• Hi Guest - Come check out all of the new CP Merch Shop! Now you can support CigarPass buy purchasing hats, apparel, and more...
    Click here to visit! here...

First Trip to Cuba report

SamuelClemens

Member
Joined
Aug 17, 2017
Messages
21
** This report is abit dated now because it was back in April, but I wanted to post it as a basis for follow ups. I've returned to Cuba every month since April**

My first trip to Cuba - if you are considering it... don't wait, take the plunge. I'm going again in 2 months!


Flight was an easy non-stop 4.5 flight from LAX to HAV $344 roundtrip on Alaska Air. Declare that you are person to person educational trip. It’s the easiest to qualify for as you state that you are learning about the culture, food, music, cigars etc through independent travel. I booked a casa particulares. This is a private owned home on Airbnb. The government has started to allow private business for Cuban home owners. This is cheaper than hotels because the hotels are state owned management that was charging $600+ for “a 5 star” which in Cuban terms is a 3.5 star. We paid $70 per night per room for a beautiful casa with a pool. (includes breakfast) Currency, US dollar has a 10% penalty as well as a 3% conversion charge to cuban convertible peso. So I bought Euro then changed to cuban. I lost 6% in conversion vs. 13% for US dollar.

Rum: dirt cheap. Havana Club 7, Santiago 7, Legendario was $6.50 per bottle. These are quite decent and go for $40-60 here in the US. Santiago 11 and Havana Club Mastro was $40. Found 2 bottles of Barrel Proof for $100. I prefer Santiago. Smooth, hint of sweetness, caramel and woody. The Santiago 25 was amazing but I am a cheap bastage so I didn’t buy any bottles. $240.

Cigars: This is where it gets long. We were blessed in our guide, the ex-president of Habanos SA. This guy new everything about everything about Cuban cigars. I learned more in a week than 27 years of smoking Cubans. This guy makes more working as a tour guide. He charges $150 per day which includes a car. Which is what you would pay anyway for an english speaking driver with car. But he made it VIP the whole week. He had all the master rollers on speed dial. We never paid for factory tours or farm tours. For example, we sat in all the VIP lounges while the managers and master rollers sat and smoked with us. Hirochi Robaina pulled up a chair in the middle of his work and brought out his private stash of personal cigars to smoke with us!


Our first stop was the mecca of Cuban cigars, the old Partagas factory which is now shut down and just a La Casa Del Habanos. It felt like Olivanders wand shop. Just so beautiful it makes you want to cry. Met our first torcedor, La Chine. Torcedors are allowed to make extra money by custom rolling cigars which they split 50% with the state. $25 a month is average salary for a Cuban. I was abit disappointed in La Chine pyramides and robusto. Very light (refined taste?) but after 6 cigars that day I couldn’t taste them for shit they were so light. $5 per stick.


Alex at the Comodoro Hotel. The youngest torcedor in present cuba at 31 years old. His cigars were incredibly amazing. He offered any size, and length. His canonazo was the best for me. 54 by 6. $5 per stick. And his behike 52. Also $5


Yolanda at the Melia Habana. Her robusto was amazing, but my tastes give Alex the slight edge. $5 . She was incredibly gracious. Definitely the queen of her domain, which includes the Comodoro and Melia Habana as she runs the place. She stayed and smoked a cigar with us, wanting to talk to foreigners.


Jorge, took over for Enrique Mons. His Lonsdale was very good, but his other sizes were unimpressive for me. $7 stick.
Cueto, his cigars have gone down in quality. Taste is still amazing to me but underfilled with less complexity than years past. $7-10.
While talking with Hirochi, Tobacco leaf was supposed to be best harvest ever. Truth was leaf quality is good but output is at less than 50%. Large sizes and top boxes were nowhere to be found. Searched 10+ stores and no behike. Was told that top boxes will be scarce for at least 2 years now, so buy up what you can. Its only going to get worse.


Obama removed import limits. Brought home 22.5 bundles and boxes. In excess of 600 sticks. Had to buy another cabinet humidor.
10 bottles of rum. Santiago 11 and legendario.
Trip was worth every penny. Already booked for return trip. Feel free to ask questions.



 
Very nice! So can you speak on the culture and things to do not related to cigars? What else have you done there in your travels?
 
Wow, very cool! I thought the cost would be outrageous but it sounds like a very affordable trip. Thanks for sharing the experience.

I'd ask some questions but I highly doubt I would ever go so I'll just sit back, watch this thread and dream.......

I've never really traveled far for vacations, hell I never vacation. If I ever go anywhere, it would be France/Europe.
 
The music was great. Buena Vista Social Club puts on a great show. Parisien puts on a nice caberet show as well at the Hotel Nacional. The food is great if you know where to go. Al Carbon has the very best roasted sucking pig. It's worth a visit all by itself. However, there are many bad restaurants so you have to have the right guide. Too many guides get kickbacks to bring you to bad restaurants. The city is nice to see but I must admit, even after 5 vists - i don't know much of the city. However, I can tell you about the specifics of every Casa del Habanos from west to east. We spent 12 hours of every day smoking and drinking rum. The nightlife I'd have to tell privately. The plantation tours are a must do, but I'd only do once because of the 5 hours roundtrip. The factory tours are a must. It's very hard to buy cigars from rollers now because the security is insane. On one of the trips I was able to buy H upman #2 by the handful for $3 each off the tables. And I was gifted a Cohiba Grandioso and Majestuosos 1966. But other tours I was turned away by security.
 
** This report is abit dated now because it was back in April, but I wanted to post it as a basis for follow ups. I've returned to Cuba every month since April**

My first trip to Cuba - if you are considering it... don't wait, take the plunge. I'm going again in 2 months!


Flight was an easy non-stop 4.5 flight from LAX to HAV $344 roundtrip on Alaska Air. Declare that you are person to person educational trip. It’s the easiest to qualify for as you state that you are learning about the culture, food, music, cigars etc through independent travel. I booked a casa particulares. This is a private owned home on Airbnb. The government has started to allow private business for Cuban home owners. This is cheaper than hotels because the hotels are state owned management that was charging $600+ for “a 5 star” which in Cuban terms is a 3.5 star. We paid $70 per night per room for a beautiful casa with a pool. (includes breakfast) Currency, US dollar has a 10% penalty as well as a 3% conversion charge to cuban convertible peso. So I bought Euro then changed to cuban. I lost 6% in conversion vs. 13% for US dollar.

Rum: dirt cheap. Havana Club 7, Santiago 7, Legendario was $6.50 per bottle. These are quite decent and go for $40-60 here in the US. Santiago 11 and Havana Club Mastro was $40. Found 2 bottles of Barrel Proof for $100. I prefer Santiago. Smooth, hint of sweetness, caramel and woody. The Santiago 25 was amazing but I am a cheap bastage so I didn’t buy any bottles. $240.

Cigars: This is where it gets long. We were blessed in our guide, the ex-president of Habanos SA. This guy new everything about everything about Cuban cigars. I learned more in a week than 27 years of smoking Cubans. This guy makes more working as a tour guide. He charges $150 per day which includes a car. Which is what you would pay anyway for an english speaking driver with car. But he made it VIP the whole week. He had all the master rollers on speed dial. We never paid for factory tours or farm tours. For example, we sat in all the VIP lounges while the managers and master rollers sat and smoked with us. Hirochi Robaina pulled up a chair in the middle of his work and brought out his private stash of personal cigars to smoke with us!


Our first stop was the mecca of Cuban cigars, the old Partagas factory which is now shut down and just a La Casa Del Habanos. It felt like Olivanders wand shop. Just so beautiful it makes you want to cry. Met our first torcedor, La Chine. Torcedors are allowed to make extra money by custom rolling cigars which they split 50% with the state. $25 a month is average salary for a Cuban. I was abit disappointed in La Chine pyramides and robusto. Very light (refined taste?) but after 6 cigars that day I couldn’t taste them for shit they were so light. $5 per stick.


Alex at the Comodoro Hotel. The youngest torcedor in present cuba at 31 years old. His cigars were incredibly amazing. He offered any size, and length. His canonazo was the best for me. 54 by 6. $5 per stick. And his behike 52. Also $5


Yolanda at the Melia Habana. Her robusto was amazing, but my tastes give Alex the slight edge. $5 . She was incredibly gracious. Definitely the queen of her domain, which includes the Comodoro and Melia Habana as she runs the place. She stayed and smoked a cigar with us, wanting to talk to foreigners.


Jorge, took over for Enrique Mons. His Lonsdale was very good, but his other sizes were unimpressive for me. $7 stick.
Cueto, his cigars have gone down in quality. Taste is still amazing to me but underfilled with less complexity than years past. $7-10.
While talking with Hirochi, Tobacco leaf was supposed to be best harvest ever. Truth was leaf quality is good but output is at less than 50%. Large sizes and top boxes were nowhere to be found. Searched 10+ stores and no behike. Was told that top boxes will be scarce for at least 2 years now, so buy up what you can. Its only going to get worse.


Obama removed import limits. Brought home 22.5 bundles and boxes. In excess of 600 sticks. Had to buy another cabinet humidor.
10 bottles of rum. Santiago 11 and legendario.
Trip was worth every penny. Already booked for return trip. Feel free to ask questions.



Went to see La China 3 times. All three times she was not there. They said she did not have any tobacco to roll.
I would agree Alex's rolls are great, and he is a great guy.
Also saw Yolanda. Great rolls, hands down my favorite. Smoked one of her robustos and it was probably the most perfectly made cigar I've ever touch. I was surprised. That's just my experience. Can't wait to get some age on her rolls.
Juanita. What a sweetheart. Bought her Magicos roll. Solid.
Focused on these three because I knew from research they had light to medium blends.

Sounds like you're having a great time as I did. Enjoy your post. So thanks.
Be well.
 
For a minute there I thought Neal was posting and had moved to LA. :confused: Inconceivable! I just can't see Neal in short shorts, rollerblading down the way with an albino boa on his shoulders.
 
Good stuff!!
I went in April and fell in love with Reynaldo Gonzales' custom rolls - he is at the CONDE DE VILLANUEVA LCDH -- small shop, but amazing cigars, and great espresso pulls! I've got some blog posts finalizing that I'll post here for info.
 
La China was also absent the day I went to see her. But we did smoke some peso cigars in Vinales on our way to Pinar del Rio that were outstanding. I would have loved to buy a few hundred of those.
 
La China was also absent the day I went to see her. But we did smoke some peso cigars in Vinales on our way to Pinar del Rio that were outstanding. I would have loved to buy a few hundred of those.
The peso cigars I had there were only enjoyable because of the company I was with were strangers who gifted me these blunt looking cigars. Like I've heard before: cigars do not taste the same in Cuba, whether thats in the tobacco or the atmosphere, you be the judge. ;)
 
I believe is a particular peso cigar that most people smoke. I think it has a blue band. Not sure the name. But would have like to try those.
 
Top