So by your definition and algebra you are making it stronger because it has less plant material after water curing, thus giving it a larger ratio of THC to plant material?

In my world that's not an increase in potency of any kind, it's an increase in concentration. That's some verbage I can get behind.

In the future, try to see a little beyond your own ego before you lay out your condescending responses. I didn't need a lesson in algebra, nor your remark about biology, however I think you could use one in experiment design. There appears to be quite a bit of assumption and not much quantitative data to support you.

Maybe the next guy will kneel before your awesome brainpower, but most around here are skeptical and believe it or not fairly well educated. You come out of left field with this idea and bark at the first person to question it? Maybe better leave the "groundbreaking" (lmfao) research to someone with a little more PR experience and a stiffer backbone:thumbsup:
irydyum Reviewed by irydyum on . Watercuring for stronger, tasteless and odorless ABV buds this was originally shared on another forum, but it was, in my opinion, a little too "Orwellian" for a marijuana-related forum there so i moved here to share my information instead. anyway, this is the result of an experiment to raise the quality of ABV buds by watercuring - it was successful. the ABV buds were ground up from the start, placed in a coffee filter, sealed and immersed in distilled water for 5 days. water was changed on average once a day, occasionally twice a day. the Rating: 5