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Southern Planters Patch

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Southern Planter

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Thursday the twentieth of June:
Traded a dozen and a half of homemade snickerdoodle cookies for a hydroflat of two hundred KT 209 burley seedlings on a whim. I had cleared out a plot of honeysuckle shrub that had not seen a photon in years. I wanted to plant something on the barren ground, but the seed house folks told me it was to late in the year to plant timothy. Then I saw the add in the paper for bacca transplants, and I called the guy. I asked the price, and he said $150 for an acre. I told him I was thinking more like 30 plants, he laughed and said he'd give them to me. I drove to his farm and green house and handed him the cookies. He told me they were tough little buggers, and they would be OK until I prepped the plot. The county agent is a friend of mine, and he talked me into "no till". On the advice of the farmer I stopped at Tractor Supply and bought a hose sprayer filled with Miracle Grow and a bulb planter. When I got home, I sprayed Permethrin to kill the ground bugs and ants, then sprayed the Miracle Grow. That was my first mistake.

Friday June 21:
At 0600 started setting the plants, sitting on my butt, using a bulb planter. Finished planting them 2100 the next day. Wife built a nice little "willow" fence using sticks from the murdered honeysuckle to keep the dogs out.

Sunday 23:
After church I change into my Kentucky Colonel outfit, sit in my rocking chair on the front porch and announce to the wife that I am a bacca farmer. She roles her eyes and goes upstairs to her sewing room. My brother, who has planted, grown, cut, housed, and stripped bacca all his life tells me to keep my trap shut about the miracle grow "lest I get laughed out of the county".

Monday:
I run off with the agent and watch a demonstration of no till planting on a real tobacco farm. The old boy was in his 80's and was a third generation bacca farmer. He gave me a lot of advice, and that's when I learned that the transplants like dry ground the first day they are planted, and I could have killed them by hosing the plot the night before like I did. That afternoon deer tasted five of the plants and spit them out.

June 27th:
The rain Elder "Brother Baldhead" asked for in prayer arrived with 1.9 inches of rain.

Thursday 18th of July:
The weeds in the bacca patch thank me for the miracle grow.

Friday July 26th:
Finished weeding bacca. Sat on my butt and used a hula-hoe by pressing it horizontally and pulling. Enough weeds were pulled to feed a mastodon.

Thursday August 15th:
Weeded again. Found one small worm.

Sept 4th:
Too many worms, sprayed first ortheen application.

Sept 13th:
Forty some plants are about chest high, no blooms, the plants in the back row where there is too much shade are less than knee high.
 

johnlee1933

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You are a funny dude. Thanks and best of luck on your grow. Seems your weather will be getting a little better for curing.

John
 

Southern Planter

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I'm wondering about harvesting, the frost is coming, and there are no buds, so no blooms. There is a little yellowing in the bottoms of the bigger plants. If they are cut green, will they ripen before they brown? Or will the green stay green?
 

DonH

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I'm wondering about harvesting, the frost is coming, and there are no buds, so no blooms. There is a little yellowing in the bottoms of the bigger plants. If they are cut green, will they ripen before they brown? Or will the green stay green?
You can cure leaves that aren't ripe yet. Just make sure they don't dry to fast. As long as they yellow first you'll be fine. And Burley should be no problem. I'd wait until you know a frost is coming.
 

Southern Planter

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Good to know, I need to decide which bent to use in the barn. Fix it up a bit. The barn has not seen tobacco 40 years. I found 8 sticks and four poles I'l use for the bigger plants, the little one I'll just hang from tarred hemp strings.

One bent is dark and somewhat tight, someone converted it into a tack room, the bacca bent is in the south east corner, but the rafters are old, and some of the wall planking is gone, airy, but maybe to airy.
 

BarG

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I'm wondering about harvesting, the frost is coming, and there are no buds, so no blooms. There is a little yellowing in the bottoms of the bigger plants. If they are cut green, will they ripen before they brown? Or will the green stay green?

Or will the green stay green? Now where is the intelligence in that ?
 

Boboro

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You good let it stay in the ground as long as you can. Keep a eye on it,if it ant curein right you mite want to bring it in a dryer place
 

Southern Planter

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September 29.

Just got done fixing up the bent to hang the bacca in. There is enough room for about 96 six foot plants, and 40 to 60 of the little stunted plants.

The plants in the north east corner are the tallest, about six foot, the south side the plants are very stunted. The ding bat who sold me the house spread billions of tons of white pea gravel all over the place, and about half of the patch is cursed with the stuff. I learned after I planted that the side with the gravel was also the kitchen dump at one time. The entire patch is too shady, the plants in the south get very little sun, the plants to the north are shaded but get a little more. At the time I planted, I thought that cigars wrappers grown in shade were the best, then I found this little forum too late.

Here are some pics.

This is looking south east:

bacca 2013 se.jpg


This is looking north west:

bacca 2013 nw.jpg


Are the bottom leaves in this pic good for anything?

bacca 2013 bottom.jpg

KT 209 leaf and wife's hand:

bacca 2013 wife's hand.jpg
 

Knucklehead

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The bottom leaves are the mud lugs and lugs that you've read about here. They've pretty much cured on the stalk and you can smoke them. They are the mildest leaf on the plant.
 

Brown Thumb

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Nice looking grow, the bottom pics of the of the smaller ones did you have a garden there?
Did you do a soil test, All my small plants are my fault for not fertilizing this year. Or soil test.
Lots of nice leaf you got there. Good Luck on the Harvest.
BT
 

Southern Planter

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Kewl Knuck, time for me to by a pipe and smoke the mud lugs.

BT, never been a garden there, it was a spot taken over by an invasive plant called "shrub honeysuckle" (not honeysuckle at all) that takes over and shades and kills everything in it's path. I did not know about the layer of gravel either. I took no soil samples but did spray Miracle Grow the night before.

Next year that spot will be the chicken coop, as the little building was a generator house but will next be a hen house.
 

Knucklehead

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Just a suggestion, but I'd go ahead and prime that really yellow lower leaf and have it curing while you're waiting on your plants to bud and ripen for stalk harvest. They're ready. If you don't they're just going to die and cure on the stalk. Harvesting them now could help send energy to the other leaves the same way topping does.
 

Knucklehead

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http://www.rollyourown.com/
Good price on Missouri Meerschaum cob pipes, Dr. Grabow pipes (good first pipes), cigarette tubes and bic lighters. $7.00 flat rate shipping so combine your orders. I love the cobs, everybody needs a couple. :cool:
 

Southern Planter

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Thanks Knuck, I on my way to the front porch to steal the wife's wicker basket she uses to get the black walnuts, then I'll but the primed yellow stuff in it and take it to the barn and string it. I'll get the mud lugs at the same time.
 

Knucklehead

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Should I get the "Washington", the unfiltered pony, the Missouri pride, or the legend?

I bought the legend but I don't like it because the bend in the stem is too sharp to pass a pipe cleaner. Any of the straight stem pipes would be fine. I also prefer unfiltered. I took the filter out of the legend pipe I have. Next time I need tubes, I'm going to get an unfiltered straight stem cob or two.
 

Southern Planter

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I took Knucks advice and primed some of the plants. I cut the ripe stuff and took the critter damaged leaf too. The basket I stole from my wife has the mud lugs. She noticed her basket was gone, but not the dish towel. I'll string the primed stuff up in the barn tomorrow.

There were a lot of critters in there, most of them bug eaters. Did not see any horn worms, but did find some cute little snails eating away.

bacca 2013 priming.jpg
 
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