South Jersey Farmers Struggle with Unpredictable Weather Conditions

RednekF350

Piney
Feb 20, 2004
5,191
3,611
Pestletown, N.J.
My tobacco is loving this squirrelly weather, especially the ones in my wife's flower garden that I sneak in every year, even after she says "Don't even think about it!" :) Last year I had two hit 11 feet in height. Not normal for tobacco and I only whack them once with Osmocote 14-14-14.
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amf

Explorer
May 20, 2006
157
53
Swedesboro
Tobacco flowers make a nice addition to the garden, imo. There used to be a farmer outside Quinton who raised it commercially for a few years. I worked on a tobacco research farm one summer in college - after handling it for a day my hands would be black as tar. Vowed then to never inhale!
 
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RednekF350

Piney
Feb 20, 2004
5,191
3,611
Pestletown, N.J.
Just curious. What do you do with the tobacco? Do you dry it, process it and smoke it?
I make my own loose leaf chewing tobacco. I color cure it in my garage and shed and try to age it for a year or more.
To make the chew I reduce apple juice to a thin syrup consistency on the stove in a stainless pan. I add a couple tablespoons of dark molasses, a couple pinches of salt and couple of glugs of Buffalo Trace Bourbon. I keep stirring over the heat until I get a big tacky mess of tobacco. I keep it the freezer in Mason jars and dig it out and put it in a sandwich baggie when I want to take some with me.
Here are some pics of some nice color cured Burley, the syrup mixture and the finished chew. Good stuff.

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