Tobaccofieldsforever 2023 Grow Log

Tobaccofieldsforever

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Ravenna, Ohio
My mobile sun curing station. This is just what I can fit on this particular apparatus. There’s a lot of other tobacco I leave out on the fence. There’s too much of it to move during storms (big one last night, 70mph winds) so I just try to bring any brown leaf inside.51180FC4-3570-4A65-89A0-DAACBDBF3489.jpeg
Edit: when I say “move” I am not referring to this station. This is wheeled inside the barn every night or storm. I mean move off of the fence…
 
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Tobaccofieldsforever

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My revelation regarding uniform flue-curing came when I realized that a single batch needed to be not only the same variety, but the same priming level. This is because leaf from higher on the stalk always requires a longer yellowing phase than lower leaf.

Bob
I thought I could get away with moving into the wilting phase with about 3/4 to4/5 yellowing but , at least with African red, any green left coming out of yellowing will remain. I was trying to avoid brown leaf and not over yellow…this is how we learn I guess. Right now I am cheating a bit and trying something new. I have a fully yellowed batch (yellowed in wrapped stacks) that I will put almost immediately into wilting stage. I’m giving it a couple/few hours at yellowing temps to hopefully acclimate…
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

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Is the stem drying phase of flue curing (≈160°F) done when the stems are completely dry or is it important to leave the batch InFor a certain amount of time? I have read things saying the 160ish kills some component of the lamina. I am asking because the hygrometer reading on my current batch is indicative of fully dried leaf and stems but I am only about 5 or 6 hours into the stem drying phase. I usually let the phase reach 24 hours before removing…
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

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Batch #3…success!! There are some other leaves that can be seen on the left (Costello). Those came out ok, kind of like a red leaf flue cure. 9698EDC9-A409-4C65-8BB5-8C9E04CEAD7D.jpegThe main leaf I flue cured was African red though and I am very happy with the results!! Now I know how to get flue cured leaf from my chamber! Any remaining green does come out in the sun…a good trick to know!
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

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Joined
Apr 12, 2021
Messages
691
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Location
Ravenna, Ohio
More TRSV. Should I be concerned about the future crops I may grow here? I know very little and there seems to be very little documentation about this particular virus…A9B86CD0-6097-4294-A581-AE134DB59F6A.jpeg
Edit: I am pretty much done harvesting this season. This is on Prilep regrowth that I was planning on harvesting…hence the atrocious amount of weeds…haha!
 
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deluxestogie

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near Blacksburg, VA
About the virus parade: I've had over a half-dozen different, identifiable virus species infect some of my tobacco over the years (plus a few I could not identify). Most are transmitted very early in the season, by insect vectors. Some of the virus infections are localized to one or a few leaves of a plant, though most tobacco viruses will spread somewhat into the stalk and other leaves on that stalk (including subsequent suckers). Although I have occasionally ripped out the entire plant, when a worrisome virus first appeared (that is sometimes prudent for growers of acres of tobacco), I have far more often just ignored the viruses. Year-by-year, the same viruses seldom reappear—different weather conditions for the transmitting insects.

Ideally, tobacco is rotated from bed to bed (field to field) each new growing season, allowing 1 or 2 years of non-solanaceous plants to grow in the previous tobacco bed. But for a home-grower, that may not be practical. Luckily, for a home-grower, the stakes are much lower than those of a commercial grower. I have failed to diligently rotate my tobacco beds for the last 5 or 6 seasons, yet notice no increase of tobacco disease. I attribute this "luck" to the tiny scale of home-growing, when compared to the mass effect of commercial acreage.

Short Version: I would ignore any viral infections that don't appear to spread to neighboring plants. They were infected by early-season insects.

Bob
 
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