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Tobacco not burning properly

The Haroo ln

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Hey guys. My tobacco from last year is now fully fermented but is not burning properly. Apologies if this has been asked before as I haven't seen anything on it yet. Also I did some research and a lot of people have said its not good to use tap water when watering the tobacco plants due to the amounts of chlorine in it. Tobacco that has been watered with chlorinated water has poor burn qualities. Not sure as its the 1st time I've heard this. Can anyone elaborate please?
 

deluxestogie

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The Haroo ln

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United kingdom
I haven't shredded it as I grew it for cigars. I tried burning a few leaves without rolling while the were out of case but they didn't burn. So I will try shredded them and trying them in a pipe and see if that makes a difference
 

plantdude

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I've had issues with some varities (like canik) being somewhat flame retardant. My guess is your tobacco may not be dried sufficiently though. The U.K. Is probably fairly humid in general - you're living on an island after all. Have you tried storing the tobacco in a controlled environment where you can get the humidty lower? Think possibly a humidor for a few weeks with a lower relative humidty, then see how they do maybe. Finer shreds may help but not if they are packed tight and still to wet.
I would think Chlorine is probably fairly volatile if you are watering with tap water, although others might disagree. I would assume most of the chlorine off gasses pretty quickly, but I don't have any scientific evidence to back that up - other than most chlorine will evaporate from tap water in about 24 hours- no idea how it might bind to other substances in the soil though. I rarely water my plants with tap water once they are established so it's not really been an issue for me. Dry tobacco burns, overcased moist tobacco doesn't burn without a flame held under it in my experience. Nothing much more frustrating than trying to keep a freshly rolled cigar burning in 90% humidity while the mosquitoes are biting and sweat is dripping off your forehead in 90(F) + temps... Wow, I just got myself looking forward to summer.
 

adamziegler

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I have had purchased ligero leaf that is hard to burn. I have had some leaf labeled as viso and seco that were on the verge of being as thick as ligero.

I have no doubt that what the plant uses to grow impacts combustion, but sometimes I think it's just thick sections of leaf needing thinner leaf to act as kindling.
 

Johnny II

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Hey guys. My tobacco from last year is now fully fermented but is not burning properly. Apologies if this has been asked before as I haven't seen anything on it yet. Also I did some research and a lot of people have said its not good to use tap water when watering the tobacco plants due to the amounts of chlorine in it. Tobacco that has been watered with chlorinated water has poor burn qualities. Not sure as its the 1st time I've heard this. Can anyone elaborate please?
Make sure your soil have enough potash for your crop. The potash requirement of the tobacco crop is very high when
compared with other crops. That is the key for a good combustion.
 

plantdude

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Ligero tends to be younger leaf and of course near the very top of the plant. Most of the leaf cells are fairly compact since they haven't matured (hence thicker leaves) and contain a lot more moistness than lower mature leaves. When I stalk harvest harvest a plant those are the last to turn brown - if they do at all. Ligero isn't know for its combustibility and is generally used sparingly for its flavor near the center of a cigar where other lower down mature leaves (volado and seco) can keep it burning properly. I suppose shredding it might help some but if you have thick moist leaves you will need some "kindling" to keep it burning if you don't want to be constantly relighting it.
A lot of it is going to come down to the "case" your leaf is in. Paper dry ligero will still probably burn better than wet mud lugs. Not that I would want to try a ligero puro;)
 

Skafidr

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My take on watering tobacco with city tap water and chlorine is that there is not enough chlorine in water to cause bad burning, according to a research paper (here; assuming that it's the only source of chlorine your tobacco has).

I haven't gotten to the bottom (yet) of why my tobacco doesn't burn well, unfortunately.
 

Belle-Beast

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Hey guys. My tobacco from last year is now fully fermented but is not burning properly. Apologies if this has been asked before as I haven't seen anything on it yet. Also I did some research and a lot of people have said its not good to use tap water when watering the tobacco plants due to the amounts of chlorine in it. Tobacco that has been watered with chlorinated water has poor burn qualities. Not sure as its the 1st time I've heard this. Can anyone elaborate please?
Send it to me and I'll see what I can figure out lol
Maybe a wee little bit of glycerine in your casing. If you don't case maybe just a spritz of water with a small amount of glycerine mixed in. I read on here someplace it is used to help the burn.
 
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