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Plantdude 2020 plant torture grow log

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Knucklehead

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Our member from Turkey who was a botany professor there has been an excellent source for information on Turkish varieties. Turkish varieties are traditionally spaced extremely close compared to American grown varieties. There is a chart in the first thread. If you become truly enamored with the Turkish varieties as some of us have, you would be well served to use the Search box above and type in Istanbulin.

My favorite Turkish varieties have been narrowed down to two - Prilep and Izmir
 

deluxestogie

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growing orientals...some advice
I would suggest no more than one or two Oriental varieties per season. I plant most at 1.15 sq. ft. per plant. That's ±26 plants into a modest, 5' x 6' bed. In traditional growing regions, they are planted as close as 6" apart, seldom if ever irrigated, and only minimally fertilized. This produces the "tiny" leaves that are available commercially. But as a home-grower, I have compromised between the massive labor of such tiny leaves vs. the intense aromas that result from such stressed plants.

So, at ~9-12" between plants, my Xanthi (a Basma type) reached about 3' in height, with ~8" leaves (way too big for the market in Turkey), though they have a decent Oriental aroma. The same variety, when I planted it at typical American spacing (24-36" between plants) grew to about 8' tall, with 14" leaves and was not particularly typical of Oriental leaf in its strength and aroma.

By contrast, I plant Prilip @ 1.875 sq. ft. per plant (16 plants per 5' x 6' bed), and have been delighted with the results. Prilep is somewhat related to Basma, but is a relatively new introduction (from Prilip, North Macedonia).

Bafra, Samsun and Trabzon are a different group. They are similar to one another. I used Trabzon in my latest Latakia firing trial.

I've grown a couple of dozen Oriental varieties, and found nuanced differences among them. But it's a lot of work, just to say that you grew them.

Bob
 

plantdude

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Our member from Turkey who was a botany professor there has been an excellent source for information on Turkish varieties. Turkish varieties are traditionally spaced extremely close compared to American grown varieties. There is a chart in the first thread. If you become truly enamored with the Turkish varieties as some of us have, you would be well served to use the Search box above and type in Istanbulin.

My favorite Turkish varieties have been narrowed down to two - Prilep and Izmir
Thanks, I've been slowly making my way through some of these on the key forum threads. Lots of good info. I saw a pic of prilep p66/7 that @deluxestogie linked to. Prilep looks like a beautiful variety. I'm gong to have to try and find some of that if for no other reason than looks alone:)
 

plantdude

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I would suggest no more than one or two Oriental varieties per season. I plant most at 1.15 sq. ft. per plant. That's ±26 plants into a modest, 5' x 6' bed. In traditional growing regions, they are planted as close as 6" apart, seldom if ever irrigated, and only minimally fertilized. This produces the "tiny" leaves that are available commercially. But as a home-grower, I have compromised between the massive labor of such tiny leaves vs. the intense aromas that result from such stressed plants.

So, at ~9-12" between plants, my Xanthi (a Basma type) reached about 3' in height, with ~8" leaves (way too big for the market in Turkey), though they have a decent Oriental aroma. The same variety, when I planted it at typical American spacing (24-36" between plants) grew to about 8' tall, with 14" leaves and was not particularly typical of Oriental leaf in its strength and aroma.

By contrast, I plant Prilip @ 1.875 sq. ft. per plant (16 plants per 5' x 6' bed), and have been delighted with the results. Prilep is somewhat related to Basma, but is a relatively new introduction (from Prilip, North Macedonia).

Bafra, Samsun and Trabzon are a different group. They are similar to one another. I used Trabzon in my latest Latakia firing trial.

I've grown a couple of dozen Oriental varieties, and found nuanced differences among them. But it's a lot of work, just to say that you grew them.

Bob
Thank you, I had read a little about the closer spacing and the effect on leaf size and this summarized it very nicely. Prilip sounds like it's worth a try after the good reviews by everyone and the nice looking picture in one of your threads. I'm a sucker for a pretty plant:)
 

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deluxestogie

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Yes and no. They list Perique as an Oriental, because ARS-GRIN incorrectly listed (and continues to list) it as an Oriental. It is not. It's just a robust, fairly strong, American tobacco that originated from "Red Burley", and subsequently hybridized with probably some Virginia variety over a century or so, prior to the recognition of Mendelian genetics. Physically, the plant looks nearly identical to Hickory Pryor, though the leaf cures out differently.

Bob
 

plantdude

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Yes and no. They list Perique as an Oriental, because ARS-GRIN incorrectly listed (and continues to list) it as an Oriental. It is not. It's just a robust, fairly strong, American tobacco that originated from "Red Burley", and subsequently hybridized with probably some Virginia variety over a century or so, prior to the recognition of Mendelian genetics. Physically, the plant looks nearly identical to Hickory Pryor, though the leaf cures out differently.

Bob
Has anyone run molecular markers to determine population structure in a large number of tobacco lines yet? If not that could be an excellent graduate student project for someone at NCSU working with GRIN. Agriplex has a 1000 SNP assay that costs about $12 a sample (that includes the DNA extraction process). That would be plenty of markers to determine poulation structure and known additional markers for specific traits could be included as well. I would think some of the tobacco companies would be willing to shell out some grant money for something like that - assuming it has not already been done of course.
 

Knucklehead

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Has anyone run molecular markers to determine population structure in a large number of tobacco lines yet? If not that could be an excellent graduate student project for someone at NCSU working with GRIN. Agriplex has a 1000 SNP assay that costs about $12 a sample (that includes the DNA extraction process). That would be plenty of markers to determine poulation structure and known additional markers for specific traits could be included as well. I would think some of the tobacco companies would be willing to shell out some grant money for something like that - assuming it has not already been done of course.
Couldn’t you just smoke it and see what the traits were? There are only 2500+ accessions in the GRIN database. If I agreed to smoke it and give my opinion at $6 per sample, I could save the tobacco companies hundreds, no thousands, no maybe millions of dollars. :D

edit: plus free smoke!
 
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deluxestogie

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A number of phylogenetic "trees" have been published on a number of categories of tobacco. They were based on some subset of mitochondrial DNA or on a small number of cytoplasmic DNA markers. What they have come up with is less than stellar science. [Crazy stuff like Xanthi yaka is only distantly related to Xanthi djebel, or that a Tennessee burley is closely related to Sumatra Deli.]

Big Tobacco imports an increasing proportion of its leaf (cheaper than paying American tobacco farmers) from third world countries, and doesn't really want to know what it is, so long as it works in their blends. Tobacco got the boot from research grants in the US prior to affordable sequencing methods.

Looks like you'll be the lone pioneer on this quest.

Bob
 

plantdude

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Couldn’t you just smoke it and see what the traits were? There are only 2500+ accessions in the GRIN database. If I agreed to smoke it and give my opinion at $6 per sample, I could save the tobacco companies hundreds, no thousands, no maybe millions of dollars. :D

edit: plus free smoke!
You would have to have a very discerning palate, but it would be for a good cause:)

A person would have to pick a smaller panel of lines that follow some of the current groupings and go from there. It could be a neat historical/phylogeographical study to trace human and tobacco movement through history looking at some of the historical lines. In response to Bob's email - maybe a person could justify funding through the cultural/anthropological aspect.
 

Knucklehead

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You would have to have a very discerning palate, but it would be for a good cause:)

Not so! This would be a purely scientific study based on a grant for funding. The grant would spell out what they wanted proven and I would prove it using the scientific grant method of discarding any evidence that didn’t support what they wanted proven. They nor I would care about the truth, just more grant money. It’s the new scientific chain of evidence theory.
 

plantdude

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Not so! This would be a purely scientific study based on a grant for funding. The grant would spell out what they wanted proven and I would prove it using the scientific grant method of discarding any evidence that didn’t support what they wanted proven. They nor I would care about the truth, just more grant money. It’s the new scientific chain of evidence theory.
Sad and a little too true.
 

plantdude

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I would suggest no more than one or two Oriental varieties per season. I plant most at 1.15 sq. ft. per plant. That's ±26 plants into a modest, 5' x 6' bed. In traditional growing regions, they are planted as close as 6" apart, seldom if ever irrigated, and only minimally fertilized. This produces the "tiny" leaves that are available commercially. But as a home-grower, I have compromised between the massive labor of such tiny leaves vs. the intense aromas that result from such stressed plants.

So, at ~9-12" between plants, my Xanthi (a Basma type) reached about 3' in height, with ~8" leaves (way too big for the market in Turkey), though they have a decent Oriental aroma. The same variety, when I planted it at typical American spacing (24-36" between plants) grew to about 8' tall, with 14" leaves and was not particularly typical of Oriental leaf in its strength and aroma.

By contrast, I plant Prilip @ 1.875 sq. ft. per plant (16 plants per 5' x 6' bed), and have been delighted with the results. Prilep is somewhat related to Basma, but is a relatively new introduction (from Prilip, North Macedonia).

Bafra, Samsun and Trabzon are a different group. They are similar to one another. I used Trabzon in my latest Latakia firing trial.

I've grown a couple of dozen Oriental varieties, and found nuanced differences among them. But it's a lot of work, just to say that you grew them.

Bob
Going
Going back to what you said earlier I'm wondering if sticking a few basma plants together in a large pot might not be a bad idea since they are getting planted so late in the season. That should mimick compact field planting conditions and I could bring them indoors if we get an early frost latter in the season. I could put my wife in charge of watering them, which would insure they get severely drought stressed as well:)
 

plantdude

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Just a mental note to add to my grow blog... When cooking cornstarch at 400 degrees to make dextrin for use in cigar glue, do not use a toaster oven. Toaster ovens apparently run hotter than conventional ovens. A tray full of corn starch produces flames approximately 12 inches high and smells somewhat reminiscent of burning marshmallows...

Another mental note - replace smoke detector batteries...
 

plantdude

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I tried my first hand rolled cigar last night. It wasn't packed tight enough but was smokable. The wife tried a puff and said it was better than a lot of the expensive ones I'm always trying in the sampler packs. Personally I thought it was a bit to young tasting still and the flavor was off. The tobacco is going back up in the attic for a few more weeks. Could have been worse for a first attempt, it didn't taste to terrible or explode:)
 
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