Bah. -25 (C) here the other day with the wind chill. Smoking outside just isn't ... elegant.
Bah. -25 (C) here the other day with the wind chill. Smoking outside just isn't ... elegant.
If you smoke in the house, you're going to smell the after effects of cigar smoke no matter what you try to do. You can spend a lot of time and money trying to minimize it but there's no way you will ever eliminate it to those (like my wife and other non-smokers) who can smell it.
The best solution is to have a separate building like a shed or a garage that you turn into a smoking room. grateful1 has an attached garage at his house but it doesn't have any doors that connect directly to the main house (the house and garage are connected by a screened in porch) and therefore it works perfectly. This is the only case that I've ever seen where it works.
Every Wednesday is "WNS" or "Wednesday Night Smoker" at his house NO HIS GARAGE, stop by tonight if you're in the neighborhood!
BTW, the "neighborhood" is Connecticut, not Cape Breton Island.Us Brettoners have been known to winter in Connecticut, LMAO!
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Last edited by CoventryCat86; 03-07-2012 at 12:24 AM.
TBSCigars - "On Holiday"
Grammar - It's the difference between knowing your crap and knowing you're crap.
I have what was once an upstairs apartment that is on a seperate heating system With 4 guys upstairs smoking on Mondays we open a window with a fan blowing out and turn on 2 fans and a Hepa air purifier as well. Since the use of the purifier began neither I nor my wife have been able to detect smoke smell in the main house however before the purifier we could smell it at the bottom of the stairs and a little in the hallway going to the stairs, not terrible though.
"I'm a leaf on the wind watch how I soar."
Hoban Washburn
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