Originally posted by tippexx
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Jose doesn't work for Habanos anymore, he left in early 2011. In his case, I've never known him to take a position on something about which he was not willing to change his mind.
He simply had not heard the notion that stress would make for a better tobacco plant.
While surprised to hear Hector say it, he accepted what he said as true right away. He had no reason not to and Hector had no reason to lie about it.
Hector has worked on that farm all his life as have his family, all the way back to the 1890s.
What Hector says make sense. What I had been trying to get out of him was what makes Cuban tobacco different to tobacco from other countries.
Experience and seeds can and have been exported, climate can be very closely approximated, that leaves soil.
Habanos, being Habanos, will of course say that the soil their cigars comes from is some of the best in the world. And, in a way, they're right. It's a lot less clumsy to say "the best soil" than "precisely the right kind of 'bad' soil".
Soil can be improved and conditioned. But it's hard to make soil "bad", or at least just the right type of "bad", if that makes sense.
Pinar del Rio has very sandy soil, not volcanic, and that goes down for metres, allowing for very good drainage, so it's easy to induce water stress in the plants by starving them of water for just the right amount of time.
Look at the plants in the second video. They are mature plants, the harvest had already started on the second (Libre de Pie) leaves but the plants are barely more than 3-4 feet tall.
Look at a mature Dominican tobacco field, the plants are over 6 feet tall, using the same seed variety.
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