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Any use for flower heads?

OakBayou

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Aug 31, 2023
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Madison, WI
I have an abundance of flower heads and ripe and unripe seed pods from my Yenidje oriental and Aztec rustica. Anyone do anything with them? I don't need to collect any seed right now, I have enough for several more seasons kept in good conditions.
I'm considering steeping them in hot water like a tea to make an insecticide, even though I don't really need one right now other than some aphids on my remaining Perique plants. There are lots of predator insects around the garden and it's only on one plant, so I'm likely to leave them be for now, but I hate to waste all this plant material. I suppose I could experiment and see if a nicotine tea might kill off some of the invasive jumping worms that have infested my front yard flower beds.
 

deluxestogie

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Buffalo Bird Woman's elders used to fry the blossoms of their tobacco plants in bear grease, then smoke them.


I have tried many different ways to utilize the dried blossoms (though not by frying in bear grease), and found them to be relatively flavorless, burn poorly, and blend poorly with shredded leaf. I undertook these trials with separate batches of dried blossoms from a half-dozen different tobacco varieties. They are a cute idea, but simply not worth the fuss.

Pests of tobacco are not intimidated by spraying on more nicotine. Making potions from tobacco is dangerous and potentially lethal. We won't discuss that on this forum.

Bob
 

OakBayou

Active Member
Joined
Aug 31, 2023
Messages
44
Points
33
Location
Madison, WI
Buffalo Bird Woman's elders used to fry the blossoms of their tobacco plants in bear grease, then smoke them.


I have tried many different ways to utilize the dried blossoms (though not by frying in bear grease), and found them to be relatively flavorless, burn poorly, and blend poorly with shredded leaf. I undertook these trials with separate batches of dried blossoms from a half-dozen different tobacco varieties. They are a cute idea, but simply not worth the fuss.

Pests of tobacco are not intimidated by spraying on more nicotine. Making potions from tobacco is dangerous and potentially lethal. We won't discuss that on this forum.

Bob
An excellent book and an excellent thread. Thank you.
 

Old Gasman

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Feb 28, 2022
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Norfolk (U.K not Virginia)
Buffalo Bird Woman's elders used to fry the blossoms of their tobacco plants in bear grease, then smoke them.


I have tried many different ways to utilize the dried blossoms (though not by frying in bear grease), and found them to be relatively flavorless, burn poorly, and blend poorly with shredded leaf. I undertook these trials with separate batches of dried blossoms from a half-dozen different tobacco varieties. They are a cute idea, but simply not worth the fuss.

Pests of tobacco are not intimidated by spraying on more nicotine. Making potions from tobacco is dangerous and potentially lethal. We won't discuss that on this forum.

Bob
First catch your bear.
 
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