The two main methods of microbial retting are water retting and dew (field) retting. In water retting, plant stems (e.g.,
flax) are harvested and submerged in natural bodies of water. While underwater,
anaerobic bacteria degrade the cementing compounds, typically
pectin, allowing the bast fibres to separate from the woody tissues, called shive, in the stem. The stems are then removed from the water and dried by the sun before being cleaned to remove the shive. As the bacterial process was somewhat understood at the time of water retting's greatest popularity, practitioners were able to develop improvements to the process, including controlling the temperature of the water by submerging the stalks in contained tanks or pits, selecting for better microbial variety, and aerating the containers to reduce the smell and pollution generated by the bacterial action. Water retted fibers are high quality, though the process produces more pollution than dew retting, has higher production costs, and the smell from
anaerobic digestion lingers in the fibers. It is also possible to over- and under-rett: over-retting results from
cellulase weakening the cellulose bast fibers; under-retting results in poor separation of the fibers and shive, requiring more labor to remove the shive. ==Dew retting==