April what's in your humidor? No fooling

Mike Trudel

Well-known member
I have to admit my humidor is loaded with pipe tobacco, as my hunting buddy and I bought a 5lb bag of our favorite English blend, trying to beat the revenuers to the punch. This is the first of multiple buys to get ahead of extreme taxes.

On the cigar side, I'm down to a precious few El Rey Del Mundo Robosto Supremos and a new great cigar, La Flor Dominicana Air Bender. Probably won't make a big cigar purchase until the start of dove season. Luckily my same hunting buddy started growing tobacco and just bought some cigar presses. Turns out, Wisconsin used to be a big cigar producing state.

What's in your humidor?
 
They grow tobacco that far north? I used to enjoy a Peterson bent with a good blend, but gave it up. When I'm in the shop by myself, I still sometims clinch it in my teeth.

Mike
 
I have a couple of Cusano Robustos and one hand wrapped Cuban that my dad brought back from Germany last year, plus a pound bag of Cavendish and some smaller bags of blends. Dead Man's Pipes used to make this awesome blend of English and other tobaccos, but they went out of business not too long ago.



Nate
 
[font=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica][font=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica]El Rey Del Mundo Robosto Supremos is an excellent smoke and I have a few in the humidor.

- Torano Casa Torano

- Torano Exodus 1959

- Rocky Patel Vintage 1990

- Rocky Patel Vintage 1992

- 5 Vegas "A" Robusto

- Punch Grand Puro

...and many more that are aging gracefully
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They grow tobacco that far north?

Wisconsin was a big wrapper leaf growing state. The long summer days and use of shade cloth produced a large, thin leaf.

Some of the New England states also grew significant amounts of tobacco too.

Tobacco is a pretty neat plant.

Tom
 
Completely empty! Had the last one on Tuesday for the final night of bowling league. I will not have to worry about that come July when the statewide smoking ban takes place. I will have to restock soon, those long walks to keep the dog in shape will be a killer with out the no-skeeter-smoke sticks.
 
My humidor is actually a large zip-lock bag with a wet paper towel inside. It's filled with Macanudo's.........................Kevin
 
My dad died a couple of months back from the results of lung cancer from early-age smoking. Watched him suffer terribly for well over two years as a result of smoking and I hope to never see anyone go through it again. I will never forget him saying how he had wished he had never started (note, he had smoked his last piece of tobacco well over 25 years before cancer reared its nasty head). So while I am sure you enjoy your tobacco, please think about some of the terrible results and all the people it effects. Hate to rain on your post, but I just don't see tobacco doing good for anyone.
 
I'm with you on that one Derek. You guys have a right to take chances with your own health just like anyone, but consider for a moment the people who love you and how much they will suffer. We're talking about cancer, not bad breath.

MIke
 
My dad died a couple of months back from the results of lung cancer from early-age smoking. Watched him suffer terribly for well over two years as a result of smoking and I hope to never see anyone go through it again. I will never forget him saying how he had wished he had never started (note, he had smoked his last piece of tobacco well over 25 years before cancer reared its nasty head). So while I am sure you enjoy your tobacco, please think about some of the terrible results and all the people it effects. Hate to rain on your post, but I just don't see tobacco doing good for anyone.

Derek,
I understand exactly what you're saying. I lost both my Father and my Father in Law to tobacco & Cancer.

Part of my Fathers throat rotted away and you could touch his tongue without him opening his mouth. He was on morphine every 3 hrs. the last 4 months of his life. Terrible but preventable loss.
My Father in Law ended up with a tumor that closed off his esophagus and we had to have a tube implanted in his stomach for feeding. From the time he got sick until he died was 3 months. Another tragic loss that could have been prevented.
I grew up with the stench of smoke in the house and hated it. Not only do I find it disagreeable to have around, but I'm also allegic to it. So.....no bars for me. ;)
The family that is left behind suffers the most.
Lou
 
I'm with you on that one Derek. You guys have a right to take chances with your own health just like anyone, but consider for a moment the people who love you and how much they will suffer. We're talking about cancer, not bad breath.

MIke

You're right about the health hazard. When it boils down to it, the right to smoke stops at the end of my nose. Just like the right to swing our arms stops at the end of somebody's nose.
Lou
 
There is soooooooo much we all do that is bad for us do we really need to pick on guys who didn't ask for it? I hate smoking as much as anyone but come on. I do miss the smell of my uncles pipe when I was a kid.

Tim
 
Five CAO mini maduros and one CAO M2 or, double maduro for Friday night at Pheasant Run... Hope to see you there! Pat
 
Something strikes me about the disagreement between smoking and non-smokers.........I would postulate that the angle of the slippery slope of government control of all things deemed evil from smoking to the amount of salt in processed food has increased.....and the desire or push to regulate has increased.

So let us assume that if any activity can be shown to be harmful to a persons health let us demonize and regulate.....I present the following article as evidence of yet another attempt to decide what is best for all you evil unhealthy people.. I better hide the brauts as they will be next, they cause nasty heart problems....

Just for the record I do not smoke.....and would not suggest anyone start.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jWPzur4NCKW0O98FXg8DtBEyag8QD9F718U82

Too much salt: Report urges FDA to force rollback
By LAURAN NEERGAARD (AP) – 2 days ago
WASHINGTON — Too much salt is hidden in Americans' food, and regulators plan to work with manufacturers to cut back — but the government isn't ready to go along with a major new recommendation that it order a decrease.
"We believe we can achieve some substantial voluntary reductions," Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Margaret Hamburg told The Associated Press on Tuesday. "We are shaping a strategy, and that strategy involves working in partnership."
Don't expect soups, pizzas and breakfast cereals — yes, they contain added sodium, too — to taste different any time soon. The FDA's plans are still being formulated, but the idea is for gradual change so consumer taste buds can adjust, as well as industry recipes and production methods.
Americans eat about 1 1/2 teaspoons of salt daily, more than double what they need for good health and enough to increase the risk of high blood pressure, strokes and other problems. Most of that sodium doesn't come from the table salt shaker; it's hidden inside common processed foods and restaurant meals.
On Tuesday, the prestigious Institute of Medicine said the food industry has made little progress in voluntarily reducing sodium. The advisers urged the FDA to set maximum sodium levels for different foods in a stepwise rollback, so that eventually average consumption would drop by about half a teaspoon.
"This needs to be a mandatory standard," said Dr. Jane E. Henney of the University of Cincinnati, a former FDA commissioner who headed the IOM's study. Because salt is so "ubiquitous, having one or two in the industry make strong attempts at this doesn't give us that even playing field over time. It's not sustainable."
The IOM report doesn't set a deadline, but says it will take years to phase in the changes for consumers who are used to the taste of a high-salt diet.
One in three U.S. adults has high blood pressure, which in turn is a leading cause of heart attacks, strokes and kidney failure. And while being overweight and inactive raises blood pressure, too much salt is a big culprit as well. The American Medical Association has said 150,000 lives a year could be saved by cutting in half sodium levels in processed and restaurant food.
"This is crying out for a change that's long overdue," added Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, who helped spur the IOM report and plans hearings on next steps.
Hamburg told the AP that while her agency is reviewing the recommendations, it isn't currently writing new regulations — and that setting legal limits on how much sodium can be added to different foods would take longer than collaborating with food makers on salt-cutting goals.
"We would be working with them to establish targets," she said. "We absolutely see reducing salt in the diets of Americans as a very important public health priority. ... You'll see us sitting down with key industry partners and starting to define a roadmap."
Government guidelines set 2,300 milligrams of sodium as the maximum daily intake — the amount above which health problems can appear. The IOM says people need just 1,500 mg a day for good health, less if they're over 50. Yet average consumption is more than 3,400 mg.
The food industry has long argued that it didn't have tasty ways to replace sodium if it made deep cuts. But brand-to-brand differences in the same foods suggest that's not so, and some food giants are leading the way in sodium reduction.
 
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