ready to enjoy it.
Is the company engaged in advocacy for federal legalization?
We’re one of the founding members of the American Trade Association for Cannabis and Hemp. We have a board seat. That is the leading organization in the country for federal legalization. They work in Washington on safe banking and a number other things for federal legalization of marijuana.
Where do you see Boveda going from here?
We believe that Boveda should be everywhere flower is present. That starts from the time cannabis flower is stored to the time it’s ground and consumed. We see ourselves being a part of everything. ASTM International [formerly American Society for Testing and Materials] is an international standards board. We were one of the very first cannabis standards put into place, by 400 technical people involved in the industry to create a standard around water activity [between 55% and 65% relative humidity]. They didn’t recommend our brand but they recommended maintaining this water activity with a saturated salt solution in a sachet form, like our product. You can’t go into any room, building or house that doesn’t have standards that were ushered through the ASTM International organization.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
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Marijuana use and possession are now legal in Minnesota. Here's what to know. - Read more.
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A guide to Minnesota's new cannabis law - Read more.
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What you can and can't do with marijuana in your vehicle - Read more.
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What you need to know about cannabis crime expungement - Read more.
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Minnesota Office of Cannabis Management - Read more.
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