-
Bummin' Around
I leave them on if they came in one. Since I have so many cigars, I usually don't around get to smoking new stock for at least a year (or more, depending on the cigar). And... I am horrible about dating my cigars, so the amount of yellowing on the cello gives me some idea of how long they've been in there.
Stop looking at them and smoke them!!!
-
Lonely Wandering Bum
Originally Posted by
Bruck
I've found that cigars taste a lot better if you remove the cello before lighting.
Draw is better, too..
-
Custom User Title
Originally Posted by
Tman
That's crazy talk! What next? Remove band?
True confessions, a time or two I have forgotten to remove the band while smoking in the dark.
You oughta know not to stand by the window, somebody see you up there.
-
Post Thanks / Like - 0 Thanks, 1 Likes
Tman liked this post
-
Wow, Someone Knows Me
Originally Posted by
johnnyflake
You lost me brother!
1. If I take the cellophane off I always crack a wrapper or fray an end; and
2. if I leave it on I feel like I am strangling my cigars or impregnating them with some kind of hydrocarbon toxin (which I am not - cellophane is both permeable and pretty much non-toxic once clear of the manufacturing site).
Sometimes I take the cello off but then put it back on a more valuable or fragile vitola to increase the overall value/survivability quotient. So that's cello off-and-on; no accounting for that in the on/off polls.
Then, sometimes, I find an old Fuente-Fuente OpusX #4, upon which I ALWAYS leave the cellophane, in the Opus box without a cellophane jacket; no telling where it went or why. That's cello-on-vanished again with no category.
Then sometimes I find the '98 Upmann churchills or some creme-de-la-creme Bolivars in the humidor that were delivered without cellophane but I always wished they HAD come with cellophane.
I am one of those people who is never satisfied. I similarly worried about pipe tobacco, jarred or tinned but, now, I just smoke the stuff and forget about it.