Tobaccofieldsforever 2026 grow log.

Tobaccofieldsforever

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The photos of TN Red Leaf on Victory Seeds are copies of TN Red Leaf photos from Northwood Seed. I guess you'll get to see what you end up with.

Bob
Ha, I didn’t even notice. I’ve found it a few places across the web. All of them calling it an “heirloom burley”. They are likely all just repeating found information though. There is an oldish thread in the types of tobacco forum called Tennessee red leaf where pretty much this same issue arises. I think the plants the OP grew look like mine. Either way, thanks and have a good night!
 

deluxestogie

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I was finally able to access the Tennessee Redleaf page on @polygon55's site:

Tennessee Redleaf​
A cigarette-pipe variety. Seeds were obtained from Sweden. No specific information is available about this variety. The period from planting to flowering is 72-80 days. The flower is red. The plant shape is conical. The bush grows to a height of approximately 1.2 m. The leaves are dark green, sessile, with a narrow stem and an elliptical blade. There are 20-22 leaves.​
Classification​
Western classification Flue-cured (FC)​


Bob

EDIT: I also scanned through both of Killebrew's massive tobacco books from the late 19th century. There was no mention of a variety known as "Redleaf" or "Red Leaf".
 

Tobaccofieldsforever

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@deluxestogie thank you very much for looking into this whole TN Redleaf issue again. I am still at a bit of a loss as to what to do with this leaf after harvest. I guess my biggest issue arises from @skychaser having it classified as a burley and he is, in my humble opinion, the best there is at what he does (tobacco seed vending). I also understand that @polygon55 is the assumed origin of this variety so his information should be true to life. @DaleB…I believe you grew some TN Redleaf last year maybe? How did you cure it? How did it turn out? I apologize if the answers to these questions have already been discussed and I thank you in advance for any time you spend helping me with this issue!
 

deluxestogie

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Experimentation is always fun. If you already have a flue-cure chamber, then flue-cure some of it, and air-cure some of it. If you don't have a flue-cure chamber, my inclination would be to not construct one for just this variety. It's worth recalling that "heirloom" varieties came from the days before Gregor Mendel. No cross-pollination protection. Everyone growing tobacco assumed that varieties gradually took on the characteristics of the other tobacco varieties growing in the same limited region—due to the local climate, while in reality, everybody was ending up with hybridized tobacco.

Bob
 
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