CyBeRDiVeR
New Member
The last 1/3rd of the cigar is always the most enjoyable for me! To each their own I guess!
Madmonk, Cigarstone, thanks for the tips. I'm sure that I'm doing those things. I've noticed that my RH is a little to high also as I'm having to re-light almost everything. The next week or two will get better as I've adjusted the RH slightly.
Glad to hear it's not just me that has this problem. Way to relaxing of a hobby.
I don't know if anybody knows for sure but it seems to me that a change in RH could take a long time to reach the middle of the cigar and especially if there are a bunch of cigars in a pile in a humi.
I've noticed that my RH is a little to high also as I'm having to re-light almost everything. The next week or two will get better as I've adjusted the RH slightly.
I've noticed that my RH is a little to high also as I'm having to re-light almost everything. The next week or two will get better as I've adjusted the RH slightly.
This could be the main reason you're not able to nub your cigars. When a cigar burns, or anything burns for that matter, one of the by-products is water. Just from the cigar burning you will get a natural buildup of moisture and tar/resin. The higher the rH you start out with, the quicker this happens. I've found that starting out slightly dry gives you a longer and more pleasurable smoking experience. I don't know what your current storage conditions are but I bet if you bring everything down to about 65%, and any cc's down to about 63%+/-, you'd see a big difference.
The last 1/3rd of the cigar is always the most enjoyable for me! To each their own I guess!
Proving again that "you are the man"! I would definitely get sick if I tried that everytime.Just about everything I smoke gets nubbed if I have the time, I always keep toohpicks or something around to hold it.
Just about everything I smoke gets nubbed if I have the time, I always keep toohpicks or something around to hold it.
If the cigar does have a band on it I always take it off before I even start smoking. Usually I put
If the cigar does have a band on it I always take it off before I even start smoking. Usually I put
Very continental - as I recall, the old-school british etiquette about smoking cigars runs along the lines that the bands come off, since gentlemen do not advertise what they're smoking; one-upmanship diminishes both parties.
I typically stop above the band as well. Most of the time at least. When the cigar's done for you, put it to rest; stretching it out for the sake of stretching it out does no one any favors.
Shit.......I save bands from expensive cigars and put them on the dog rockets I smoke just to look important :whistling:
If the cigar does have a band on it I always take it off before I even start smoking. Usually I put
Very continental - as I recall, the old-school british etiquette about smoking cigars runs along the lines that the bands come off, since gentlemen do not advertise what they're smoking; one-upmanship diminishes both parties.
I typically stop above the band as well. Most of the time at least. When the cigar's done for you, put it to rest; stretching it out for the sake of stretching it out does no one any favors.
I think smoking to the nub is an art, it requires the proper light and proper attention during the smoke so it doesn't require relights and touchups as I think these are what creates the bitter/harsh taste. Be careful with the light, pay attention so you don't get behind and you may start enjoying the nub. Just my .02
I've noticed that my RH is a little to high also as I'm having to re-light almost everything. The next week or two will get better as I've adjusted the RH slightly.
This could be the main reason you're not able to nub your cigars. When a cigar burns, or anything burns for that matter, one of the by-products is water. Just from the cigar burning you will get a natural buildup of moisture and tar/resin. The higher the rH you start out with, the quicker this happens. I've found that starting out slightly dry gives you a longer and more pleasurable smoking experience. I don't know what your current storage conditions are but I bet if you bring everything down to about 65%, and any cc's down to about 63%+/-, you'd see a big difference.
+1
I was a 68-72 guy for EVER, and would panic at 65. Until I started on this board.
My humi has been a steady 63 for a couple of weeks, and everything is smoking beautifully, esp the CCs.
Click here to register for free. You'll gain full access to all features. If your account is not activated within 24 hours, contact us at contact@cigarpass.com with the username you are inquiring about. Thank you...