Success StoryApplied Tobacco Research and Extension involvement in GAP Training for Tobacco Growers



Applied Tobacco Research and Extension involvement in GAP Training for Tobacco Growers

Author: William Bailey

Planning Unit: Plant and Soil Sciences

Major Program: Tobacco

Outcome: Initial Outcome

Tobacco provides nearly $270 million annually to the Kentucky Agricultural economy.  All tobacco growers that sell tobacco to major manufacturers in the U.S. are required to complete an annual Good Agricultural Practices (GAP) Training.  This training is a 2-hour annual training that includes crop management, environmental management, and labor training, with tobacco extension specialists in the tobacco-producing states conducted the crop and environmental management (1 hr) of each 2-hour session in their respective states.  Information presented in the annual crop and environmental management sessions are based on field research results conducted locally.  Andy Bailey has conducted several research projects focused on cost reduction, harm reduction and increased quality and marketability of dark tobacco grown in Kentucky, including:  curing methods and potassium source modification to reduce harmful nitrosamine constituents in cured leaf, pesticide residue reduction (12 common pesticides tested over the last 12 years to establish common pesticide residue levels in cured dark tobacco leaf in Kentucky), development of production recommendations for establishment of Connecticut Broadleaf cigar wrapper tobacco production in Kentucky, management of angular leaf spot in dark fire-cured tobacco, air-curing barn management to mitigate poor air-curing conditions to make tobacco marketable in poor curing seasons, and variety development and fungicide evaluation to allow dark tobacco to be produced in the presence of black shank.  

   Results from these and other dark tobacco research programs have been used in the crop and environmental management training in 158 Tobacco GAP Trainings that Andy Bailey has conducted since the U.S. Tobacco GAP Program was established in 2013.  Over the past 11 years since the inception of the U.S. Tobacco GAP Program, between 900 and 1800 tobacco growers annually have participated in Tobacco GAP Trainings that Andy Bailey has conducted.  In addition, Andy Bailey is editor of the Burley & Dark Tobacco Production Guide, a major extension publication that is published every 2 years and has become the leading reference for GAP Program compliance and leading general reference for burley and dark production in the United States.






Stories by William Bailey


Development of Production Recommendations and Assistance in the Production of Connecticut Broadleaf Cigar Wrapper Tobacco

about 2 years ago by William Bailey

Although burley and dark tobacco are the primary tobacco types grown in Kentucky, a new type of toba... Read More


Development of Virtual Educational Materials for Tobacco Good Agricultural Practices Trainings in 2021

about 2 years ago by William Bailey

Tobacco educational programming has traditionally been a very in-person, face-to-face effort that ha... Read More


Stories by Plant and Soil Sciences


Forage group completes national publication on 'Grazing Alfalfa'

Forage group completes national publication on 'Grazing Alfalfa'

about 2 years ago by Jimmy Henning

Grazing AlfalfaRay Smith, Krista Lea, and Jimmy HenningThe UK Forage Group has recently completed a ... Read More


UK Forage Group Establishes Teaching Pastures at Locust Trace AgriScience Center

UK Forage Group Establishes Teaching Pastures at Locust Trace AgriScience Center

about 2 years ago by Jimmy Henning

UK Forage Group Establishes Teaching Pastures at Locust Trace AgriScience CenterSpecialists and Staf... Read More