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Cigar's A Goner...

verhoevc

Banned
Joined
Oct 30, 2007
Messages
846
Location
SC
No, I didn't leave any cigars out... however, I did recieve an interesting "advice" email that cheap humidors likes to send out every week or so it seems... this one saying that:

"Take a cigar in the wrapper [referring to cellophane] and leave it outside your humidor for a week. You might as well throw it away, because it'll be ruined."

I was wondering what people thought of this quote. How long do ya'll think a cigar can be outside proper humidity before you would consider it ruined?
Chris
 
That's too broad a statement to be accurate. In summer time in some areas, the relative humidity of the ambient environment could be well over 70%. That could keep a cigar in smokeable condition quite a long time. Winter in the Great White North is another story. With the relative humidity being about 20% right now, that same cigar would be a crispy critter in a day or two.

That said, there is some hope of re-humidifying a cigar that got a little dried out, though it will never be the same as it would have been if properly stored from day one.
 
Ditto, too broad. Many of our brothers could leave cigars "out" for months and suffer no damage. I live in Denver where that statement could be true. I have to be careful not to allow cigars to stay too close to the door seals on my cabinet. Even so, I found a Pepin blue that had fallen outside my cabinet for at least a week. I ran it under the tap for a second to wet the wrapper and smoked it. It was fine.
 
No, I didn't leave any cigars out... however, I did recieve an interesting "advice" email that cheap humidors likes to send out every week or so it seems... this one saying that:

"Take a cigar in the wrapper [referring to cellophane] and leave it outside your humidor for a week. You might as well throw it away, because it'll be ruined."

I was wondering what people thought of this quote. How long do ya'll think a cigar can be outside proper humidity before you would consider it ruined?
Chris
The quote doesn't make sense to me. Perhaps there was something in the context?

edit: NS, sealing problems with the kitchen-o-dor? ... and water from a tap? Don't you know you have to use distilled water? :D

edit2: just got a nice package of sticks from a friend that have been frozen and uncello'd (except for the Shark) and losing moisture for the five days that they were in the mail. I'm not throwing these away :whistling:.
 
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