On this day of the Harvest Moon, the temp has remained in the low 70s, the sky is overcast, and the relative humidity high enough to handle some leaf.
The 5 stalks of Izmir-Karabaglar were removed from the line, and stripped. I tossed only 3 trashy bottom leaves and 2 tiny green top leaves. The rest is what you see.
Sounds easy. At stripping, the leaf was shriveled and replete with spiders, spider webs, earwigs, bug poop, grass clippings, and other undesirable foreign matter. After all, it had spent 3 weeks serving as a bug condo. That's what sun-curing is. So after evicting the living things, each leaf was carefully spread open, wiped clean with my fingers, then lovingly placed onto an inverted 1020 lattice tray. I separated the leaf into 3 crude batches:
- cruddy, but smokable leaf
- Bob's Finest
- stuff that still has undried stems
The somewhat flattened leaf actually looked nicer than it did on the stalk. In the end, I decided to subject all of it to a modified Knucklehead process.
I placed the 1020 tray sandwich onto a wire shelf in my enclosed back porch, in a location that receives about 1/2 day of direct sunlight. A seedling heat mat is positioned between the bottom tray and the wire shelf.
Once all the stems are dry, the Izmir-Karabaglar will await its turn in the kiln.
What Remains
Still remaining to be harvested are 3 strings of leaf: one each of Columbian Garcia, Swarr-Hibshman and very Little Dutch. I'll probably do these within the next few days. My shed if
FULL.
Bob