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Stripping and Marketing

Fully cured leaves are brittle to the touch. These leaves cannot be handled easily unless the leaves have a certain moisture content in the leaf. This moisture helps the farmer handle the leaves so they can be prepared for market.

Usually this moisture will be in the tobacco during humid conditions so the leaves can absorb atmospheric moisture. If conditions do not allow for this then leaves may be steamed or misted so they can be handled.

Once the leaves have enough moisture in them to be handled then they are taken out of the curing facility. When the plants are taken off of the sticks they were put on during harvesting the leaves are then stripped off. This can either be done completely by hand or there are machines that can do this for the farmer.

As the leaves are taken off of the stalk they are graded based upon their color, size, and physical condition. These leaves are then gathered together and put into bales. The bales are less than 100 pounds in weight. Tobacco that is now put in bales was once hand-tied and placed into baskets. The baskets were also graded before they reacted the market. The bales today are then taken to a warehouse where they are auctioned off. Before the bales are auctioned though federal graders grade them. This grade helps determine the price of the tobacco is sold for is a company does not buy the tobacco. If a company does not purchase the tobacco, then it goes to what is known as the "pool." This is actually the Burley Tobacco Growers Cooperative.