Yesterday I tried G&H Westmoreland Slices for the first time and was really thrown by it. On TR it was described as straight virginia and it clearly had what I know as a strong, deep, spicy kentucky/dark leaf profile. I read all available descriptions of it and it gets described as 'dark-fired virginia', 'African dark fired', and 'rich dusky virginias'.
After trawling the interwebs, I found a fascinating discussion on another forum in which the venerable Rusty linked to various sources to demonstrate that dark leaf is one distinct plant and the base of dark-fired aka DFK.
According to Rusty, dark-fired 'virginia' is probably a misnomer used by pipe tobacco manufacturers, unless of course it is referring to a dark-fired crop sourced from Virginia geographically, which Westmoreland and its ilk isn't.
Yet others referred to dark-fired virginia as an old empire style, alluding to the plant/crop being produced in Africa and India.
The discussion was left hanging about whether the seeds used to produce this old empire crop in India and Malawi is a strain of dark leaf or virginia.
I can't find an answer and don't use social media to ask Gawith and Hoggarth.
Has anyone here managed to establish what the answer is? Is it virginia leaf somehow processed in a way that mimics kentucky-style dark leaf OR is it an example of confusing inaccurate manufacturer terminology?
After trawling the interwebs, I found a fascinating discussion on another forum in which the venerable Rusty linked to various sources to demonstrate that dark leaf is one distinct plant and the base of dark-fired aka DFK.
According to Rusty, dark-fired 'virginia' is probably a misnomer used by pipe tobacco manufacturers, unless of course it is referring to a dark-fired crop sourced from Virginia geographically, which Westmoreland and its ilk isn't.
Yet others referred to dark-fired virginia as an old empire style, alluding to the plant/crop being produced in Africa and India.
The discussion was left hanging about whether the seeds used to produce this old empire crop in India and Malawi is a strain of dark leaf or virginia.
I can't find an answer and don't use social media to ask Gawith and Hoggarth.
Has anyone here managed to establish what the answer is? Is it virginia leaf somehow processed in a way that mimics kentucky-style dark leaf OR is it an example of confusing inaccurate manufacturer terminology?