Buy Tobacco Leaf Online | Whole Leaf Tobacco

Deluxestogie Grow Log 2025

deluxestogie

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
May 25, 2011
Messages
25,603
Points
113
Location
near Blacksburg, VA
There used to be about 35 acres of hilly pasture rising behind my house. Over the last half-dozen years, that has been noisily bull-dozed, trenched, flattened and filled, rinsed and repeated. Now it hosts a sparkling new First Temple of Responders (complete with an ear-splitting siren on a 30 foot pole), and is in the process of completing:
  • four baseball, softball, and multi-purpose fields with lighting (essentially duplicating what the local middle school and high schools already have)
  • a picnic shelter
  • a playground
  • restrooms
  • over 300 parking spaces
  • walking trails
The only problem is that those 35 acres used to be an integral part of my watershed. So now, my property will flood with a mere inch of rainfall. That's progress. What else could they possibly do with $13,000,000?

Bob
 

Huffen'Snuff

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 6, 2024
Messages
263
Points
93
Location
Pittsburgh
Reminiscences of a Bygone Era

Once upon a time, when a business accepted your money for the purchase of an item, they actually provided you with that item. And once upon a time, the US Postal Service actually functioned.

In December of 2024, I ordered a book from Amazon. I timed the order so that it would be delivered to my sister before her birthday in early January. Amazon took my payment. Nearly 3 weeks later, well past my sister's birthday, Amazon informed me that it was not available. They refunded my payment.

The same day (14 January 2025) that I was informed of the non-availability of the item that I had purchased, I ordered the very same book from Thriftbooks.com. That was shipped via USPS by Thriftbooks on January 16...from Phoenix, AZ. That's a 33 hour drive from me.

As of today, 29 January 2025, USPS has already managed to ship the book west from Phoenix (to Nevada), northeast (to Pennsylvania), south to Roanoke, VA (on 26 January)—a mere 30 miles from my home, yet farther south to North Carolina (today), and still has not been able to project a delivery date.

The book will likely arrive...eventually.

It is true that events never unfold in accordance with our expectations, though they may sometimes come close. Our expectations are always based on the past. [As I post this, I hear the mail delivery vehicle drive past my mailbox, without stopping.]

Bob
I just had the same issues from USPS, my package went thru Customs in Queens, NY. It went past me in Pittsburgh Pa, and goes to Indianapolis Indiana, to be sorted back to Pittsburgh, meanwhile on its first pass I70 is maybe 30 miles from my house. Screenshot_20250209-023514.png
 

deluxestogie

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
May 25, 2011
Messages
25,603
Points
113
Location
near Blacksburg, VA
Almost Nordic Skiing

My Nordic skis are still resting in the corner of a closet, alongside my Ojibwe snow shoes. And I used my twin, Komperdell trekking poles, instead of my ski poles. But strapping on my knee-high, bright blue gaiters, and cautiously walking out to my mailbox and back, through the snow, felt almost like an adventure. No slips or falls.

Bob
 

deluxestogie

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
May 25, 2011
Messages
25,603
Points
113
Location
near Blacksburg, VA
¼-inch ice encases all of my shrubs, and has persisted for over a day. The online map from my local power company says that I have no electricity. Although it is true that my lights have blinked off repeatedly for the past 24 hours, I continue to have electricity (i.e. heat and water). Outside, there are some mighty large tree branches that have fallen. Every self-respecting tree sacrificed something. The map below does not include my home, but the quilt-like color overlays are lovely.

ApCo_outageMap_20250213.jpg


There are so many outages, that even the outages have outages!

Bob
 

Huffen'Snuff

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 6, 2024
Messages
263
Points
93
Location
Pittsburgh
I removed all my dry boxes from my mini-fridge this morning, to allow them to come up to room temperature, prior to opening. It took me a mere 45 minutes to go through all the poorly indexed boxes and Ziploc bags this afternoon, to locate seed for my three planned varieties for 2025:
  • Lancaster Seedleaf
  • Havana 322
  • Prilep 66-9/7
I'll be starting the seed in early March, for planting in early May.

Bob
Wonder where Lancaster Seedleaf can be bought? I didn't see it at nwts yet
 

deluxestogie

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
May 25, 2011
Messages
25,603
Points
113
Location
near Blacksburg, VA
Ah! My first cigar in about a month. When I stepped outside, it was sunny, 59°F, though windy. As usual, when it is windy, I lit the cigar in my front doorway, with the storm door slightly cracked. I was bundled-up—neckerchief, fleece vest, fleece jacket, heavy ski cap, fingerless knit gloves, and a top layer wind jacket. The forecast said the overnight rain was over.

As soon as I sat out on the porch chair with my lit cigar, the sky darkened, the wind gusted well over 50 mph, and a heavy rain blew through. Then it stopped. This cycle repeated itself for the entire duration of a Rothschild-size cigar. The good news is that my eyes could actually look out in the distance, as a respite from sitting at the desk in my study. I could safely flick the cigar ash into the dead leaves beyond the porch, and ultimately fling the finished cigar butt into the grass (a special cigar butt grave yard).

When I came back inside, I immediately looked at that mistaken forecast graph. I noticed that a slippery, blue peak of rainfall had cleverly slid to now.

Yesterday, the lower third of my meager acre of yard was under water. Now, it is just simple flooding of the bottom of the yard. With the recent mountaintop removal behind the property (to build their huge sportsutainment venue), the total rainfall on my one acre is immediately supplemented by their 35 acres of rainfall sweeping over my back yard.

I can't complain. I've continued to have electricity while the power outages in the area have been the worst in my recollection. And the rate of restoration is the slowest I can recall. (It seems that a lot of the manual laborers who assist with power restoration have vanished in the past month.)

Bob
 

DaleB

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 23, 2023
Messages
297
Points
93
Location
Omaha, NE
It's currently 9 degrees here, and we're not forecast to see a daily high temperature in the double digits until next weekend. I've got a space heater running in the garage to keep it warm enough to go out there and have a pipe (me) or cigarette (my wife), or grab another ear of corn to keep the entertainment corps of squirrels fed.
 

DaleB

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 23, 2023
Messages
297
Points
93
Location
Omaha, NE
I'll be starting germination of this season's tobacco next week. Today, I sanitized 3 plastic 4-ounce Ball freezer jars and their lids.

Garden20250226_7509_sanitizedGerminationJars_600.jpg


Bob
Bob, a quick question. Why the sanitizing? Have they been used for tobacco before and yo're trying to avoid or kill TMV, or are there other reasons? The way I have been looking at it, the seeds are going into dirt - potting soil- that is doubtless crawling with various bacteria and fungal spores, but if there's a good reason to sanitize then I mat do it myself. Like you, I'll be starting my seeds next week.
 

deluxestogie

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
May 25, 2011
Messages
25,603
Points
113
Location
near Blacksburg, VA
These very same cups have been used for germinating tobacco for many years. The sanitation is to minimize the risk of transferring any tobacco-specific pathogens (viral, bacterial or fungal) from one season's germination to the next. Sanitizing after washing is easy to do, and seems like a reasonable precaution.

Bob
 

deluxestogie

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
May 25, 2011
Messages
25,603
Points
113
Location
near Blacksburg, VA
After an unusually bitter winter, I've once again opened my enclosed back porch to my kitchen. I found over the years that adding ¼ cup of water to each germination cup, and allowing it to sit closed for several hours, provides me with a lovely, moist surface onto which I can sprinkle my tobacco seed—and actually see it. This quantity of water usually lasts well beyond germination.

Garden20250303_7510_tobaccoGerminationStart01_700.jpg


The seed in my three tiny Ziploc bags is enough to grow several acres of tobacco. Seed is cheap. My effort and time are not. So I sprinkle the seed generously, usually eliminating any worries about a poor germination rate.

Garden20250303_7512_tobaccoGerminationStart02_700.jpg


I set a 1020-size seedling heat mat onto a little saber saw table in the porch. That is mostly covered by a rusty cookie sheet. The germination cups are placed on it, and they will remain closed until they begin to germinate. On top, I've placed a clear 1020 dome, to help keep in the heat.

Garden20250303_7513_tobaccoGerminationStart03_700.jpg


Bob
 
Top