Author Topic: Growing Nicotiana species  (Read 83 times)

llamabox

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Growing Nicotiana species
« on: March 02, 2009, 01:26:01 AM »


Background

Tobacco has been used and cultivated in America for a very long time, 10,000 years by some accounts. High nicotine content varieties of Nicotiana tabacum and Nicotiana rustica were prized by many tribes. Both species are thought to be cultivars. N. rustica (Wild Tobacco) contains about 10 times the nicotine of N. tabacum, and should be considered one of the most important hallucinogenic entheogens, although both have been used ritually and shamanically by many tribes throughout the Americas.

Nicotianas are beautiful plants, growing to between one and two metres in height depending on the variety and growing conditions. They have huge green leaves and very sweet-scented flowers which range in colour from white to purple, through pink and red, for N. tabacum, or yellow (or even white or green) for N. rustica. They are straightforeward to grow, and will give you no end of pleasure in the Summer months.

The Basics

Nicotianas are very forgiving plants, and although they are native to warm subtropical regions, they will thrive in cooler temperate parts of the world. If seeds are collected from your plants and re-sown, within a few years you can develop hardier varieties more suited to your local climate. They can be sown in Spring, will flower in Summer and can be harvested in early Autumn. For best results they require lots of fertaliser and lots of space for their roots, but I have grown them successfully in 20cm pots.

Growing from Seed

Nicotiana seeds are produced in abundance and are very fine. They can be sown any time in spring, but will produce considerably more growth if sown early in the season. Hold off early sowing if it is unseasonally cold, as frost will kill Nicotianas. Mix the seeds with about twice their volume of sand and sprinkle the mixture on the surface of your growing medium. They can be sown in seed trays, pots, or if it is warm enough, directly into soil. Water pots or trays from below by placing the trays/pots in a sink or large container and letting the water seep upwards through the holes in the bottom by capillary action. When most of the surface is moist, remove them from the water and leave to drain. Place them inside a propagator (heated if available). They require a temperature of 21°C to germinate. They also require light, so don't try to germinate them in the airing cupboard. They should germinate within a week.

Nicotiana seedlings should be transplanted when very small, within a week after germination. If transplanting is left until later it is very easy for their tap root to become damaged, which will result in very poor and sluggish growth for the lifespan of the plant.

Planting Out

Prepare the ground in advance by adding copious quantities of garden compost and, if available, well-rotten horse manure.

Growing in Pots
Even though Tobacco plants like a lot of space, they can be grown successfully in pots. Use the largest size pot you can reasonably accommadate, and give them plenty of rich compost. In pots they will require regular watering during the hotest part of the Summer months, sometimes daily. As I said, I have successfully grown Nicotiana tabacum in 20cm pots, they were sown too late in the season (around May), and yet they still produced abundant growth. They reached about 80cm in height and were still flowering well into September.

Amberica

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Re: Growing Nicotiana species
« Reply #1 on: March 03, 2009, 01:33:06 AM »
You copied that word for word from another site.
http://www.plot55.com/growing/nicotiana.html

Do you have that mans permission? It would be best if all content here was original to avoid troubles for Vesp.
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Vesp

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Re: Growing Nicotiana species
« Reply #2 on: March 03, 2009, 01:33:51 AM »
This is probably true.
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Amberica

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Re: Growing Nicotiana species
« Reply #3 on: March 03, 2009, 01:43:56 AM »
Generally is, linking to the information in the post would work fine but taking another persons work is no good.
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Vesp

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Re: Growing Nicotiana species
« Reply #4 on: March 03, 2009, 01:52:25 AM »
meh.. I guess if there is any problems I can just delete it. I kind of doubt there will be problems now and it really will help the forum get started which will be nice. :D

either way it is nice information. might as well make it easier to find..
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Vesp

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Re: Growing Nicotiana species
« Reply #5 on: April 21, 2009, 11:31:38 PM »
I've began to grow Nicotiana Sylvestris, N. Rustica, and N. Tabacum (Virginia) in small pots to get them started. One thing I would like to mention in this is that my Nicotiana that was growing last year has started to grow again from the ground. So I don't actually think they die off when it freezes once they are well established. The ones that are coming back are the syvestris so this may only be true for them. The rustica, being from South America, probably isn't as cold tolerant.

I will hopefully be taking pictures of them and all the other things I am growing soon.
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xxx

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Re: Growing Nicotiana species
« Reply #6 on: April 02, 2010, 07:47:33 PM »
Quick tip about Nicotine bearing plants.

A Sodium Nitrate fertilizer increases the alkaloid (nicotine) content. And it seems ammonium nitrate is the fertilizer of choice for the commercial growers, so perhaps a mix of the two nitrates, along with 'Miracle grow' will make you some nice plants :)

Vesp

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Re: Growing Nicotiana species
« Reply #7 on: April 02, 2010, 10:30:23 PM »
Why would sodium nitrate be better then any other nitrate, or nitrogen fertilizer? I am interested in seeing a reference to it.
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Re: Growing Nicotiana species
« Reply #8 on: April 02, 2010, 10:59:57 PM »
Vesp: In the FTP here, in my folder, there is a .pdf named 'Nicotine'.

It specifies NaNO3 for some reason, which I cannot recall.

It, however, is a damn fine article, and I will be re-reading it and posting anything that 'jumps out' at me. I just remember the NaNO3 bit from when I read it.

BTW, the N. Rustica seeds I ordered online never arrived!