Tobacco Growers Meeting

Sugar Creek Ag • November 27, 2025

Tobacco growers, you're invited to join Southern States and Sugar Creek Ag on December 9th, 2025, for an in-depth meeting focused on foliar nutrition, humic products, and practical in-season strategies to strengthen crop performance.


Hosted at Palace Pointe in Roxboro, NC, this meeting will bring together growers from across the region to talk through real field challenges, field-proven solutions, and key timing considerations for the upcoming season.


Growers will hear the latest updates from Sugar Creek Ag’s team, including:

  • Field-tested insights on foliar timing
  • How humic products support root health and nutrient uptake
  • In-season solutions that stabilize performance when the soil can’t keep up
  • Additional Southern States agronomy topics relevant to Carolina tobacco acres




Date: Tuesday, December 9, 2025
Time: 5:00 PM
Location: Palace Pointe, 5050 Durham Rd, Roxboro, NC



Southern States - Creedmoor, NC

Contact: Hoyt Self

📞 (910) 599-5157

✉️ hoyt.self@sscoop.com


Southern States - Mebane, NC

Contact: Mike Andrews

📞 (336) 226-0666

✉️ mike.andrews@sscoop.com


Southern States - Reidsville, NC

Contact: Kevin Braddy

📞 (336) 362-4216

✉️ kevin.braddy@sscoop.com


By Sugar Creek Ag January 29, 2026
When it comes to grass hay and pasture production, early-season management sets the tone for the entire year. What happens at green-up influences stand density, forage response, nutrient efficiency, and ultimately how much you can get out of every acre. Building a strong forage program isn’t about chasing a single pass or product. It’s about supporting soil function, nutrient availability, and plant health from the start. If soil conditions or nutrient availability limit growth at green-up, those challenges can carry through the rest of the season and impact both yield and forage quality.  That’s why many hay and pasture growers focus on programs that support early nutrient efficiency and soil function — not fertilizer alone. In many hay and pasture systems, early fertility focuses heavily on nitrogen to drive growth. While nitrogen can increase biomass, it doesn’t always improve forage quality or feed value. Bigger plants don’t automatically mean better hay. In some cases, bulk without balance can lead to more waste and less efficient utilization.
By Sugar Creek Ag January 28, 2026
A crop may still require calcium even when soil pH is within the optimal range because soil pH alone does not indicate how much calcium is actually available to plants or how effectively it is taken up. While pH reflects soil acidity or alkalinity, it does not measure exchangeable calcium levels.
By Sugar Creek Ag January 8, 2026
Sugar-based nutrition helps feed soil microbes, fuel crops, and support nutrient efficiency during critical growth stages.
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