TOBACCO : NEW MARKETS, OLD TRADITIONS: 16_0_346_1web_rh23

Lester {quote}Buddy{quote} Stroud, a farm hand at Shelley Farms, looks over a field of tobacco as his crew prepares the harvesting equipment in the Pleasant View community of Horry County, South Carolina July 26, 2013. The traditional tobacco harvest requires many labor intensive hours to bring the crop to market, especially with the flue-cured variety prominent in the southern United States. With the growing health concerns with smoking in the US, most farmers use market cooperatives to sell their crop to the growing markets in China.      Picture taken on July 26, 2013.   REUTERS/Randall Hill (UNITED STATES)

Lester "Buddy" Stroud, a farm hand at Shelley Farms, looks over a field of tobacco as his crew prepares the harvesting equipment in the Pleasant View community of Horry County, South Carolina July 26, 2013. The traditional tobacco harvest requires many labor intensive hours to bring the crop to market, especially with the flue-cured variety prominent in the southern United States. With the growing health concerns with smoking in the US, most farmers use market cooperatives to sell their crop to the growing markets in China. Picture taken on July 26, 2013. REUTERS/Randall Hill (UNITED STATES)