Oldfella
Well-Known Member
Interesting. Keep us posted, with pics. I'm curious to see the results.I was out of town for two weeks and have a few things to report. The CT broadleaf is now about 7ft tall and the corojo is close behind. I had no idea CT could get that tall, there must be some magic dust in Skychasers soil! I primed more CT broadleaf and Corojo 99 mostly seco/viso.
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I also noticed something very interesting with the YTB I had yellowing in a towel while I was gone. Normally, when my leaf is yellow I let it air cure then rehydrate and go in the kiln. It cures a very light brown and develops a nice toasty smell in the kiln. In fact all of my tobacco cigar, oriental etc develops the a similar pleasant toasty sweet smell. However, the cigar leaf for instance doesn't smell like "cigars". When I nervously opened the towel expecting to find moldy YTB, I was pleasantly surprised to fin nice yellow leaves on top and very dark brown wet leaves in the middle with a noticeable ammonia odor. When I took the darkest leaves out to dry they ended up smelling vaguely of cigar leaves (iirc similar to the MD609 from WLT). This got me thinking, maybe I could culture whatever was growing in these wet conditions and inoculate my other cigar varieties in an attempt to make the more familiar cigar leaves. So, I took a dark leaf from the center and put it in some water with some lb broth and a tsp or so of sugar. The next day I had an actively fermenting brew that I diluted into 10 pts water. This was sprayed on the other cigar leaves, and they were returned to the kiln. I'll report back what happens later. My hope is whatever is growing in their will break down the nitrogen compounds in my leaves releasing ammonia (which ive never smelled in my kilning attempts so far) and generate something more "cigar" like
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Oldfella