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Royal Bum
Aging
Just curious!
I know this topic has been discussed, but I don't remember this particular point being mentioned; raising the humidity when aging cigars.
So I'm watching a TV show the other day and one of the characters talks about aging his cigars and he says "most like to stay at 70 but I push my humidity to 80 when aging..."
Anyone ever hear of this?
I wonder what the humidity is when the manufacturers age their tobacco on the farms/warehouses?
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Lucky Bum
I would be leary of anything over 70%, I keep mine at 65%. On a farm they bring in green product that must be hella wet so the humidity is probably sky high until the baccy starts drying. Never having been to these farms or countries Iam just guessing
Don’t wait for the storm to pass. Learn to dance in the rain.
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Custom User Title
Don't believe everything you hear on TV
70% RH should be about the max - much over that and you're risking mold, particular in a warmer environment. I keep my humis in the 65-70 range.
You oughta know not to stand by the window, somebody see you up there.
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Lost no more
Originally Posted by
Brimy
Just curious!
I know this topic has been discussed, but I don't remember this particular point being mentioned; raising the humidity when aging cigars.
So I'm watching a TV show the other day and one of the characters talks about aging his cigars and he says "most like to stay at 70 but I push my humidity to 80 when aging..."
Anyone ever hear of this?
I wonder what the humidity is when the manufacturers age their tobacco on the farms/warehouses?
Brian, this does not sound right. " one of the characters talks about aging his cigars and he says "most like to stay at 70 but I push my humidity to 80 when aging..."
Have to think that a retail shop ~ B&M that kept their cigars at 80 Humidity wouldn't stay in business long.
Last edited by allusred; 01-07-2019 at 01:53 AM.
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Royal Bum
Thx!
I thought it kind of strange too, that's why I asked.
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Advisor to Bum Wanabees
I age my stocks at about 62 rh. Been doing it for years and it works for me quite well.
RIP Don DeBusk, I miss you more than you’ll ever know my good friend.
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Golf Course Bum
Yep - I keep mine around 65% and although I don't seem to be able to keep much anything over 4-5 years it works just fine. I'm more interested in how people keep cigars longer without lighting them up ! 80 sounds crazy
No cigar until you get a par - birdie if it's a scramble !
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Lost no more
Should anyone here (Cigarbum) wish to prove/disprove the idea that a Humidity level of 80 would be right when aging NC.
Once warm & humid weather returns. Put a cigar you'd not smoke in a box and leave the box exposed to a Summers heat & humidity.
What cigar to put in that box. Why not a Gurkha?
Oh....wait have to choose something else lest..... His Excellency Sir. Dog Rockets should become distraught.
Hell, just forget the whole thing, concentrate on your plans for the Cigarfest & Orgy.
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One would think that the dissemination of facts would be overwhelming as to aging and at what RH is correct these days. There are sources out there who still manage to confuse others. Most hobbyists tend to split the difference between 60 and 70% RH and keep things at 65% which helps keep things safe. 70% is too high according to most experts...aging is 5 years and on while resting is anything before 5 years.....high humidity will cause issues where beetles and mold are margins that cause this to happen....anything below 62% will cause the loss of essential oils esp. over 2 years and some will choose lower RH anyway as it's all a choice and personal tastes. 80% RH is just asking for trouble IMO.....and aging is something left to those who understand the process of how to care for their cigars...stable environment of RH and temps.
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Ruler Of The Galaxy
There's a lot of know-nothing jackassery out there in the realm of cigars. I pay little attention to it these days and just stay with what seems to work. I have several boxes stored in a sealed bucket at room temp. I don't have a way to control temperature as I'm not building a wineador, I'm just not that into it. Anyway, I had 3 boveda 65 packs in the bucket and one 69 pack. I used the 69 pack for the monitor figuring that one would deflate first. Well it was too much for the 2 boxes of habanos that were in there, they both started to mold. Not one of the NCs molded fwiw. Wiped off all the mold, smoked the worst ones and dropped the 69 pack and so far no more trouble. 80% r/h... in your moldy dreams.
Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
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