Tobaccofieldsforever
Well-Known Member
Ha, I can see how it would remind someone of that.
Ha, I can see how it would remind someone of that.
The classic question: when to top? In the past, I have waited until anywhere from 10 to 50% of plants have at least one open blossom but watching YouTube videos got me thinking. Is there any harm in topping a plant as soon as you see it producing buds (days to weeks before any blossoms may open)? My thought was commercial farmers wait this long to top (until at least 10% of plants have an open blossom) because there is a better chance all plants will have buds to top at this point, reducing the possibility of having to go through and too again. If I top as soon as I see any buds will I be sacrificing anything? I was thinking it would be beneficial because all the energy the plant would have put into this flowers/buds will go to leaf maturation but I know there are different chemicals at play during this stage of development…any ideas?
Edit: I have heard a lower leaf count being a result of early topping. Is this due to the fact that many immature leaves can be removed with the bud head? What if I reach in between all those immature leaves and literally only remove the bud head and no surround ding leaves, will those “tips” grow to full size like they may have if the bud head was left longer?

Your leaf count will be at the level you top. [You get to count.] When the leaves are all scrunched together, I find it difficult to count them from the bottom. Once a bud stalk has lengthened, then I decide on the level at which to top, based on the visual position down from the crowsfoot.I have heard a lower leaf count being a result of early topping.
The tobacco looks wonderful!
Bob
Thank you both!The plants exploded upwards! My compliments to the gardener. That's some nice hoe work.
Reset at least 50 plants. Lost 1 completely (uprooted) and my Costello bud bag was snapped clean off! I have topped most of that variety other than a couple “runts” that were too far behind. I’m not crazy about saving seed from plants with such characteristics but I guess I have no choice now. Is there any problem with letting a sucker grow out on my intended bag plant and bagging that? This is new territory for me…never lost a bud bag before.Oh good, another severe thunderstorm with high winds. I wonder how many plants I will be resetting this time (about 10ish last time)
Ideally, you collect seed from seed pods that have browned on the plant. If the snapped-off bud bag has fully formed seed pods, then you may get sufficient seed (lower germination rate) for your needs, just by hanging it indoors to complete drying, and saving lots of seeds. Allowing a new sucker to produce seed will work, if you have enough time before first frost.Is there any problem with letting a sucker grow out on my intended bag plant and bagging that? This is new territory for me…never lost a bud bag before.


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