Enriching CO2 negates the need to ventilate with fresh air, UNLESS you are trying to control temperature.
Bringing CO2 up to 1200ppm causes dramatic growth in tomatoes and 'other' similar plants. It also helps plants' heat tolerance.
I had planned on running some tubing into a small germination tray from a small bottle of a fermenting mash, just to see if I could help them along with the slow start I see in a lot of the grow blogs.
I also notice that fertilizer is to be stopped as leaves ripen, and I wondered if a container-grown plant could be (gently) pulled from it's container, and placed in a bucket of clean water, and agitated until the dirt is pretty much gone, then place the plant in a bucket of clean water, with an air stone at the bottom, so the plant would have virtually no nutrients, and see how this would affect ripening and color curing.
In northern Germany, I should get the 90 frost free days, but, trying to color cure in the cold, dry weather I'm bound to have, is leading me down strange hypothetical routes....