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  • #16
    I read that quick and thought you said when you were 12 years old.

    Great auntie!
    Nic
    Editor UK Cigar Scene Magazine

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    • #17
      I like reading these stories. I smoked cigarettes from age 13, Marlboro or Camel - mostly because I had seen people smoke in the movies Eventually got fed up with the rising costs & chemical stench - switched to roll-ups for some years. Then I was introduced to my first high quality cigar by the security guard at an office I worked in (aged 17) a tubed Bolivar!!! It was great, but too expensive for me to maintain a regular habit.

      I started working from home in 2004 and switched to pipe-smoking full time, after I accidently discovered the joys of tobacco aging! And also because I would smoke more and couldn't be bothered to roll the damn things every 5mins!

      Now I can afford to smoke what I want, so I'm planning to build up a collection of habanas!! My favourites are the Bolivar Royal Corona and the Cohiba Robusto - but there are many that I haven't tried.


      My credit card company is going to enjoy this more than I will!!

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      • #18
        After several years of watching my father thoroughly relaxed whilst savouring a fine Havana it persuaded me eventually to try my first cigar. That first step has led us to share and enjoy many memorable and enhanced occasions, what was once a pleasant pastime for me has now become a passion...

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        • #19
          I come from a family of cigarette smokers, and my wife smokes ciggs as well, I have always despised them, but I did enjoy social smoking, but hated cigs so much i'd buy cafe creme or similar just to have a smoke.

          Then a couple of years ago before a night of drinking and poker playing a buddy suggested we go and buy a Montecristo, off we went to the Cigar specialist. So unsure of what to look for and not wanting to browse too long I asked for a 'Montecristo Number 1' and was shocked to find only a couple of pound change from a twenty... Needless to say, i never looked back, and the smoking ban in pubs has only caused me to smoke more, as I would now find a nice heated patio, and spend the night outside, maybe smoking 3 good cubans over the space of several hours. Thankfully, online ordering and dollar exchange rates means that they are a damn site cheaper than ?17 each.

          Roll on Saturday!
          Maginns Patio, Montecristo No. 1, Pint of Guinness. Sheer Bliss.

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          • #20
            It was 5 years ago, I had quit the fags a couple of months and craving like mad! In one of the poker nights Mark, a cousin-in-law, had brought a few Cohiba robustos with him. He offered me one and I took it, having promised that I wont throw it away and it wont go to waste...that was it, I was hooked.

            It took me a few months smoking JLPs, Quinteros, Guantanameras and all kinds of dog rockets, till I got to know what I liked.
            www.cigars.ie

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            • #21
              Guantanameras are well dodgy, aren't they?!

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              • #22
                Originally posted by Robusto View Post
                Guantanameras are well dodgy, aren't they?!
                Very true you get what you pay for, i couldnt give em away.

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by snooky View Post
                  Very true you get what you pay for, i couldnt give em away.

                  Neither could I!!! I tried to offload them to my mate's dad who smoked one then refused the rest. And he's a guy who smokes Hamlets!!!
                  No man has the right to fix the boundary of a nation.
                  No man has the right to say to his country, "Thus far shalt thou go and no further."

                  CS Parnell



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                  • #24
                    i have to say guantanamera is my least fave cigar. i bought 10 or 15 a few years ago and i could not stand them.

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                    • #25
                      When I was a child, I just loved the smell of cigars. My childhood friend's dad smoked cigars regularly. I went with my friend and his dad often to the cigar shop. I loved the smell of spanish cedar and cigars when entering into a walk-in humidor. That is a smell I still love today.

                      While in the military, I was stationed in Tampa, Florida. I went to Ybor City with some friends. I was absolutely fascinated with watching cigars be hand made in front of me. Of course, I had to buy some. Shortly after that day, I went back and bought more cigars along with my first humidor. It was a small 25ct. one, which I still have today. I have been hooked ever since.

                      Though I no longer live in Tampa, I always remember those days fondly. It is sad to see how the government's smoking bans and ridiculous tobacco taxes are destroying a once lively industry in that city.

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                      • #26
                        I never was a cigarette smoker either. Upon graduating college I moved from Kentucky to California back in the mid-90's, a fellow there that I worked with introduced me to cigars and I've been into them since.

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                        • #27
                          My first ever introduction to cigars was at a rugby match. I can only have been about ten years old, stood in the Shed at Kingsholm watching Gloucester play Llanelli. Two elderly Welsh guys (supporting Llanelli) were smoking cigars (almost non-stop for the three hours they were stood there). There are two abiding memories of that experience - the first being that I was coughing and spluttering for about a week... the second was the fantastic aroma of the smoke, nothing like the putrid smell of a cigarette.

                          I started about two and a half years ago when I joined the Royal Navy. At BRNC it was often said that the first six weeks weren't a great opportunity to stop smoking (due to the pressure). A number of guys would have some cigarettes for leadership exercises on Dartmoor (got to have something to do when your wet through and 'on watch' at 2am)... I thought I'd grab a few cheapish tubed cigars - a pack of five Henri Wintermans half coronas, if I remember correctly.

                          They served their purpose, so I hunted around online for some 'proper' cigars and bought a small selection from CGars. These were very nice and hence the love affair started. I find it quite like having a mistress - I usually flirt with her and have a bit of fun on holiday (nothing beats an evening cigar on the deck of a chalet in a ski resort or a on a yacht), but try not to draw attention to her when at home - for cost reasons as much as anything...
                          My cigar review blog: The Cigar Monologues (Twitter / Facebook)
                          My Company:
                          Siparium Sporting

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                          • #28
                            I find it - (smoking cigars) quite like having a mistress - I usually flirt with her and have a bit of fun on holiday (nothing beats an evening cigar on the deck of a chalet in a ski resort or a on a yacht), but try not to draw attention to her when at home - for cost reasons as much as anything...

                            I have to say I find my relationship with cigars is just about the same as yours, Sir. I find many aspects of cigar smoking - the looking, the smelling. the touching for starters - very arousing.

                            The smell when you enter a packed walk-in humidor is sex sex sex.

                            All this before the aroma hits you!

                            Cigar Porn is a very apt phrase.

                            Since feeling so comfortable in my mind at smoking publicly these days, I feel like a pole dancer on display.

                            Now there's a thought...

                            Curiously enough, apart from my Father's cigars, there was a master at the school I went to - strictly non-smoking - who used to light up a cigar when he was cheering rugby teams on from the touchline. It will have been a Castella... but in an environment which cut your limbs off if you were caught smoking, this was a delicious moment if you were either watching or playing team rugby.

                            Well it was for me.

                            I can pinpoint certain big moments in my life to cigars and their beautiful aroma.

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                            • #29
                              Originally posted by Robusto View Post
                              Guantanameras are well dodgy, aren't they?!
                              Got to admit, when I returned from the motherland in Jan, I brought a selection box for giveaways. Didn't manage to give any away and smoked the lot! Out of a selection of five vitolas, only one was 'enjoyable' (clear tubed Churchill typish, from memory) I found it a rough n ready stick if that makes sense, but one that still tasted better than none at all.
                              "Go you good things...geddem int'ya"

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                              • #30
                                In France with a party of kids, I whipped off secretly to a tabac to buy some cigars.

                                I now confess I bought a pack of BIG Villigers which I'd read about.

                                There were only a few wizened small Havanas in the store which had been there for donkey's years and which weren't worth buying.

                                I'd just like to say the BIG Villigers were absolutely vile.

                                I say THEY. I tried one and that was enough. After five minutes, I thought I was going to hurl.

                                Watch the Premier League-ers mock LMFAO!

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