Keep the cello on just like in the B&M until you are aging boxes of cigars for years, and by then you may have an educated opinion as to when and why the cello should come off - or stay on.
Keep the cello on just like in the B&M until you are aging boxes of cigars for years, and by then you may have an educated opinion as to when and why the cello should come off - or stay on.
last time I unwrapped I had a kid. No more for me!![]()
Cellophane is derived from cellulose, a plant product, which breathes and allows moisture to pass through.
Latest smokes:
Cigar: 5/19: Nub Connecticut 464T
Pipe: 3/16: G.L. Pease~Charing Cross
I was randomly browsing and came across this, great info! I have always kept the "plastic" which I now know is cellophane on my cigars and have always wondered if it was ok, seeing as how I didn't think moisture could get through plastic. If I ever decide to "age" my cigars for long periods I might rethink it, but for now this relieves my worry.
"Eating and sleeping are the only activities that should be allowed to interrupt a man's enjoyment of his cigar." - Mark Twain
I find it funny how people worry so much about these kinds of things when we first start out. I was exactly the same, treating my sticks like babies and spending nights researching on every little detail. Later you will find it a lot more enjoyable to just let things be. It takes years, like 5-10 to put age on a cigar, and you might not even notice with the better ones which age before they even get to you.
Like RH and most things with this hobby it's subjective. Personally I keep the cello on to protect the cigar from damage against other ones. When I first started out I treated them as a pet, because in a sense you are taking care of them. Once you get a nice collection and system going you will start to enjoy the actual sticks rather than the hobby of caring for cigars.
Cello is your friend, it adds a level of protection. I wish more of my favorites came packed in cello.
The only thing I do is keep two desk tops for loose cigars. One for cello/tubos and one for naked cigars.
You will soon out grown this foolishness.
It will always be a battle a day between those who want maximum change and those who want to maintain the status quo.
~ Gerry Adams
When I started smoking cigars I already knew the cellophane allowed humidity to pass through (in either direction)
As a result, whenever I buy cigars with the cello on, I leave it on (and always have) because I figure it will protect the wrapper from being damaged during transit or while moving them around in the humi which I do from time to time when I have to rearrange the cigar because I've bought more.
It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the scroll.
I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul.
***William Ernest Henley***
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