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AFK to Tobacco History Traditional Cache

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Hidden : 12/6/2014
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

Now that we have you Away From Keyboard..
Welcome to the History of Tabacco!

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Tobacco

Tobacco is a broadleaf plant and is part of the nightshade family. People inhale, chew, or smoke dried tobacco leaves. The tobacco leaves contain nicotine, an addictive compound. Tobacco users claim that smoking, inhaling, or chewing the dried leaves has both an invigorating and calming effect on users, while scientists have now proven that tobacco use increases chances for various types of cancer and lung ailments. Indigenous to North, Central, and South America, farmers now grow varieties of this crop on six of the seven continents.

Tobacco is generally associated with warmer climates with long growing seasons. The first tobacco planted commercially in North America was in Jamestown, Virginia, during the early 1600s. Once it was discovered that tobacco grew well in the Virginia soil and climate, many white Virginians began planting the crop to sell in Europe. Europeans during this period believed that tobacco was a medicine. During the early 1600s, some pharmacies in Europe claimed that tobacco would cure people of any disease that afflicted their bodies from the waist up. Tobacco cultivation eventually spread into North and South Carolina, Maryland, and Kentucky, although people across the Southern and Midwestern United States commonly grew some tobacco, usually for their own personal use.

During the late 1700s and the early 1800s, white Ohioans also planted tobacco. The crop never gained the popularity among Ohio farmers as it did among farmers further south, but a commercial market did develop for Ohio-grown tobacco. Ohio farmers continue to grow tobacco today. In 1992, Ohio farmers produced almost twenty-one million pounds of tobacco.

Burley tobacco is a light air-cured tobacco used primarily for cigarette production.

The origin of White Burley tobacco was credited to George Webb and Joseph Fore in 1864, who grew it on the farm of Captain Frederick Kautz near Higginsport, Ohio, from seed from Bracken County, Kentucky. He noticed it yielded a different type of light leaf shaded from white to yellow, and cured differently. By 1866, he harvested 20,000 pounds of Burley tobacco and sold it in 1867 at the St. Louis Fair for $58 per hundred pounds. By 1883, the principal market for this tobacco was Cincinnati, but it was grown throughout central Kentucky and Middle Tennessee. In 1880 Kentucky produced 36 percent of the total national tobacco production, and was first in the country, with nearly twice as much tobacco produced as by Virginia, then the second-place state. Later the type became referred to as burley tobacco, which is air-cured.

In the U.S., burley tobacco plants are started from pelletized seeds placed in polystyrene trays floated on a bed of fertilized water in March or April. Transplanting begins in May and progresses through June with a small percentage set in July. Producers must contend with major diseases such as black shank and blue mold and insects like aphids, hornworms and budworms. Plants are topped by removing the developing flower head at approximately 60 days from transplanting, and treated to prevent the growth of side shoots called suckers. Topping allows energy that would have produced a bloom to promote leaf expansion. At approximately four weeks after topping, the tobacco is stalk cut, using a knife that is shaped like a tomahawk. Each plant is speared, spiked or spudded (the terminology depending on the geographic location) onto a stick topped by a metal spear, spike or spud that fits over the stick. Each stick will contain five or six stalks.

Sticks of green-cut tobacco are most often allowed to field wilt for three or four days prior to hanging in a barn. Tobacco is allowed to air cure for eight or more weeks, turning from the normal pale green to yellow and then to brown. Burley that cures too quickly will retain some of the yellow pigments, as well as chemicals that normally break down with a slower cure. The quality achieved by U.S. burley producers is primarily due to natural curing conditions. Once fully cured burley is taken down, sticks are removed and leaves are stripped from the plant into grades by stalk position. Leaves are baled by grade and taken to a receiving station run by a tobacco manufacturer or leaf dealer.

Burley contains little sugar, and has generally been cased (sweetened) with humectants, sugars, or other flavors for uses such as in American blend cigarettes. As a result, a broad ban enacted by Canada and proposed in many other countries would block the import of nearly all tobacco products containing burley. The situation resembles a dispute between Asian producers and the United States, which banned clove cigarettes. For each nation, banning components typical of tobacco manufactured abroad provides a powerful trade advantage, but may be prohibited by GATT trade agreements. The effect on American producers is limited, but not negligible, as most Canadian imports were already of flue-cured Virginia tobacco.



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Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Fubhyq or f fvzcyr teno.. Vs lbh pna abg svaq vg, lbhe bire guvaxvat vg!

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)