Tobacco Asia

Volume 19, Number 5

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52 tobaccoasia / Issue 5, 2015December/January) Boegli.ch STORY TELL YOUR BRAND Boegli–Gravures can help you to develop subtle, refined and ingenious ways of elevating your brand's characteristics and enhance your consumer brand experience. Let us partner with you to bring new dimensions to your marketing. Sans titre-1 6 12.05.2015 12:04:10 has a lot left in the field and not enough barn space to cure it all," Teal says. "I'm letting him use three of my barns to keep his harvesters rolling." Teal's farm is a little north of where the well-pub- licized floods in Myrtle Beach and Charleston. He got around nine inches here. "Fortunately, the ma- jority of the crop was in barns when the flood came." In Owensboro, KY, Rod Kuegel, a dark and burley grower had a similar report. "The quality was decent, but the weight was off considerably," he said. "Burley may be down 20-25%. The dark types are not down as far but are still reduced, maybe 15-20%." The weather had two extremes, he said. "Very, very wet and very, very dry. It was Workers load flue-cured into a rack-curing barn at a farm near Smithfield, NC. A worker loads burley in boxes in storage at the Burley Stabilization Cooperative facility in Springfield, TN. wet till August, but then there was no more rain after that." Heavy early-season rains in parts of Tennessee lead to problems with bacterial soft rot that were significant in some burley fields, says Eric Walker, Tennessee Extension tobacco specialist. "There was some leaf loss," he said. "Target spot was also bad in some areas. A number of fields got blue mold throughout the season, but yield losses were minimized." Most blue mold sightings were in or near Greene County, where the season's initial out- break was discovered on June 1, he said.

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