Connecticut Broadleaf - Tobacco
This ancient variety, 1.2 m tall, produces white flowers and leaves 75 cm long and 30 cm wide. They have a sweet fragrance and medium nicotine content.
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in bucket
Sow in trays, under light cover, at a temperature of around 18°C. Cover superficially with soil. Transplant into individual cups when plants reach several leaves. Plant out after the last frosts. Dwarf varieties should be spaced 20 cm apart in all directions and full-grown varieties 80 cm apart in all directions.
March, April, May
June, July, August, September
in the ground
sunny
medium
humus
rich, fees, drained
Nicotiana tabacum
very early
400 seeds
From 100 to 120 cm
From 60 to 75 cm
elongated
United States
1884
This ancient variety from the United States is mentioned in seed catalogs as early as 1884. Also known as "East Hartford Broadleaf", it is descended from the "Connecticut Seedleaf" variety. Its accession no. in the USDA seed bank is "PI 552619".
USDA seed bank
We now know that it's the hundreds of chemicals, additives and addictives (thousands of which are present in cigarette smoke) that make tobacco a deadly plant. The tobacco industry and the economic stakes generated by its sale present it to us as a highly carcinogenic plant, and with good reason, but it's important to differentiate between Tobacco, a medicinal and sacred plant, and what is sold to us under the label "smoking kills". Often called the "master plant" by many tribes, it has always been used by gastrointestinal or respiratory route - in juice, chewed or smoked - for its many uses. In particular, it is highly prized for treating migraines. In homeopathy, a very low dose of Nicotiana tabacum is also prescribed for migraines, nausea, vomiting and circulation problems. Tobacco is apparently still used to combat parasites. Historically, it was used to relieve asthma, coughs, rheumatism, gout, pain and neuralgia, epilepsy and to make purgative enemas. In 1614, physician William Barkley wrote: "Used in moderation, there is no medicine comparable to tobacco. Native Americans and many Latin American tribes use tobacco ceremonially to communicate with the spirits (through smoke), to thank the Creator, to pray for good harvests and fish catches, to make peace with the enemy (peace pipe) or for rites of passage.