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Deluxestogie Grow Log 2022

deluxestogie

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I guess I will just wait longer…

If it's not currently mud, I would go ahead and plant. So long as your forecast does not include a frost warning or multi-day flooding, chances are good that the transplants will be fine. I seldom have perfect planting conditions. I usually end up with presentable tobacco. (Although my address says, "Virginia", I'm not in tobacco country. I'm above the Blue Ridge.) Mother Nature never smiles. She always smirks.

Today will be our first 90°F day. I walked the tobacco beds this morning. All of the tobacco appeared bedraggled, but in a perky sort of way. I decided not to drag out the hose to water them.

Bob
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

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Ravenna, Ohio
If it's not currently mud, I would go ahead and plant. So long as your forecast does not include a frost warning or multi-day flooding, chances are good that the transplants will be fine. I seldom have perfect planting conditions. I usually end up with presentable tobacco. (Although my address says, "Virginia", I'm not in tobacco country. I'm above the Blue Ridge.) Mother Nature never smiles. She always smirks.

Today will be our first 90°F day. I walked the tobacco beds this morning. All of the tobacco appeared bedraggled, but in a perky sort of way. I decided not to drag out the hose to water them.

Bob
I’m currently planting as I type this. Real quick…what’s the spacing on orientals supposed to be? (Not American spacing)
 

deluxestogie

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Garden20220522_6358_entireGarden_700.jpg


This morning, I walked the garden. Veggie seeds were germinating, my peas had reached the top of their fence circle, and all of my tobacco plants were smiling. Even the two tomato plants that one of my critter neighbors had ripped to pieces had put out new suckers from their barren vine stalks. If you're a plant here, life is good. The night temps have stayed at or above 60°F, with the day temps in the 80s. And there has been intermittent rain, with bright sunshine in between. Of course, with warmth and rain come germinating weed and grass seeds.

A brief shower has just passed. At the moment, I'm sitting on my front porch, viewing a double rainbow to the East. Birds are chirping, and my belly is full. For dinner I made a cheese omelet, filled with fried asparagus chunks and oozing cheese. I topped it with fruit salad. (In my household, there is a long tradition of randomly ignoring traditions when preparing food. No one complains!)

Garden20220522_6357_MachuPicchu_peas_bed_600.jpg


Some rain is expected most days this week.

Bob
 

deluxestogie

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My tobacco is satisfactory today, and most of my veggie seeds have germinated in their beds. On returning to the house, via my front yard, I passed my overgrown, 24 year old Mugo Pine. They don't grow upward, but only outward, after reaching about 3 feet in height. (My gravel driveway has a somewhat recent bend added, to avoid scratching my car door on the Mugo.) I heard singing coming from within it. The music sounded familiar, but the lyrics were not quite as I recalled them. Curious, I jotted down what I heard:

To dream the impossible dream
To fight the unbeatable foe
To bear with unbearable sorrow
To climb where the rest dare not go
To right the un-rightable wrong
To smirk at complaints from afar
To try when our stems are too weary
To grow an unreachable weed
This is my quest,
To follow the sun
No matter how hopeless,
Although it is fun.
To fight for the light
Without question or pause,
To be willing to march
out of hell for a dastardly cause.
And I know if I'll only be true
To this glorious quest
That my seeds will lie peaceful and calm
When I'm laid to my rest
And our world will be better for this
And one plant, scarred but laden with seed
Still strove with its last ounce of courage
To fight the unbeatable foe
To grow an unreachable weed
[with apologies to Leigh Mitch and Darion Joseph]

Galium_aparine_sketch.jpg

Leaning on a trekking pole in one hand, I spent nearly a half-hour pulling up scores of this awful weed, which had managed to hide near the center of the Mugo Pine—far away from mower blades. I tossed the uprooted weeds in every direction. When I was done, and turned to head for my front porch, a cluster of the angry, two and three-foot long weeds tripped me, resulting in a muddy left knee of my jeans.

Bob
 

deluxestogie

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My 2" of torrential thunderstorms last night turned out to be about 1¼" of steady rain. [There was a tornado 60 or so miles to my northeast.] Good soaking here. I have two or three Corojo 99 plants in the lowest beds in the garden that look a bit drowned, but they're on their own.

Bob
 

deluxestogie

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This afternoon, following another ½" of rain last night, I waited for the sun to dry the yard a bit, then squished my way out to visit the garden. Other than a few veggie seeds that have refused to even germinate (e.g. all the Golden Scallop squash, and half my small bed of sweet corn), everything looks excellent. Well, not really excellent, but surprisingly good. I could no longer tell which of my Corojo 99 plants had survived their near-drowning episode from the previous day.

Due to my overweening vanity, I'll wait until the lawn is dry enough to mow, then post some photos. (Mowed grass makes the tobacco look better and taller!)

Bob
 

deluxestogie

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Garden20220529_6359_entireGarden_700.jpg


The yard was still too soggy to mow today. Maybe tomorrow. Then I need to weed everything.

Garden20220529_6360_Corojo99_bed3_400.jpg


Garden20220529_6361_Corojo99_bed2_400.jpg


Garden20220529_6362_MachuPicchu_bed_500.jpg


Garden20220529_6363_Corojo99_Pieate_bed_500.jpg


Garden20220529_6364_Ainaro_bed_300.jpg


Of my 8 Ainaro, 1 has been replaced, yet was killed again, probably by a combination of mole undermining and slug munching. I'll go with 7. The Prilep is awfully scraggly, even though planted deep.

Garden20220529_6365_Prilep66_9_7_bed_400.jpg


As you can plainly see, I need to replace my broken hoe, and do some serious weed removal. My impression is that "no-till" presents me with its own set of problems, if I am unwilling to either mulch the tobacco far more heavily than I believe is wise for them (given the soil and above ground pests that dense mulch promotes), or spray the beds with herbicide closer to transplant date than I feel comfortable doing. Next season will be back to tilling the beds.

And, to fill my spare time, my curing shed is still holding a lot of last year's crop.

Garden20220529_6366_curingShed_600.jpg


Bob
 

deluxestogie

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Garden20220530_6367_GoldenBackedSnipeFly_600.jpg


This beautiful insect landed on the molding, alongside the door handle of my front storm door. I waved my hand at it to shoo it away, so it would not fly inside. But it was unimpressed, and remained there. I grasped it by one wing, and flicked it into the yard. Twenty minutes later, it appeared on the cement floor of the front porch, and just sat there.

It is not bothered by my close inspection, the proximity of a ruler and camera with flash, or even the storm door swinging open just above its head. It just sits there, tilted upward on its stilt legs. They are poor-flying predators of aphids and other small insects. Yay! They don't bite people. In fact, they seem to ignore people completely, judging from my encounter today. I understand that they prefer damp woodlands to dry front porches, but this one has made himself right at home here.

Bob
 

skychaser

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Below is a better view of the so-called "Pieate Cuban", again, probably just Piloto Cubano.
It's not Piloto Cubano. It's similar, but different. You'll see. I'm sure it is a Piloto strain and came from the Dominican Republic. Well, almost sure. Hope so because that is what I am calling it now. It looks like the photos of the DR strain of Piloto I found. We both did a lot of researching on it last year and about all we found out for sure is that "pieate" means nothing in any language. I think you theory of very poor handwriting combined with misspelling on the original seed pack sent to Don is correct. Too bad the guy who originally grew it isn't around anymore so we could ask him where he got it.

My hopeful bag seamstress is in Texas right now but gets back on Wednesday. I'm gonna lean on her hard and dangle some money at her to get those bags made when she gets back. I haven't forgot our deal. And I have 500+ that need restitching. You will be bagging your Corojo 99 before I finish planting mine the way this year is going. Coldest crappiest spring ever here. But it's improving some and planting begins this weekend. rain or shine. Only 32 strains of 40 plants each this year. Shouldn't take long. yah....
 

deluxestogie

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The only Piloto Cubano seed that I am aware of coming into our (the forum members') hands was acquired by @ChinaVoodoo, then shared with me and others. It's origin was a failed tobacco plantation venture in Puerto Rico.

[To my knowledge, no Piloto Cubano seed was available in that time frame from any seed vendors in Europe or the US.]

That original seed was not genetically pure. My early plantings of it revealed a number of noticeably different phenotypes. From those, I selected seed from the examples that consistently grew the broadest leaves.

In my subsequent plantings, these typically grew to over 7 feet tall, and sometimes close to 9 feet tall (here at my humble magnetic declination). Since the FTT seedbank acquisition of "Pieate" designated seed did not come from me, it is most likely the spawn of a randomly selected plant from that early, impure seed.

Garden20170616_2727_PilotoCubano_bed_400.jpg

2016

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2018

Garden20180703_3630_PilotoCubanoPR_bed_600.jpg

2018

Garden20220530_6369_Pieate_bed_600.jpg

2022

Bob
 

deluxestogie

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Sophie's Choice: Home Tobacco Growers' Edition

I still had 16 beautiful, well developed seedlings ready for transplant. Their fate was to be abandoned to die. I decided that I would pot one more plant. Just one more. Who lives? Who dies? I loved them all equally. [Well, the "Pieate" maybe not quite as much as the others.]

Garden20220531_6370_MachuPicchu_potted02_600.jpg


I decided to reunite one more Machu Picchu Havana with an older sibling. To show my sincerity, I potted it in a "Value-Size", cheap coffee can. It got its own, personal sprinkle of low-chlorine 10-10-10, and a dribble of imidacloprid. The can, of course, has a bunch of nail holes poked through the metal bottom.

Garden20220531_6371_MachuPicchu_potted01_600.jpg


Now I have two potted tobacco plants to worry over when the wind picks up.

Bob
 

deluxestogie

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I find it remarkably quieting to sit out on my front porch in the early morning, sipping coffee, puffing a cigar, and watching a small bunny graze the lawn. Only 7 feet in front of me, I see the early bird (in this case, a familiar, gray cat bird) browse the dewy grass, and actually catch the worm. A young, cucumber vine dangles from my hanging pot, wagging in the gentle breeze.

Bob
 

deluxestogie

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Garden20220604_6375_MachuPicchu_pottedComparison_600.jpg


These two Machu Picchu Havana plants were germinated at the same time, and transferred to adjacent cells in their (48-cell) 1020 tray at the same time. Although their current pots are of a different size, the "smaller" pot is not yet limiting growth. The later plant transferred to its pot is actually slightly taller than the larger-leaf plant. The differences are apparently due to:
  1. spending more time in a tiny 1020 tray cell insert
  2. spending more time in sunlight that was somewhat filtered by a clear glass window
The later transplant experienced overall warmer night temperatures, yet is still smaller.

Bob
 
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