Wednesday, June 15, 2022

A HOT START TO THE HARVEST SEASON

 



Though the weather was sweltering, the leaf looked great on the Georgia-Florida tobacco tour June 6 through 8. In this picture, carloads drive through a field near Lee, Fla. This particular field may turn out to be the first harvested anywhere this season. Photo: Jennifer Atkins, Marketing Specialist, Virginia Department of Agriculture.


A HOT START TO THE
2022 HARVEST SEASON
 
 
Despite some dry periods in May and a very hot June, the tobacco looks very good in Georgia and Florida. “We have some beautiful tobacco out there,” says J. Michael Moore, Georgia Extension tobacco specialist. And it is early. “Harvest could begin in the Lee, Fl., area later this week,” he says.” The very early variety PVH 2310 is playing a big part in that earliness. 
 
Water is urgently needed in Georgia and Florida, says Moore, and lower temperatures too--the thermometer readings went from the high 90s to just above 100 degrees from Florida and Georgia to North Carolina. “We are about finished with layby and much of the crop will be reaching flower soon in Georgia," says Moore. "That’s when tobacco plants need water the most.” Irrigation rigs are running full steam.
 
Two severe wind events forced some growers to go out and set blown-over stalks back up. “Almost all of our tobacco is mechanically harvested so the stalks have to stand straight up,” Moore says.
 
Spotted wilt makes a comeback. Tomato spotted wilt has been a severe problem again in Georgia after a relatively mild season in 2021, Many farmers have found areas in their fields with 20 percent plants showing TSWV symptoms. We expect that level of symptoms will lead to a 10% loss in yield. We sure don’t need a loss like that this year.”
 
It’s too late for spotted wilt control efforts now, but if you applied a foliar spray of Actigard to plants in the greenhouse, you might have reduced the spotted wilt level by around 15 percent. A greenhouse spray of imidacloprid might reduce infection by 35 percent. If both are used it is expected that infection can be reduced by around 50 percent compared to untreated plants.
 
And there is also more TSWV in South Carolina than in either of the last two years. “We have been seeing around 5 to 10 % on average, and I’ve seen up to 30% in a few fields” says William Hardee, S.C. Extension tobacco specialist.
 
Brown spot broke out earlier than normal in South Carolina, says Hardee. “It usually appears later in the season. It was probably brought on by the dry weather we had earlier.”
 
The early flue-cured variety PVH 2310 is helping in S.C. as in Georgia. It lets famers spread out the crop so that it doesn’t all come off at once. "The less time in the field means less time for disease development,” says Hardee.
 
The crop looks good, but the hot weather coming this week is concerning. “Most areas received good rainfall in the last week, but there are still scattered areas that have missed it. “Some of the crop is a little behind: The later planted tobacco that had to be reset because of dry weather, and some of the tobacco planted on sandier land got off to a slow start." However, layby is nearly done in the Pee Dee. 
 
Crop progress through June 12, according to USDA: Flue-cured--VA, 97% set out. SC, 4% topped. GA/FL, 20% topped. Burley (all %s represent "set out")—KY, 71%. TN, 62. NC, 46%. VA, 90%. Dark—VA, 91%. Source: Crop and Pro gress Report, NASS.
 
In other tobacco news:
 
How low is very low when it comes to nicotine? A cigarette that contains extremely low-nicotine levels is being rolled out by its manufacturer, 22nd Century Group. The brand--called VLN (for very low nicotine)—is being marketed in two varieties, VLN Kings and VLN Menthol Kings.

A pilot program was successfully conducted in May in Chicago, with most VLNs sold in convenience stores. VLNs are said to contain 95 percent less nicotine than America’s leading brands and are designed to help consumers smoke less.

VLN cigarettes are believed to be manufactured in the company's plant in Mocksville, N.C. Watch for more details in a future issue.



DATES TO REMEMBER
The S.C. Tobacco Tour will take place July 12 and 13, says Hardee. It will begin with a dinner in Florence on the 12th and end in Sumter County in the afternoon of the 13th. For more information and to register, email Hardee at hardee@clemson.edu. Other tours and field days this summer include:

  • The 2022 NC State Tobacco Field Day will be held Tuesday, July 26 starting at 9 AM and lasting till 12 PM at the Cunningham Research Station, 200 Cunningham Rd, Kinston, NC 28501.

  • The 2022 Tobacco, Beef, and More Field Day will be held June 30 starting at 8 AM at the UT Highland Rim Research & Education Center in Springfield, TN.

  • The Tobacco Field Day for 2022 will be held August 9 at a time to be announced at the Northeast Tennessee Research & Education Center in Greeneville, TN.

  • The 2022 Bluegrass Burley Tour will be held August 10 at a time to be announced at the Spindletop Research Farm in Lexington, KY.

  • The 2022 Dark Tobacco Twilight Tour will be held August 11 at 5:30 PM at the Murray State University West Farm at Murray, KY.

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

GOOD START IN EASTERN NC BODES WELL FOR U.S. CROP

 


All eyes on the East: A news cameraman films transplanting in the Eastern Belt of N.C. in this file photo by Christopher Bickers. This year's crop in the East has gotten off to a fine start.

The flue-cured crop in the N.C. Eastern Belt is, to Matthew Vann’s eyes, as good at this point in the season as it has been in all his years in North Carolina. “I hope I am not jinxing things, but the stands and uniformity are the best I can remember,” says Vann, N.C. Extension tobacco specialist. “Despite a couple of cold spells and dry spells in the spring, our tobacco is looking good across the board.” Some areas got as much as four inches of rain last week, but the soil was dry enough that it wasn’t a major problem. “But we still have some dry pockets,” he says. “For example, places in Johnston County and Edgecombe County could still use a good drink.”
 
All in by June 1? Vann expects 100 percent of the N.C. flue-cured crop will be in the ground by Wednesday and nearly all the other types as well. “A little cigar tobacco remains to be planted and some burley in the mountains,” he says. “But we are substantially finished with the planting phase of this crop.” Next up in the East: Layby, he adds.
 
One reason for the good start was a very good plant supply in N.C. Earlier, that wasn’t predicted because of a slow start in plantbeds, says Vann. “We were afraid there might be shortages,  but as it turned out, we have plants left over now.” A factor that helped: Very little replanting was needed.
 
The crop in South Carolina is off to a good start. Transplanting was finished a few weeks ago. “We have good stands and our tobacco is looking good,” says William Hardee, S.C. Extension tobacco specialist. As of May 26, the crop needed rain. Other than that, the only problem so far has been a little tomato spotted wilt virus. “But it is not too bad,” says Hardee. The transplant production season had gone well and plenty of plants were available. Farmers seemed to have planted all the acreage they intended, but those intentions were less than last year because of reductions in contracts
 
In Kentucky, burley transplanting is proceeding at a good pace, says Bob Pearce, Kentucky Extension tobacco specialist. “We may be a bit behind our long-term average through June 1 but there is no need for concern.” He estimated that roughly 50 percent of the state’s burley crop or perhaps more had been transplanted by last Friday. 

Transplanting was slowed in part by the conditions in the greenhouse. “Cool temperatures beginning of May and late April lead to a slow start,” he says. “The field conditions were such that we could have planted a little sooner than we did but the plants weren’t ready.”

About half the dark tobacco in western Kentucky and Tennessee had been transplanted by May 27. “That includes all of the early dark fire-cured tobacco that is grown so farmers can double crop their barns,” says Andy Bailey, Kentucky-Tennessee Extension dark specialist. “The late crop is still being planted.”  Over the past three weeks up till Memorial Day, farmers here had two weeks of hot and dry weather, then a week with good rain.

Problems? There is a little Pythium in the floatbeds, and it has caused some loss. But plant production went well and farmers have enough plants to plant their fields. “But if for some reason there was a lot of replanting, we might run short,” says Bailey. 

Dark contracts are up 15 to 20 percent from two years ago, putting perhaps a little pressure on the plant production system.

The rush to wrapper production is receding: Some of the appeal of cigar wrapper types for Black Patch farmers seems to be dwindling, at least this year. As reported in TFN’s May I issue, the abundance of dark air-cured and dark fire-cured contracts has suppressed wrapper plantings, since the dark types are generally considered by farmers to be better prospects for profit.

What one dealer expects for 2022: In its first projection of U.S. production since the growing season began, Universal Leaf estimated American flue-cured volume at 282.2 million pounds, six percent less than 2021. It estimated American burley at 81.5 million pounds, up 32 percent from its estimate for 2021.

Our major competitor—Brazil--was projected by Universal at 1.1 billion pounds for flue-cured, down 12 percent from 2021, and 103.6 million pounds for burley, down six percent. (Source: World Leaf Production May 2022, Universal Corp. Estimates as of May 25).
 
Don’t forget: You must file a report of planted acreage with your crop insurance agent by the acreage reporting date, which for the following types is July 15: Burley, cigar binder, cigar filler, cigar wrapper, dark air cured, fire cured, and Southern Maryland.
 
On the move: Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company will move from Oxford, N.C. to Tobaccoville, N.C., as part of parent company Reynolds American’s strategy to “reduc[e] its manufacturing footprint.” Also moving will be Santa Fe’s sister companies American Snuff Company (formerly Conwood), from Winston-Salem to Tobaccoville, N.C., and ASC’s Traditional Oral operations from Memphis, Tn., to Clarksville, Tn.
 
Planting progress through May 22, according to USDA: Flue-cured--VA, 73%. NC, 87%. SC, 93%. GA/FL, completed. Burley—KY, 30%. NC, 12% VA, 51%. Dark—VA, 55%. Source: Crop and Progress Report, NASS