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  • #31
    Just got home from a very busy day at work... to find my order from Monte arrived in the post.



    More later, but - fuck me! - they smell completely awesome and I'm smiling like a goon because my humidor has a real pulse again, and my nostrils are well flaired!

    Great start to the weekend.

    Comment


    • #32
      Niiiiiccccceeeeee!!!

      You smoking tonight then Robusto????
      Love Life - Love Cigars

      Comment


      • #33
        Yaaay! Same here...got home pretty cheesed off, and there they were! No picture, sorry...my wife is the techy here...but 4 Cubans and 4 NCs really cheered me up!

        One problem - it's pissing down!

        Best,

        Wildwood

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        • #34
          My..'it's pissing it down solution'

          hehehehehehe

          t.jpg
          Love Life - Love Cigars

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          • #35
            Very nice CohibaIV...but don't your kids get pissed off with you smoking at the top of their slide?



            Wildwood

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            • #36
              Originally posted by Wildwood View Post
              Very nice CohibaIV...but don't your kids get pissed off with you smoking at the top of their slide?


              Wildwood
              hahahahahahha.... Yeh, why can't kids share???
              Love Life - Love Cigars

              Comment


              • #37
                Ive got nothing in my humi yet,as tis empty,got a nice big order coming in from monte so should fill it up then.

                Comment


                • #38
                  17th Sep Post bag!!!

                  Todays postman brought me:-

                  A Churchills sampler, going off the recommendations from the ?What are your favourite Churchill Cigars? Thread.

                  They are:
                  1 x H. Upmann: Sir Winston Cabinet
                  1 x Punch: Churchill
                  1 x Bolivar: Coronas Gigantes
                  1 x R&J: Churchill
                  1 x Hoyo de Monterrey Double Coronas
                  along with

                  1 x Georges Reserve (Cheers Rokkitski)
                  and
                  1 x Rey Del Mundo: Demi Tasse (Present from Monte..Cheers)

                  i 001.jpg

                  And
                  Five Padrons 1926
                  Three Padrons 1964

                  The large size 1926 are #9 maduro.
                  The middle size 1926 are #6 maduro
                  The smallest one is 1926 #35 maduro.
                  The 1964 large ones are the Pyramids maduro
                  The small one is a natural principe.

                  i 002.jpg

                  As SmokieJoe would say ?LOVELLY JUBBLIE? hehehehe
                  Love Life - Love Cigars

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Nice selection there.
                    If you got em, Smoke em!

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Originally posted by cohibaIV View Post
                      Todays postman brought me:-

                      1 x Georges Reserve (Cheers Rokkitski)
                      and

                      Five Padrons 1926
                      Three Padrons 1964

                      The large size 1926 are #9 maduro.
                      The middle size 1926 are #6 maduro
                      The smallest one is 1926 #35 maduro.
                      The 1964 large ones are the Pyramids maduro
                      The small one is a natural principe.
                      Another bloody Brit who thinks I'm a fucking skier. R-O-K-K-I-T-S-C-I!!

                      I'm a rocket scientist (check out the picture: that's not Photoshopped), not a rocket skier!

                      But I lust after your Padrons. Especially the 1926's. From everything I've read, these cigars are some of the finest smokes on the planet.
                      rokkitsci

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Originally posted by rokkitsci View Post
                        Another bloody Brit who thinks I'm a fucking skier. R-O-K-K-I-T-S-C-I!! http://www.ukcigarforums.com/images/icons/icon11.gif[/IMG]

                        I'm a rocket scientist (check out the picture: that's not Photoshopped), not a rocket skier!

                        But I lust after your Padrons. Especially the 1926's. From everything I've read, these cigars are some of the finest smokes on the planet.
                        Sorry mate, it was a jibe to make you smile

                        Can't wait to try the Padrons myself
                        Love Life - Love Cigars

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          If you got em, Smoke em!

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Another Delivery.....!!

                            Well, what a week…another delivery…..!!!!

                            And a bollocking of the missus….....Thought I would get home before her


                            PARTAGAS SERIE D NO.4 box of 10

                            o 002.jpg

                            H.UPMANN MAGNUM 46 TUBOS pack of 3

                            o 004.jpg

                            EL SANTOR FIGURADO x 2

                            o 003.jpg
                            Attached Files
                            Love Life - Love Cigars

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                            • #44
                              Uh-oh!

                              BY MIAMI HERALD STAFF
                              C...@MiamiHerald.com

                              SAN JUAN y MARTINEZ, Cuba -- Alejandro Gonz?lez spends his days touting
                              the intricate craft of tobacco growing to tourists here on the western
                              reaches of the island that produces the world's premier cigars.

                              But when Hurricane Ike blew through Cuba eight days after Hurricane
                              Gustav's pass, Gonzalez, 35, a tobacco engineer/plantation guide at the
                              Hoyo de Monterrey cooperative, joined an intense effort to move delicate
                              tobacco leaves from their drying barns to stronger buildings in hopes of
                              shielding them from the storm's fury.

                              Even so, more than half the crop was lost, Gonz?lez says. More than
                              3,000 tobacco leaf drying sheds and 8,600 homes for tobacco workers in
                              the region, which lies about 112 miles southwest of Havana, also were
                              destroyed.

                              ''It was very, very bad,'' he said in halting English.

                              According to the daily newspaper Granma, Gustav alone destroyed 3,414
                              curing barns and damaged another 1,590. In a blow to one of Cuba's top
                              exports, more than 800 tons of tobacco products were damaged by Gustav.

                              The hardest hit city was Consolaci?n del Sur, where 1,836 of the
                              existing 1,857 curing barns were destroyed.

                              The Cuban government estimates losses from the two storms at $5 billion.
                              As the island struggles to rebuild, one of the few crops that can earn
                              the hard currency it needs to bounce back has sustained damages that
                              experts say could linger for years to come. Cuba made $402 million from
                              tobacco in 2007.

                              It is possible that the scarcity of Cuban tobacco will pump up prices.

                              Not counting the United States, Cuban cigars account for 80 percent of
                              the world market. Cohiba, Robaina, Quintero, Partagas and Romeo y
                              Julieta brands, among others, are all hand-rolled from premium tobacco
                              in a process that has changed little over hundreds of years. Besides
                              being widely hailed as the world's best, the Cuban cigars have taken on
                              an extra mystique in the United States, where the long-standing trade
                              embargo makes them forbidden fruit.

                              Like much of the rest of the island, tobacco production in western Cuba
                              is in a time warp, with locals riding horse-drawn wagons that vie with
                              oxen and ancient Buicks on the highway. A drive along the main highway
                              these days shows countless roofless barns and debris tossed about the
                              rolling terrain.

                              Rice, coffee, yuca and other crops also were damaged in the double storms.

                              But cigar-making is a point of national pride for the ailing communist
                              nation, which has few bragging rights after five decades of economic
                              hardship under the Castro regime.

                              ''This is the best tobacco in the world,'' said Gonz?lez, a reed-thin
                              Creole descendant who studied agronomy for eight years and foreign
                              languages for another four.

                              He grows theatrical as he describes the painstaking work of tending the
                              seedlings, nurturing the young plants and curing the leaves in a
                              many-faceted process more akin to winemaking than growing a typical
                              field crop.

                              It starts with the land and the climate: The rustic rolling hills of
                              Vuelta Abajo, as the area is known, have ideal soil for tobacco, and the
                              region's humid weather provides the best growing conditions.

                              Tobacco is planted in the fall, beginning in October, and harvested in
                              the spring, around March. Some plants, cultivated for filler, are grown
                              in the full sun, for flavor and aroma, while those that will be used for
                              the cigars' outer wrapping are nurtured under cotton cloth to keep them
                              tender and moist.

                              Oxen are still used to work the fields, in part because they don't
                              compress the dirt as heavy machinery would. Women do most of the
                              handling of the plants, on the notion that softer hands are better
                              suited for the delicate process.

                              The leaves are hand-harvested over many days. After the leaves are
                              picked, they are sewn onto Eucalyptus sticks, which provide some
                              flavoring. They are then dried for two months in a special barn.

                              Many of those barns are now gone.

                              Carpenters from other provinces, the Cuban papers said, are being
                              organized into brigades to rebuild the barns in the worst-affected
                              areas. Still, government papers say the losses could have been worse: In
                              2002, Hurricanes Isidore and Lili claimed 11,000 curing barns.

                              ''Each one of those barns has 400 to 500 quintales. A quintal is 100
                              pounds,'' said Ram?n Seraf?n, who lives in Hialeah but owns a cigar shop
                              in Tampa.

                              ``How many of those did they lose? They probably had reserves in the
                              factory, but what are they going to do when the reserves run out? That's
                              when they'll see a shortage.''

                              When the leaves finally get to the cigar factories, such as the Fabrica
                              de Tobacos Francisco Donatien, in the center of Pinar del R?o, the
                              provincial capital of the tobacco-growing region, the leaves are
                              painstakingly crafted into stogies. They are hand-rolled, with each
                              worker expected to produce 110 cigars a day.

                              While Cuban cigars are widely regarded as the best, shoppers who try to
                              buy them on the cheap through informal channels may end up getting
                              ripped off. ''They are banana leaf,'' warns Gonz?lez, who disdains the
                              fakes because they undercut the image of the industry ''and it's bad for
                              Cuba.'' The real Cubans are usually sold in cedar boxes with government
                              stamps.

                              Gonz?lez claims he can spot a fake at a distance. On a recent afternoon,
                              inside a drying barn, he twirled a Cohiba in his fingers and held it to
                              his ear, listening for the crinkling sound that goes with a good cigar.

                              The name of the reporter who filed this dispatch from Cuba is being
                              withheld because the reporter lacks the journalist's visa required by
                              the Cuban government to report from the island.

                              Additional reporting was done by Miami Herald staff writer Frances Robles in Miami.

                              rokkitsci

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                              • #45
                                Deano. Monte. This should have been posted in What Are You Smoking Today?
                                I am officially a mong.

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