ProfessorPangloss
Amateur Kentuckian
Can anyone comment on the susceptibility of tobacco to waterborne disease from having wet foliage? In commercial nursery settings, we would take the sprinkler heads off the water wands and try to water the soil in the pots directly, because some plants (geraniums, begonias, and zinnias in particular) will rot if they keep wet foliage. On the flipside of that, we would purposely wet the petunias, millionbells, ferns, and some others with fertilizer every week or so, provided it was early in the morning and they would dry off before nightfall. I've always thought that tomatoes, peppers, and eggplants would become diseased if kept wet, and since they and tobacco are all nightshades...
So in my own vegetable and ornamental gardening, I've never used sprinklers, due to evaporative loss (which accounts for a ridiculous amount of water) and disease concerns. I'm a fan of soaker hoses deployed under the mulch, or a water wand with the head taken off to apply the water right to the base of the plants. How do those practices work for tobacco?
So in my own vegetable and ornamental gardening, I've never used sprinklers, due to evaporative loss (which accounts for a ridiculous amount of water) and disease concerns. I'm a fan of soaker hoses deployed under the mulch, or a water wand with the head taken off to apply the water right to the base of the plants. How do those practices work for tobacco?