ChinaVoodoo
Moderator
I live in Edmonton. I don't believe that the length of the growing season here is a serious issue, because although the season is shorter, the days are longer. A friend from Colombia told me he can grow any vegetables that he used to back home because we get 16 hours of daylight at the peak of summer.
I believe the issue we have up here is temperature, both of the air, and of the soil. The average temperature is around 55F at night, and 75F during the day. It fluctuates dramatically-we'll get freak snowstorms in May-but this is the average. Greenhouses work well because they maintain a higher temperature. I have grown tobacco several times, and the plants only get to about three feet tall by the end of the season. This year was the first year I took growing tobacco seriously, and is also the first year that I cured my tobacco. I planted Burley - Special Gold, and Black Samsun. I had eight plants-four of each-enclosed in an impromptu vapor-barrier greenhouse. The Samsun got to nearly six feet tall, and the Burley had larger leaves, and about 5 feet tall. The same tobacco growing in the garden got only half the weight of leaves per plant. I believe that with a properly constructed greenhouse, I will do much better because this impromptu setup I had was open at the ends, and shielded by fence on two sides, and had a young cherry tree nearby. I transplanted my asparagus to that spot before the snow fell.
We got a 9'x14' car shelter for my wife's winter-useless rear wheel drive Scion, and I plan on covering it with clear material in the summer and plopping it in the middle of my garden next year. My tomatoes will do awesome, and so will my tobacco.
That said, I still have room in other places on my property to plant tobacco, and my question is, are there some types of tobacco that will do better than others in the spaces outside of the greenhouse? Knowing this, I can plan ahead to plant the ones that need the greenhouse more, inside; and the ones that need the greenhouse less, outside.
I believe the issue we have up here is temperature, both of the air, and of the soil. The average temperature is around 55F at night, and 75F during the day. It fluctuates dramatically-we'll get freak snowstorms in May-but this is the average. Greenhouses work well because they maintain a higher temperature. I have grown tobacco several times, and the plants only get to about three feet tall by the end of the season. This year was the first year I took growing tobacco seriously, and is also the first year that I cured my tobacco. I planted Burley - Special Gold, and Black Samsun. I had eight plants-four of each-enclosed in an impromptu vapor-barrier greenhouse. The Samsun got to nearly six feet tall, and the Burley had larger leaves, and about 5 feet tall. The same tobacco growing in the garden got only half the weight of leaves per plant. I believe that with a properly constructed greenhouse, I will do much better because this impromptu setup I had was open at the ends, and shielded by fence on two sides, and had a young cherry tree nearby. I transplanted my asparagus to that spot before the snow fell.
We got a 9'x14' car shelter for my wife's winter-useless rear wheel drive Scion, and I plan on covering it with clear material in the summer and plopping it in the middle of my garden next year. My tomatoes will do awesome, and so will my tobacco.
That said, I still have room in other places on my property to plant tobacco, and my question is, are there some types of tobacco that will do better than others in the spaces outside of the greenhouse? Knowing this, I can plan ahead to plant the ones that need the greenhouse more, inside; and the ones that need the greenhouse less, outside.