Keep flower in an airtight glass jar, somewhere cool and dark (around 60–70°F), at roughly 59–63% humidity — a two-way humidity pack makes this easy. Avoid plastic bags (static pulls the trichomes off) and skip the fridge and freezer. Do that and your flower stays fresh and flavorful for months. It's the same thing we do, at a bigger scale, in our vault.
You paid for fresh, terpene-rich flower — here's how to keep it that way instead of letting it dry out into harsh, flavorless crumble in a month. It comes down to controlling four things.
The four enemies of fresh flower
Everything about good storage is really about defending against these four:
- Light (especially UV) — the biggest driver of cannabinoid breakdown; it speeds the conversion of THC into the more sedating CBN.
- Heat — degrades cannabinoids and evaporates the delicate terpenes that carry aroma and flavor.
- Air / oxygen — oxidizes THC over time; lots of empty headspace in a jar speeds it up.
- Improper humidity — too wet invites mold; too dry makes buds brittle and harsh.
The ideal conditions
| Factor | Aim for | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Humidity | ~59–63% RH (55–65% range) | Below ~55% gets brittle/harsh; above ~65% risks mold |
| Temperature | Cool, ~60–70°F, and stable | Heat degrades cannabinoids and terpenes; swings cause condensation |
| Light | Dark | UV breaks down cannabinoids fastest |
| Air | Airtight, minimal headspace | Oxygen oxidizes THC over time |
The right container
Airtight glass is the gold standard — a simple mason jar does the job. Glass is non-reactive and doesn't hold static. Two things to avoid:
- Plastic bags/containers: they build up static electricity that literally pulls the trichomes — the parts that hold your cannabinoids and terpenes — right off the buds. They're also rarely fully airtight.
- The fridge and freezer: the fridge's humidity swings invite condensation and mold; the freezer makes trichomes brittle, so they snap off the moment you handle the flower. A cool, dark cabinet beats both for everyday storage.
A two-way humidity pack (Boveda, Integra Boost, and others) sits in the jar and both releases and absorbs moisture to hold a target level — usually around 62%. Drop one in a sealed jar and most of the work is done for you. Pair it with a small hygrometer if you like to verify.
How long does it last — and when is it bad?
Stored well, flower generally keeps good potency, flavor, and aroma for about six months to a year, sometimes longer. Two different things to watch for:
- Just stale (fine, just disappointing): dry, brittle, browned buds; a flat, hay-like smell; harsh smoke and a weaker effect.
- Moldy (do not consume): fuzzy white or gray patches or a powdery film (different from frosty trichomes), buds that feel damp or mushy, or a musty, mildew, or ammonia-like smell. When in doubt, throw it out.
How we keep our vault dialed in
Here's the part that connects to your jar at home. Freshness doesn't start when you buy — it starts long before. After harvest, flower is cured and then held in climate- and humidity-controlled storage. At Sunflower, our back-of-house vault is kept cool and dark and held at that same optimal humidity band — close to the 60-something-degree, ~60% range — and away from UV and excess air, right up until it reaches the sales floor.
Why we bother:
- Terpenes survive. They're the first thing to evaporate with heat and time — controlled storage protects the aroma and flavor you're paying for.
- The label stays honest. Stable, cool, dark conditions slow oxidation and THC breakdown, so what's in the jar still matches the lab report at sale.
- It's safe and consistent. Holding the right humidity prevents both mold (too wet) and harsh over-drying (too dry).
The work we do in the vault to keep flower fresh is exactly what you continue at home — an airtight glass jar, a humidity pack, and a cool dark spot. Buy it fresh from us, store it right, and that top-shelf eighth still tastes top-shelf on day 30.
Start with fresh flower
You can't store your way out of stale weed — it starts with buying fresh. Browse our vault-kept, lab-tested flower and pick it up in Williamsburg.