dubhelix
Well-Known Member
This is my first year growing, and my first year gardening in central Virginia. I have acquired seed for the following varieties, with the goal of producing snus and pipe tobacco, and perhaps a few cigars.
Madole
Small Stalk Black Mammoth
Shirey
Bolivian Criollo Black
Wisconsin 901
Yellow Oronoko
Long Red
Aztec Rustica
Izmir Ozbis
Perique ( thanks Hasse!)
A-Hus (thanks Hasse!)
Perhaps I should include a good burley, as I don't think any of the above are burley (perhaps the Bolivian Criollo?). All I know about these varieties is what the seed companies had to say, plus what I've read on this forum. Special thanks to the jojjas and Hasse for advice and seeds!
I am starting 50 cells per week, the first set was Madole, planted on 2.9.14. Probably too early, but I'm eager. I'm hoping the extra deep planting trays and a "haircut" will hold the plants until my estimated planting date of 4.15.14. The seed I got from Skychaser is strong. I guess this week I'll find some tiny scissors and thin them out. Looks like I missed a cell. Oops.
The seeds are started in SureRoots cell trays, which are very deep. I think they are designed for tree starts.
I am using a 50/50 mix of peat moss and vermiculite, with a
4mm top layer of straight peat moss on top. The cells sit in 1020's, with a half inch of water in the bottom. The trays are under six 32w / 6500K T-8 fixtures. If I run out of room under the T-8's, I have a 150w HPS I could use, but it's annoying to be near. I used a soda straw cut with scissors at a sharp angle to scoop seeds from the packages and deposit them into the divots in the peat moss, it worked well.
On 2.16.14 I planted 25 cells of Yellow Oronoko and 25 of Shirey.
I have a couple of options regarding where to plant, each with some drawbacks.
-The top of the front pasture gets full sun, but is pretty much just red clay. Will tobacco grow well in Virginia Clay? Seems like folks 300 years ago managed.
-The bottom of the front pasture has nice black soil, but when it rains hard, there's running water through the middle of it. Maybe too wet? Maybe I could trench the creek and plant along side it.
-Up on the hill there's full sun, and good dirt, and no creek, but the wife would prefer me to plant in the fenced pastures.
Perhaps I'll plant a patch in each location and see what does well in different conditions.
I intend on using only organic fertilizers and pest controls if I can, any advice regarding natural soil supplements for Virginia Clay would be appreciated. I did get a pH/NPK test kit so I can get a benchmark on those levels. What happens if I do nothing to the soil? I don't know. Will deer trample tobacco? Probably. If everything goes perfectly, and I plant every variety, I'll have just over 300 plants. That's a lot of tilling, and a lot of manure if I go by my organic gardening book's recommendation. I'm thinking about marking off the plots and just tilling individual holes to conserve labor, manure and supplements. I've been saving all the ashes from my woodstove, and should have a 30 gallon trash bin full by the time it's warm/dry enough to till. I also have 20 acres of forest from which I could take leaf mulch. So much to learn, and so much to do.
Madole
Small Stalk Black Mammoth
Shirey
Bolivian Criollo Black
Wisconsin 901
Yellow Oronoko
Long Red
Aztec Rustica
Izmir Ozbis
Perique ( thanks Hasse!)
A-Hus (thanks Hasse!)
Perhaps I should include a good burley, as I don't think any of the above are burley (perhaps the Bolivian Criollo?). All I know about these varieties is what the seed companies had to say, plus what I've read on this forum. Special thanks to the jojjas and Hasse for advice and seeds!
I am starting 50 cells per week, the first set was Madole, planted on 2.9.14. Probably too early, but I'm eager. I'm hoping the extra deep planting trays and a "haircut" will hold the plants until my estimated planting date of 4.15.14. The seed I got from Skychaser is strong. I guess this week I'll find some tiny scissors and thin them out. Looks like I missed a cell. Oops.
The seeds are started in SureRoots cell trays, which are very deep. I think they are designed for tree starts.
4mm top layer of straight peat moss on top. The cells sit in 1020's, with a half inch of water in the bottom. The trays are under six 32w / 6500K T-8 fixtures. If I run out of room under the T-8's, I have a 150w HPS I could use, but it's annoying to be near. I used a soda straw cut with scissors at a sharp angle to scoop seeds from the packages and deposit them into the divots in the peat moss, it worked well.
On 2.16.14 I planted 25 cells of Yellow Oronoko and 25 of Shirey.
I have a couple of options regarding where to plant, each with some drawbacks.
-The top of the front pasture gets full sun, but is pretty much just red clay. Will tobacco grow well in Virginia Clay? Seems like folks 300 years ago managed.
-The bottom of the front pasture has nice black soil, but when it rains hard, there's running water through the middle of it. Maybe too wet? Maybe I could trench the creek and plant along side it.
-Up on the hill there's full sun, and good dirt, and no creek, but the wife would prefer me to plant in the fenced pastures.
Perhaps I'll plant a patch in each location and see what does well in different conditions.
I intend on using only organic fertilizers and pest controls if I can, any advice regarding natural soil supplements for Virginia Clay would be appreciated. I did get a pH/NPK test kit so I can get a benchmark on those levels. What happens if I do nothing to the soil? I don't know. Will deer trample tobacco? Probably. If everything goes perfectly, and I plant every variety, I'll have just over 300 plants. That's a lot of tilling, and a lot of manure if I go by my organic gardening book's recommendation. I'm thinking about marking off the plots and just tilling individual holes to conserve labor, manure and supplements. I've been saving all the ashes from my woodstove, and should have a 30 gallon trash bin full by the time it's warm/dry enough to till. I also have 20 acres of forest from which I could take leaf mulch. So much to learn, and so much to do.