Buy Tobacco Leaf Online | Whole Leaf Tobacco

Tobaccofieldsforever 2022 Grow Log

Tobaccofieldsforever

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 12, 2021
Messages
684
Points
93
Location
Ravenna, Ohio
I was very happy with the Krumovgrad I grew this year. The plant ended up being quite tall (none of my orientals were topped) with many of them approaching 7 ft. In height. The leaf spacing leaves something to be desired. It is quite “leggy”, especially in comparison to Prilep. It makes up for this in leaf size and yield. My Krumovgrad yield was considerably higher than my Prilep yield with the same number of plants (actually had less Krumovgrad due to losing one early on.) it is a lovely, sweet, rich smoke that I will certainly be growing again!!50E4A3C9-C459-4FFF-91B7-8F8379EC5446.jpeg
1 month kilned Krumovgrad.
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 12, 2021
Messages
684
Points
93
Location
Ravenna, Ohio
I was very happy with the Krumovgrad I grew this year. The plant ended up being quite tall (none of my orientals were topped) with many of them approaching 7 ft. In height. The leaf spacing leaves something to be desired. It is quite “leggy”, especially in comparison to Prilep. It makes up for this in leaf size and yield. My Krumovgrad yield was considerably higher than my Prilep yield with the same number of plants (actually had less Krumovgrad due to losing one early on.) it is a lovely, sweet, rich smoke that I will certainly be growing again!!View attachment 44195
1 month kilned Krumovgrad.
Was wondering why my orientals turn out a darker brown/auburn color when the stuff from WLT can be very blonde/gold? I sun cured mine but maybe the sun in Greece (I think?) is more intense causing more of a flue cured outcome?? Any ideas…?
 

Knucklehead

Moderator
Founding Member
Joined
Oct 18, 2012
Messages
12,677
Points
113
Location
NE Alabama
Was wondering why my orientals turn out a darker brown/auburn color when the stuff from WLT can be very blonde/gold? I sun cured mine but maybe the sun in Greece (I think?) is more intense causing more of a flue cured outcome?? Any ideas…?
Level of maturity/ripeness can influence color.

 

deluxestogie

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
May 25, 2011
Messages
25,605
Points
113
Location
near Blacksburg, VA
I have had batches of golden and batches of deeper brown. My guess is that primed leaf is fully color-cured in the sun more rapidly than portions of the stalk-cured leaf. Most Oriental tobacco grown in Turkey, Greece, North Macedonia, Bulgaria, etc. is primed and strung for sun-curing. They have to satisfy a market expectation of leaf size and leaf color. The Oriental tobacco varieties that I have grown are harvested and cured in a manner selected for my convenience. Some of mine comes out golden, some not so golden. How much time does my "sun-cured" leaf spend in the shed, avoiding rain? I suspect that good sun exposure during the initial part of that 2-3 week period of color-curing has more impact (i.e. lighter final color) than an equal sun exposure later during color-curing. But I'm not sure of that.

Another factor is the ambient humidity during the color-curing process. The higher the ambient humidity, the darker the leaf ultimately color-cures.

Do they taste different? Probably. But every year of every variety tastes different anyway. And I'm happy with that.

Bob
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 12, 2021
Messages
684
Points
93
Location
Ravenna, Ohio
Level of maturity/ripeness can influence color.

Yes, I am very familiar with that post and chart and have referred to it often. I tried to harvest and cure asap without being too early but now that I look at that chart again the cured leaves look a lot like mine. It is just a testament to the quality of leaf don is able to obtain. The orientals are outstanding and beautifully colored.
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 12, 2021
Messages
684
Points
93
Location
Ravenna, Ohio
I have had batches of golden and batches of deeper brown. My guess is that primed leaf is fully color-cured in the sun more rapidly than portions of the stalk-cured leaf. Most Oriental tobacco grown in Turkey, Greece, North Macedonia, Bulgaria, etc. is primed and strung for sun-curing. They have to satisfy a market expectation of leaf size and leaf color. The Oriental tobacco varieties that I have grown are harvested and cured in a manner selected for my convenience. Some of mine comes out golden, some not so golden. How much time does my "sun-cured" leaf spend in the shed, avoiding rain? I suspect that good sun exposure during the initial part of that 2-3 week period of color-curing has more impact (i.e. lighter final color) than an equal sun exposure later during color-curing. But I'm not sure of that.

Another factor is the ambient humidity during the color-curing process. The higher the ambient humidity, the darker the leaf ultimately color-cures.

Do they taste different? Probably. But every year of every variety tastes different anyway. And I'm happy with that.

Bob
Yes, I generally encounter high humidity and wet conditions(sometimes they get hit with a storm I didn’t anticipate or are soaked by the morning dew much more than I would like) and the sunny conditions here are not anything to brag about. I am happy with the tobacco but was just curious about that color difference I observed.
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 12, 2021
Messages
684
Points
93
Location
Ravenna, Ohio
I am VERY impressed with how my hybrid (bright x burley f3) turned out this year. I just smoked it straight in a cigarette to test it and liked it so much I had to finish the whole thing! Perfectly balanced and tasty ( this is what I was going for when making the cross but really had little hope it would turn out that way!!) I wish I knew more about the burley I used. It is a green stem variety that I purchased from a small business near my home. They were nice looking transplants labeled “burley”. This place has always put the variety (shirey,Virginia gold, etc…) on the label every other time so this must be how the seed was sold to them. It was very difficult to cure. It kept wanting to flash dry green, even when stalk curing. I eventually had to cure what I had left of it in a tote and spritz it with water every so often. Anyway, great stuff!!
 
Top