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  1. #1
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    I always try to get two of everything I buy. I will smoke one and let the other sit a while, smoke and compare.
    I haven't really aged enough cigars to say anything about the cello on or off. I don't think it would make a big difference. I don't think its as important as the condition in which the cigar is stored.
    In my short year of smoking, I have noticed that some cigars are better fresh, and some with age. The hard thing to figure out is it the aging that made the cigar better or is it my taste changing.

    Good luck

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by CAJUNBLAZE View Post
    I always try to get two of everything I buy. I will smoke one and let the other sit a while, smoke and compare.
    I haven't really aged enough cigars to say anything about the cello on or off. I don't think it would make a big difference. I don't think its as important as the condition in which the cigar is stored. In my short year of smoking, I have noticed that some cigars are better fresh, and some with age. The hard thing to figure out is it the aging that made the cigar better or is it my taste changing.

    Good luck
    Exactary....two very good points.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by CAJUNBLAZE View Post
    I always try to get two of everything I buy.
    This is a great strategy. I used to buy only one smoke and smoke it and form an opinion of the smoke. I then realized that sampling a single stick made no sense at all based on all of the factors that Mark listed. There is so much that goes into the smoking experience that I now try to buy two or more sticks of something I want to try, hopefully enabling me to form a more rounded opinion.

    This cigar smoking thing is confusing!
    Smoke em' if you got em'

  4. #4
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    Dang it, you guys! I thought someone was going to say Do this, then do this, then leave them for this long, then you are good to go. Sounds like trial and error mixed with a lot of experience are going to be the keys. I have not tried dry boxing many of mine yet so i will defenitely give that a try. Well i guess the good news is there are plenty of cigars out there to experiment on, and pleny of time to learn. Thanks

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by daredog4 View Post
    Dang it, you guys! I thought someone was going to say Do this, then do this, then leave them for this long, then you are good to go. Sounds like trial and error mixed with a lot of experience are going to be the keys. I have not tried dry boxing many of mine yet so i will defenitely give that a try. Well i guess the good news is there are plenty of cigars out there to experiment on, and pleny of time to learn. Thanks
    If it were that easy there wouldn't be so many cigars and opinions out there. There's no single recipe. It's a hobby that you learn to apply your own personal taste to. Learning is more than just asking questions on a bulletin board. There are some things that are pretty straight forward, but how and what you store, age, smoke, etc., isn't one of them. It's a personal journey... enjoy it.

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