yes, it's a pretty cruisy smoke. dreamy mild high :)
Tobacco is the dried leaves of the tobacco plant.
Tobacco is in cigarettes and it comes from dried leaves of the tobacco plant.
People make tobacco. People grow the tobacco plant, pick the leaves, the leaves are dried and cut and this is what we call tobacco.
Nettle tea contains a moderate amount of calcium, typically ranging from 300 to 500 mg per 100 grams of dried nettle leaves. However, the actual calcium content in a cup of nettle tea will depend on the amount of dried leaves used and the steeping time. Generally, a cup of nettle tea made from one tablespoon of dried leaves may provide around 50-100 mg of calcium. It's an excellent herbal source for those looking to increase their calcium intake.
Tobacco is made from the leaves of the tobacco plant, scientifically known as Nicotiana tabacum. This plant belongs to the nightshade family, Solanaceae, and is cultivated for its leaves which are dried and processed for various tobacco products like cigarettes, cigars, and chewing tobacco.
tobacco? I'm not an expert, but ive seen tobacco leaves hanging in barns. they don't do that to store them i would assume. they look dry to me.
Dried tobacco, no.
On October 15, 1492, Christopher Columbus was offered dried tobacco leaves as a gift from the American Indians that he encountered
Chewing tobacco refers to a form of smokeless tobacco furnished as long strands of whole leaves and consumed by placing portion of the leaf between the cheek and gum or by chewing, and is dried. Natural tobacco is tobacco: an agricultural product processed from the leaves of plants in the genus Nicotiana; It is alive and in the ground and growing. Natural tobacco can also be known as the Flowering Tobacco Plant, which is a fragrant flower found in many gardens.
Dried leaves are dead leaves.
Smoking means to smoke a cigarette or cigar. Tobacco is the leaves of a plant dried and prepared for snuff, chewing, or smoking
They started growing Tobacco in 1612 but they did not get a final product that could be exported until 1617.