I am in New Mexico, I do not stalk cure any of them. I water the grass very well, and I fling the leaf all over it for the heat of the sun on it to wilt the leaf. When I am done. I drink a soft drink (beer or tea) then tie it to 1/2 emt at 1/2 inches apart. The leaf is saggy and wilted perfect for the tie. It is a steam wilt. The Catteron acts like the Silver River. When a leaf turns over like the one in the picture, I start the prime. It will roll back after the bottom leaf is gone. (on Mine)
Does stalk harvesting tolerate lower temps and humidity during color curing than primed leaves? I'm hoping the residual moisture in the stalk will keep the leaves from drying green if the conditions are not ideal.
Vinconco,
Why do you want to prime burley? As far as I know it is a stalk cut type, generally air cured. All I really know is Connecticut, and we only prime the shade and cure it with heat. The broadleaf and Havana seed are stalk cut and air cured--some heat might be needed during a very rainy fall. Since burley leaves are not wrapper leaves or flue cured leaves generally, why bother to prime them?
Some of you do prime burley, I know. Why?
CT
You can successfully stalk-cut or leaf-prime any tobacco. Burley air-cures just fine when primed. My reason for priming the lowest burley leaves, while stalk-cutting the rest is because by the time the entire plant is ready to be stalk-cut, the lowest leaves have become tattered trash.
I have leaf-primed CT Broadleaf. It color-cures well.
A justification for stalk-cutting is that it takes less attention and harvesting time (labor costs) and requires about 1/2 the square footage of curing space--single tier--(curing costs). If the quality of the resulting leaf is the same, whether stalk-cut or leaf-primed, then I stalk-cut. For the best quality wrapper leaf, I always prime, regardless of the commercial harvesting preference.
For me, the curing space advantage is a plus for stalk-cutting. But carrying 8-10 pound plants from the garden bed to the shed is sometimes an ordeal. The taller ones need to be held with my arms fully extended at 45º. After the 4th or 5th trip back and forth, it gets old.
Bob
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