MTISEMPTY
New Member
Hi All,
As I mentioned in my introductory post, I'm growing some tobacco in my backyard. A blend of Burley's to air cure for my swedish snus, and some orientals to make shisha for my girlfriend. I'd prefer to sun cure the orientals. I imagine this won't be hard considering Berkeley's climate, which resembles many places on the Aegean. However, I wanted to check in about direct sunlight in such a scenario. The sun here is rather intense in the summer (to say the least), and it can get pretty dry. Do I need to make sure the tobacco is in the shade or near the ground from the start, or can I hang it on a rack in the sun? I saw some forum posts on doing it in Arizona, which is obviously hotter and drier, but would I also need to make a humidity shed? (For the air dried tobacco, I have a small shed with 2 fans and two humidifiers, plus a dehumidier for curing over the winter. It's not closed to the elements, but it gets the job done). The guides here have been so useful for planning this out, but I'm worried about messing it up and losing my crops.
One idea I had: I have a pergola that supports my grapevines (well, the landlord's, but I take care of, harvest, and turn them into jam). Could I hang the primed leaves on the bottom of the pergola? Would the dimpled sun be enough?
I'm attaching a photo of the pergola (the seedlings on the table are a mix of tobacco and tomato, so once I do the mid-summer harvest I have ready to transplant replacements. The joys of a nearly year long growing season!). Also attaching a photo of one of my raised beds rn, where I'm trying a significant modification on three sisters: beans on the outside, tobacco in the center, and then am about to start some mugwort and marigold under the tobacco leaves to repel pests. Will let people know how the trio interact. The tobacco in the bed is 4 meerchinski, with 3 tofta plants and 2 Tennessee Burley (I just ordered fabric to sew cross-pollination prevention bags). They're a little closer together than ideal, but I think I can make it work.
As I mentioned in my introductory post, I'm growing some tobacco in my backyard. A blend of Burley's to air cure for my swedish snus, and some orientals to make shisha for my girlfriend. I'd prefer to sun cure the orientals. I imagine this won't be hard considering Berkeley's climate, which resembles many places on the Aegean. However, I wanted to check in about direct sunlight in such a scenario. The sun here is rather intense in the summer (to say the least), and it can get pretty dry. Do I need to make sure the tobacco is in the shade or near the ground from the start, or can I hang it on a rack in the sun? I saw some forum posts on doing it in Arizona, which is obviously hotter and drier, but would I also need to make a humidity shed? (For the air dried tobacco, I have a small shed with 2 fans and two humidifiers, plus a dehumidier for curing over the winter. It's not closed to the elements, but it gets the job done). The guides here have been so useful for planning this out, but I'm worried about messing it up and losing my crops.
One idea I had: I have a pergola that supports my grapevines (well, the landlord's, but I take care of, harvest, and turn them into jam). Could I hang the primed leaves on the bottom of the pergola? Would the dimpled sun be enough?
I'm attaching a photo of the pergola (the seedlings on the table are a mix of tobacco and tomato, so once I do the mid-summer harvest I have ready to transplant replacements. The joys of a nearly year long growing season!). Also attaching a photo of one of my raised beds rn, where I'm trying a significant modification on three sisters: beans on the outside, tobacco in the center, and then am about to start some mugwort and marigold under the tobacco leaves to repel pests. Will let people know how the trio interact. The tobacco in the bed is 4 meerchinski, with 3 tofta plants and 2 Tennessee Burley (I just ordered fabric to sew cross-pollination prevention bags). They're a little closer together than ideal, but I think I can make it work.